1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*221
1. Deduction -- Loss -- Demolition of Buildings. -- The loss from the demolition of buildings is the unexhausted basis of the buildings.
2. Deduction -- Nonbusiness Expenses. -- Expenses of tax controversies
6 T.C. 799">*799 The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $ 3,556.51 in income tax for the calendar year 1941. The petitioners contend that the Commissioner erred in failing to allow a deduction of $ 17,500 representing a loss sustained in 1941 upon the demolition of six buildings on property in Croton Village, New York, and in disallowing a deduction of $ 625 for legal and accounting fees paid by the petitioners in 1941.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The petitioners are husband and wife. They filed joint returns upon a cash basis for the calendar year 1941 with the collector of internal revenue for the second district of New York.
Petitioner Lydia Heyman paid $ 24,327.88 for five mortgages covering a property known as Scandia Gardens at Croton, New York. The principal amount of the mortgages was $ 29,766.73. No payments were ever made on account of the principal of those mortgages. Lydia 6 T.C. 799">*800 Heyman foreclosed on the mortgages in 1937, obtained judgment, and acquired1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*223 title to the property at the sale on that judgment. She paid $ 2,337.36 of back taxes in connection with the foreclosure. That amount was included in her judgment upon which the sale was made. The record does not show that she paid any other cash at the time of the sale. The deed, dated July 30, 1937, recites that it is in consideration of $ 32,000 paid by the grantee, being the highest sum bid at the sale.
The property consisted of 17 acres of level ground fronting 900 feet on a main road. It was improved with a frame residence, a large frame barn, two 4-room bungalows, a large circular restaurant building, a kitchen and commissary building, a road stand, a showroom for dogs, and a station for selling gasoline. Some of the buildings had been unoccupied for some time prior to July 1937, when they were acquired by the petitioner.
The petitioner demolished six of the buildings in December 1941 because they were not being rented and because she thought it would reduce her taxes. The buildings demolished were the restaurant, the commissary and kitchen, the road stand, the showroom for dogs, one of the bungalows, and the gasoline station. The wreckers took the salvage from the 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*224 buildings for their compensation and neither received any cash from the petitioner nor paid her anything in connection with the demolition.
The unexhausted basis for gain or loss on the six buildings demolished at the time they were demolished was $ 6,889.
The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency, allowed a deduction of $ 3,000 on account of the demolition of the six buildings.
The remaining land and buildings were sold by the petitioner for $ 3,500 in 1943.
The petitioners paid $ 625 in 1941 to accountants for services performed by them in conferences and consultations with representatives of the Bureau of Internal Revenue who were examining the returns of the petitioners for the years 1938 and 1939, as a result of which the petitioners eventually paid additional tax of $ 30,000, and in handling a dispute with the New York State Tax Commission involving the emergency tax, which was later repealed. The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency, disallowed the deduction of $ 625 claimed by the petitioners. He explained that the fees in the amount of $ 625 do not constitute ordinary and necessary expenses within the meaning of
OPINION.
The petitioners contend that the buildings demolished to save taxes had a value of $ 17,500 at the date they were destroyed. They argue that they are entitled to deduct that amount 6 T.C. 799">*801 as a loss. They do not cite any provisions of the statute in support of this contention, but rely heavily upon
The petitioner, encouraged by the
The petitioner paid $ 24,327.88 for the1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*227 mortgages and later made an additional cash payment of $ 2,337.36 on account of back taxes in connection with the foreclosure. Thus, she paid a total of $ 26,665.24 in acquiring the property. The record does not show that she sustained any loss or realized any gain in connection with the foreclosure and purchase of the property. Neither does it show that she reported any gain or loss from that transaction on her return for 1937. Therefore, we must conclude that her basis for gain or loss on the property was $ 26,665.24 at July 30, 1937.
There is evidence to indicate that it would be proper to allocate to the buildings demolished about one-third of the cost of the entire property, and there is also evidence to indicate that a proper rate of depreciation on these buildings was about 5 percent. We have concluded, from a consideration of all of the evidence in the case, that 6 T.C. 799">*802 the loss sustained by the petitioner in the demolition of the buildings in 1941 was $ 6,889. Thus, the Commissioner erred in allowing only $ 3,000, but the petitioner is far from the mark in claiming $ 17,500.
The remaining issue is whether the petitioners are entitled to a deduction of $ 625 paid 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*228 by them in 1941 for services of a firm of accountants. They make this claim under
Disney,
Reliance is placed by the majority on
* * * The Tax Court could find as a matter of fact, as it did, that the expenses of contesting the income taxes were a proximate result of the holding of the property for income. And we cannot say, as a matter of law, that such expenses are any less deductible than expenses of suits to recover income. * * *
The Supreme Court's decision was in general based upon the idea that expenses by trustees with reference to the estate in their possession, came within the expression "management" of trust property held for the production of income. It seems to me obvious that that decision1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 221">*230 helps not at all in this case, where the payments were made, not for contesting income taxes found to be "a proximate result of the holding of the property for income," as found in the
That the
The