1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*32
1. Gain or Loss -- Basis -- Carrying Charges -- Taxes and Mortgage Interest --
2. Gross Income -- Salary Credited to Civil Service Retirement Fund. -- Amounts withheld from petitioner's salary and deposited to his credit in the Civil Service retirement and disability fund are includible in gross income.
21 T.C. 197">*197 OPINION.
The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $ 121.42 in income taxes of the petitioners for 1949. The petitioners allege that the Commissioner erred in not taking taxes and mortgage interest into account as carrying charges in computing1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*34 the profit from the sale of their residence, as provided by
The petitioners, husband and wife, filed joint returns for the years 1944 through 1949. The return for 1949 was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the fifth district of New Jersey.
The petitioners purchased a house at 82 Osborne Place, Irvington, New Jersey, on September 15, 1944, and thereafter occupied it as their residence until they sold it on December 6, 1949. They paid real estate taxes and interest on a mortgage encumbering the property during that occupancy in the total amount of $ 1,341.38. They did not itemize any deductions on their returns for the years 1944 through 1949 but each year claimed the standard deduction allowed by law in lieu of itemized deductions. They gave no indication on their returns or otherwise that they were electing1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*35 to capitalize interest on the mortgage and taxes on the property prior to March 15, 1950, when they filed a return for 1949 and stated thereon:
Pursuant to provisions of
The interest and taxes were deductible as paid. Section 23 (b) and (c). Section 23 (aa) allows individuals at their election an optional standard deduction in lieu of all other deductions with exceptions not material hereto.
The regulation promulgated by the Commissioner to carry out the purpose of the new amendments described the types of property on which carrying charges could be capitalized to include unimproved and unproductive real property, real property of any kind on which expenditures otherwise deductible were made in the development of the property or in the construction of an improvement thereon up to the time the development or construction had been1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*37 completed, taxes on services rendered in transporting fixed assets to or installing them in a plant, and interest on a loan to purchase such property, and "Any other taxes and carrying charges with respect to property, otherwise deductible, which in the opinion of the Commissioner are, under sound accounting principles, chargeable to capital account." He also required that the election to capitalize be exercised by filing with the original return a statement indicating the election and its scope. See Regs. 111, sec. 29.24-5 and sec. 29.113 (b) (1)-1. Those regulations have the force and effect of law. There were no subsequent changes in the law or regulations material hereto.
The residence upon which the petitioners claim the right to capitalize interest and taxes is not unimproved or in process of construction or improvement. It was in regular normal use. The interest 21 T.C. 197">*199 and taxes were not charges incurred in carrying it through a temporary period for some later more significant use. Those items could not be properly capitalized as a part of the cost of such a property either in the opinion of the Commissioner or under sound accounting principles. See W. A. Paton, Accountants1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*38 Handbook, 2d ed., p. 1100; W. A. Paton and A. C. Littleton, An Introduction to Corporate Accounting Standards, p. 31. Furthermore, neither Congress nor the Commissioner ever intended that taxes and interest on a personal residence in regular normal use be treated as carrying charges or capitalized. The petitioners cite no accounting or other authority to support their contention and the Court knows of none. It is unnecessary to discuss other arguments of the Commissioner in support of his determination on this point since he obviously did not err.
The petitioner, Isaiah, became a Civil Service employee a number of years prior to 1949. His Federal employment was without interruption. He enjoyed permanent Civil Service tenure and was subject to the provisions of the Civil Service Retirement Act. His employment was in the Internal Revenue Service where he was a revenue agent, conferee, and, in 1949, a technical advisor. His compensation for 1949 as a Civil Service employee was $ 6,254.08. He reported that amount in his return. $ 5,359.50 of the total was paid to him in cash, $ 519.30 was withheld as income tax, and $ 375.28 represented "Payments deposited in the Treasury of 1953 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32">*39 the United States to the credit of Civil Service retirement and disability fund created by the Act of May 22, 1920 (
The petitioners contend that $ 375.28 withheld from Isaiah's compensation, as described above, should be excluded from their gross income under section 165 (b) or