An appropriate order will be issued granting respondent's motion and denying petitioner's cross-motion.
LARO,
Respondent made his motion on June 1, 2010. On July 7, 2010, petitioners filed an objection to the motion and their cross-motion for partial summary judgment (cross-motion). On July 26, 2010, respondent filed his response to the cross-motion. In connection with the motion and the cross-motion, we decide whether petitioners are entitled to deduct any portion of the charitable contribution which they reported on their 2004 return. We hold that they are not.
On or about July 11, 1995, Mr. DiDonato purchased two parcels of property located at 245 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, New Jersey, for $211,690 (collectively, Schaafsma parcel).22011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*151 The Schaafsma parcel was subdivided from a single lot, and as of July 11, 1995, could be accessed from Cold Soil Road by way of a dirt road or a prescriptive easement.3 The Schaafsma parcel could also be accessed from Cold Soil Road by crossing over land owned by the county. Adjacent to the Schaafsma parcel was a local park owned by the county.
On 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*152 May 10, 1997, the county conveyed to Mr. DiDonato for $1 a 50-foot-wide easement and right of way (full driveway) across the county's property by a Deed of Easement and Right of Way Agreement (deed of easement). The full driveway was adjacent to the Schaafsma parcel and was situated in the neighboring park; i.e., it was parkland property. The deed of easement granted Mr. DiDonato access to the full driveway for pedestrian and vehicular ingress and egress from the Schaafsma parcel to Cold Soil Road.4 The deed of easement was recorded on October 10, 1997.
At some point after the deed of easement was executed, Mr. DiDonato filed a lawsuit against the county in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Mercer County (State court), with respect to the deed of easement. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) intervened and moved the State court for summary judgment. Mr. DiDonato also moved the State court for partial 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*153 summary judgment. The State court granted NJDEP's motion for summary judgment and declared the deed of easement void ab initio. The State court also granted Mr. DiDonato's motion for partial summary judgment, finding the county liable to Mr. DiDonato for breach of "warranties" and awarding Mr. DiDonato reasonable attorney's fees. The State court, with the consent of Mr. DiDonato and the county, appointed a special master to investigate and recommend to the State court an appropriate remedy to be awarded to Mr. DiDonato. Mr. DiDonato and the county also agreed to participate in a series of mediation sessions which were overseen by the special master. At the conclusion of the mediation sessions, Mr. DiDonato and the county entered into a Memorandum of Settlement (settlement agreement) on August 27, 2004. That settlement agreement set forth the terms and conditions to resolve the lawsuit between Mr. DiDonato and the county.
Under the settlement agreement, the county agreed to convey a 35-foot-wide portion of the driveway (partial driveway) to Mr. DiDonato in fee simple. The remaining 15-foot-wide portion of the driveway was to be held by the county in fee simple to allow pedestrian and 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*154 equestrian traffic entry into the neighboring park. Upon conveyance of the partial driveway interest to Mr. DiDonato, Mr. DiDonato agreed "to limit his use of the Schaafsma parcel to a single family residence, thereby giving up any and all development rights to said property." The county agreed to "provide written acknowledgment, in form and substance acceptable to [Mr.] DiDonato, of a donation to the county of [Mr.] DiDonato's development rights in the Schaafsma parcel." Mr. DiDonato also agreed to "pay for all property conveyed to him in fee simple through a donation to the Green Acres Fund".52011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*155 The amount of the donation was a percentage of the value of the driveway commensurate with the partial driveway interest conveyed to Mr. DiDonato. Most if not all of the substantive rights and obligations under the settlement agreement were conditioned upon receipt of the statutory and regulatory approvals required for the disposal of parkland under New Jersey State law. Given the limited record with respect to the actions taken by the county after execution of the settlement agreement, we briefly review the rights and obligations required under State law for context.
Pursuant to a statutory grant of authority under the Green Acres laws,62011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*156 the NJDEP commissioner has prescribed rules and regulations governing the disposal or diversion of parkland property. See
The county was required to hold a public hearing on the application and provide the public with an opportunity to submit written comments to the NJDEP.
At some point after December 27, 2004, the county filed an application with the commission and requested that restrictions under the Green Acres laws be released for the partial driveway interest to be conveyed to Mr. DiDonato. Pursuant to an agreement entered into between the county and the commission, the county purchased 16.66 acres of land and agreed to dedicate that land as parkland encumbered by the Green Acres laws. A portion of the purchase price ($36,000) was funded with proceeds from the sale of the partial driveway interest to Mr. DiDonato. The balance of the purchase price was paid by the county with "open space tax funds and Green Acres funds". As a condition of the sale of the partial driveway interest, Mr. DiDonato agreed to convey to the county a reciprocal deed which permanently restricted the development of the Schaafsma parcel to one single-family home. On December 12, 2005, the commission approved that application and the sale of 2.05 acres of land from the county to Mr. DiDonato.72011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*158
On or about December 22, 2006, the county sent to Mr. DiDonato a letter acknowledging and thanking him for his "donation" of the development rights to the Schaafsma parcel. That letter advised Mr. DiDonato that the county did not independently appraise the donated property and that it was Mr. DiDonato's responsibility to determine the value of the donated property for "income tax deductibility" purposes.
On December 29, 2006, the county conveyed the partial driveway interest to Mr. DiDonato by deed (deed) from the county in exchange for (1) $47,031, and (2) a reciprocal deed from Mr. DiDonato transferring development rights to the Schaafsma parcel. The deed provided that the partial driveway interest conveyed to Mr. DiDonato merged into and became part of the Schaafsma parcel.
On March 6, 2007, the NJDEP and the county executed a Green Acres Release and Compensation Agreement and Deed of Restriction, whereby the State agreed to release the land restrictions on the partial driveway interest conveyed to Mr. DiDonato in exchange for a reciprocal deed from Mr. DiDonato to the county permanently restricting the development of the subject property to one single-family home. On March 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*159 19, 2007, Mr. DiDonato and the county executed a Deed of Restriction (deed of restriction), whereby Mr. DiDonato conveyed to the county a permanent restriction against the use of the Schaafsma property for more than one single-family home.
In October 2005 petitioners filed their 2004 return, on which they claimed a charitable contribution deduction relating to the easement contribution. Attached to that return was Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions, on which petitioners reported the appraised fair market value of the land conservation easement as $1,870,000 and their cost or adjusted basis as $300,000. The Form 8283 was not signed by an appraiser or an authorized representative of the county. Petitioners also attached to their 2004 return a Self Contained Complete Appraisal Report (appraisal) prepared by Tighue Appraisal Group (Tighue).
The appraisal was dated October 3, 2005, and valued three parcels of property owned by Mr. DiDonato as of August 27, 2004, the Schaafsma parcel and one additional parcel.8 The purpose of the appraisal was to estimate a fee simple estate of those three parcels, and the value of development rights of those parcels. The appraisal reported that the 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*160 market value of the three parcels unrestricted by the easement was $2,070,000. The appraisal also reported that the market value of the three parcels restricted by the easement was $200,000. The appraisal concluded that the value of the easement was the difference of $1,870,000.
During the discovery stage of this 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*161 proceeding, respondent requested from petitioners a Form 88239 signed by Tighue and the county. Mr. DiDonato, through counsel, responded that no such Form 8283 was received. By notice of deficiency dated February 20, 2009, respondent determined that petitioners were not entitled to deduct any part of the $1,870,000 charitable contribution reported on their 2004 Federal income tax return. Petitioners petitioned the Court on May 1, 2009.
The issue before the Court on the motion and the cross-motion is whether petitioners substantiated the reported charitable contribution in the manner required by
Summary judgment is intended to expedite litigation and avoid unnecessary and expensive trials of phantom factual issues.
Under
The parties disagree on whether the settlement agreement qualifies as a contemporaneous written acknowledgment under
Although
Black's Law Dictionary defines the term "acknowledgment" as "the act of making it known that one has received something." Black's Law Dictionary 23 (7th ed. 1999); see also Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 10 (10th ed. 1997). We agree with 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*166 this definition in the light of the purpose behind enactment of Congress enacted
Petitioners argue that the settlement agreement qualifies as a contemporaneous written acknowledgment because that agreement "legally obligated" Mr. DiDonato to donate his development rights in the Schaafsma parcel. We disagree. The substantive rights and obligations created by the settlement agreement on August 27, 2004, were "subject to and conditioned upon" the county's obtaining approval for the disposition of parkland from the commission at some future date. The commission, however, did not approve the disposition of the partial driveway interest until December 12, 2005, more than 15 months after the settlement agreement was executed. When the settlement agreement was 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*168 entered into on August 27, 2004, Mr. DiDonato was not under a contractual duty to convey his development rights to the county and no legal obligation was certain to occur. The county was therefore not able to acknowledge receipt of Mr. DiDonato's development rights on August 27, 2004, because his obligation to transfer those rights had not yet matured and were not certain to do so.
The settlement agreement also provided that if any term therein was not satisfied, then Mr. DiDonato and the county agreed to return to the special master for further proceedings. The outcome of those further proceedings would then replace any duty on the part of Mr. DiDonato to convey his development rights to the county. If the commission did not approve the disposition of the partial driveway interest, then the settlement agreement would have been superseded by the outcome of those additional proceedings. See, e.g.,
The chronology of events surrounding the county's contribution of the partial driveway interest to Mr. DiDonato and Mr. DiDonato's reciprocal conveyance of his development rights to the 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*169 county also suggests that the county was not assured of receiving Mr. DiDonato's development rights by August 27, 2004. After the settlement agreement was executed, the county applied to the commission for approval to dispose of the partial driveway interest in fee simple. Only after the county obtained the commission's approval to dispose of the partial driveway interest on December 12, 2005, did the county send Mr. DiDonato the letter dated December 22, 2006, which acknowledged and thanked him for his "donation". The county's actions indicate that the county did not regard Mr. DiDonato's obligation under the settlement agreement as mature until the commission approved disposition of the partial driveway interest. Given that the county did not regard Mr. DiDonato's contribution of his development rights as complete, how then could a county representative have acknowledged receipt of those rights? The answer, we believe, is that the county could not have acknowledged receipt of Mr. DiDonato's development rights as of August 27, 2004, because the condition obligating Mr. DiDonato to transfer those rights to the county (i.e., approval from the commission) had not been satisfied and therefore 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 149">*170 the obligations of Mr. DiDonato under that agreement had not matured.
Petitioners do not argue, and we do not find, that the letter from the county to Mr. DiDonato dated December 22, 2006, qualifies as a contemporaneous written acknowledgment for 2004. First, that letter does not satisfy the contemporaneousness requirement because it was obtained after petitioners filed the 2004 return. See
In the light of the foregoing, we hold that the settlement agreement does not qualify as a contemporaneous written acknowledgment within the meaning of
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the applicable versions of the Internal Revenue Code, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Some dollar amounts are rounded.
2. The grantors retained a limited life estate which expired upon the earlier of: (1) The death of both grantors; (2) the failure of the grantors to continuously reside in the house for more than 180 days; (3) destruction of a dwelling house located on the subject property (residence); or (4) the fifth anniversary of the closing date. The grantors agreed to pay monthly rent of $850 to Mr. DiDonato for each month that they resided in the residence following the fifth anniversary of the closing date.
3. At all relevant times, Mr. DiDonato owned at least one other parcel near the Schaafsma parcel. Petitioners assert that they had a prescriptive easement over property they owned that allowed them access to Cold Soil Road. The record is not clear whether Mr. DiDonato or his predecessor in interest pursued an action in New Jersey Superior Court claiming title to real property or claiming the right to possession in lieu of an ejectment action. See
4. Petitioners assert that the deed of easement was merely an expansion of an existing easement, the purpose of which was to provide Mr. DiDonato with sole and exclusive use of the driveway and to prevent the public from accessing the driveway.↩
5. We understand the Green Acres Fund to be the Garden State Preservation Trust (GSPT). See
6. The Commissioner of the NJDEP (NJDEP commissioner) is granted authority to prescribe rules and regulations governing the administration, operation, and use of lands as set forth in the New JerseyGreen Acres Land Acquisition Act of 1961,
7. We understand these 2.05 acres to be the same partial driveway interest which the county agreed to convey to Mr. DiDonato under the settlement agreement.
8. Although respondent does not allege any defect in the appraisal in the motion, we express concern over the validity and credibility of that appraisal. First, we observe that the appraisal includes in the value of the donated property the development rights on three parcels of property when the deed of restriction concerned development rights on only the two parcels making up the Schaafsma parcel. Second, the appraisal uses market value and not fair market value as a standard of value. In that regard, the definition of market value in the appraisal embodies selective elements of fair market value but does not encompass the definition of fair market value required by
9. Respondent's request for production of documents requested "Form 8823", which is a form used by a taxpayer to notify the Internal Revenue Service of noncompliance with the low-income housing tax credit provisions or any low-income housing building disposition. See
10. Petitioners do not assert that the Form 8283 which they filed with their 2004 return serves as a contemporaneous written acknowledgment. See