T.C. Memo. 2014-52
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
GORDON KAUFMAN AND LORNA KAUFMAN, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent*
Docket No. 15997-09. Filed March 31, 2014.
On remand from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit,
Kaufman v. Shulman, 687 F.3d 21 (1st Cir. 2012), aff'g in part,
vacating and remanding in part Kaufman v. Commissioner, 136 T.C.
294 (2011), and 134 T.C. 182 (2010), to consider (1) R's disallowance
of Ps' charitable contribution deductions on account of their
contribution of a facade easement to the National Architectural Trust
and (2) accuracy-related penalties.
Held: Disallowance of charitable contribution deductions
sustained on the ground that the value of the facade easement is zero.
*
This opinion supplements our Opinions in Kaufman v. Commissioner, 136
T.C. 294 (2011), and 134 T.C. 182 (2010), aff'd in part, vacated and remanded in
part sub nom. Kaufman v. Shulman, 687 F.3d 21 (1st Cir. 2012).
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[*2] Held, further, accuracy-related penalties sustained on the
basis of gross valuation misstatement or, alternatively, on the basis of
negligence or substantial understatement of income tax.
Frank Agostino, Julie Pruitt Barry, Eleanor E. Farwell, Michael Mattaliano,
and Michael E. Mooney, for petitioners.
Carina J. Campobasso and Janet F. Appel, for respondent.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: This case is before the Court on remand from the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. Kaufman v. Shulman, 687 F.3d 21 (1st Cir.
2012), aff'g in part, vacating and remanding in part Kaufman v. Commissioner,
136 T.C. 294 (2011), and 134 T.C. 182 (2010). The case involves deficiencies in
petitioners' Federal income tax for 2003 and 2004 resulting from respondent's
disallowance of petitioners' deductions for contributions of a facade easement and
of cash to the National Architectural Trust (NAT). The case also involves
accuracy-related penalties relating to those deductions. In Kaufman, we sustained
respondent's disallowance of petitioners' deductions for 2003 and 2004 on account
of the contribution of the facade easement and of petitioners' deduction for 2003
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[*3] on account of their cash contribution claimed for that year. We sustained
portions of the penalty determinations. The Court of Appeals vacated our decision
entered in accordance with our conclusions in Kaufman except with regard to the
deductibility of petitioners' 2003 cash contribution and the associated penalty.
The Court of Appeals remanded the matter to this Court for proceedings consistent
with its decision. The parties agree that the questions presented on remand are as
follows:
1. the allocation of the burden of proof with respect to the value of the
facade easement and the remaining penalties;
2. the effect of the contribution of the facade easement on the fair market
value of petitioners' property burdened by the easement; i.e., the amount, if any, of
the diminution in that fair market value resulting from the creation and grant of the
easement;
3. (a) whether an accuracy-related penalty may be imposed on account of
either a substantial or a gross valuation misstatement;
(b) if yes, whether the reasonable cause exception applies to avoid
imposition of the penalty;
(c) if no accuracy-related penalty on account of a valuation misstatement
is imposed, whether an accuracy-related penalty on account of either (1)
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[*4] negligence or disregard of rules or regulations or (2) a substantial
understatement of income tax may be imposed;
(d) if yes, whether the reasonable cause exception applies to avoid
imposition of the penalty.
The parties agree that the record is adequate to answer the questions
presented on remand. They have filed supplemental briefs. Unless otherwise
stated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years
in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
FINDINGS OF FACT
For convenience, we repeat or summarize here portions of our findings of
fact in Kaufman and make additional findings necessary to answer the questions
presented.
Background
Petitioners are husband and wife. Gordon Kaufman1 is the Morris A.
Adelman Professor of Management Emeritus of the Sloan School of Management
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He specializes in statistical analysis.
1
Since both petitioners hold doctoral degrees, and both could thus be
referred to as Dr. Kaufman, we will avoid confusion by, in general, referring to
them individually as Gordon Kaufman and Lorna Kaufman, respectively.
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[*5] Lorna Kaufman has a Ph.D. in developmental psychology from Boston
College and is president of her own company.
The Property
In 1999, Lorna Kaufman purchased real property (property) in Boston,
Massachusetts. The property consists of a lot and a single-family residence (a
rowhouse), which is petitioners' home. The property is in a designated historic
district and is subject to the South End Landmark District Residential Standards
and Criteria (South End Standards and Criteria).
The Preservation Agreement
In December 2003, Lorna Kaufman entered into a preservation restriction
agreement (preservation agreement) with NAT pursuant to which she granted to
NAT an easement in gross, in perpetuity (i.e., the facade easement), burdening the
property and pursuant to which, with respect to the property, she accorded to NAT
certain rights and, on behalf of herself and her successors in interest, she
undertook certain duties. Among those rights and duties are the following.
Without consent of NAT, the owner of the property may not alter, construct, or
remodel existing improvements on the property, nor may she place on the property
signs or markers that would change the condition, materials, or appearance of the
building's facade. Without NAT's consent, the owner may not extend existing
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[*6] improvements on the property, nor may she erect any new or additional
improvements. The owner may not without NAT's consent paint or clean the
facade. The owner agrees to maintain in good order the roof, facade, foundations,
and overall structural integrity of the building in the condition and appearance
existing on the date of the preservation agreement. The owner also agrees that any
repair, replacement, alteration, rehabilitation, or new construction work on the
facade will be done in accordance with "the Secretary of the Interior's Standards
for the Treatment of Historic Properties with Guidelines for Preserving,
Rehabilitating, Restoring, and Reconstructing Historic Buildings". The owner
agrees to carry insurance on the property with replacement cost coverage against
loss from all perils commonly covered under the broadest standard homeowner's
policy. The owner agrees that NAT may inspect the property. The owner also
agrees to reimburse NAT's costs and legal fees should she violate the preservation
agreement and it become necessary for NAT to bring suit to enforce it. The owner
agrees to allow NAT to enter the property in order to correct violations, and she
agrees to reimburse NAT's costs. The owner agrees that, if the preservation
agreement is ever extinguished, NAT will be entitled to a portion of the proceeds
from any subsequent sale.
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[*7] The Hanlon Appraisal
In January 2004, on Gordon Kaufman's inquiry of it, NAT recommended to
him two appraisers. The Kaufmans selected one, Timothy J. Hanlon, whom they
engaged to determine the diminution in the value of the property on account of the
contribution of the facade easement to NAT (hereafter, sometimes, value of the
facade easement). Mr. Hanlon has been certified by the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts as a State-certified residential real estate appraiser; he is also a
Housing and Urban Development FHA approved appraiser. He is a licensed real
estate broker. He inspected the property on January 20, 2004. He prepared an
appraisal of the property (Hanlon appraisal) as of that date, which, by letter dated
January 30, 2004, he submitted to Lorna Kaufman. He reported the value of the
property to be $1,840,000 before the grant of the facade easement. He concluded:
"The property is considered to have a reduction in fair market value of 12% of the
property's value prior to the easement donation, which equates to a loss of
$220,800 (rounded)."
NAT had put Mr. Hanlon on a list of what it represented to be qualified
appraisers that it provided to potential donors to NAT. The Hanlon appraisal is
one of nine appraisal reports that, beginning in 2003 and continuing through
approximately the end of 2004, Mr. Hanlon completed with respect to
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[*8] contributions of facade easements to NAT. Other than those nine reports, he
has no experience in appraising partial interests in real property. In preparing to
complete his first appraisal of a facade easement, Mr. Hanlon spoke by telephone
with someone at NAT, most likely Steven L. McClain, now president of NAT, or
Mory Bahar, a representative of NAT. His purpose for the call was to get a feel
for how appraisals of facade easements were done and what had been accepted by
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). His notes of that conversation indicate that
either Mr. McClain or Mr. Bahar told him that the range of values for facade
easements is between 11% for properties in highly regulated areas and ("towards")
15% in less regulated or unregulated areas. With respect to the 11% figure for
properties in highly regulated areas, Mr. Hanlon wrote in his notes: "95% fall in
this percentage". His final notation is: "Could use 11.5% - 12.5%". After he
completed a draft of the first of those appraisal reports (stating a reduction in the
property's fair market value of 11%), he mailed a copy to Mr. McClain, asking him
to critique it and offer feedback. In response, he received an email from Mr.
McClain stating: "Your appraisal is excellent! For clarity you may wish to restate
your reasoning in the concluding paragraph. Please see attached as a possibility.
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[*9] Your call!" Almost verbatim, Mr. McClain's suggestion appears in the
Hanlon appraisal and in earlier appraisals.2
Subsequently, on March 5, 2004, after he had completed eight reports with
respect to contributions of facade easements to NAT, Mr. Hanlon received an
email from Anna C. Bookwalter, NAT's director of operations, in which she wrote:
I am writing in regard to the 8 appraisals you have done for the
National Architectural Trust * * *.
After reviewing these appraisal reports you seem to have a good
grasp of the material needed to support your easement valuation. As
an addendum to the report, we require that each appraiser insert the
easement document. As you have already referenced it in your report,
2
The suggested wording (almost verbatim) is emphasized in the following
extract from the Hanlon appraisal.
The estimated fair market value of the property as of January 20,
2004, is $1,840,000. In determining the value of the easement, I have
taken into account the current city ordinances and laws that apply in
the City of Boston which are less restrictive than the preservation
deed restriction. I have also considered the additional restrictions
imposed on the property by the preservation deed restriction. Based
upon the guidelines set forth by the Internal Revenue Service, in a
heavily regulated market like Boston, the lower end of the range is
considered more appropriate since the market value impact of this
modification of the bundle of rights on value would likely be less
than in minimally regulated markets. The property is considered to
have a reduction in fair market value of 12% of the property's value
prior to the easement donation, which equates to a loss of $220,800
(rounded).
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[*10] no additional information is required in the text, just the
document itself, which I have attached.
We will add it to the 8 reports we already have, but please add it to all
future reports you do for our clients. If you have any questions about
easement appraisals, feel free to call me. Thanks for your help and
we look forward to working with you in the future.
Gordon Kaufman's Concerns as to Value
Lorna Kaufman testified that, as between her and Gordon Kaufman, he took
the lead in facilitating the contribution of the facade easement to NAT.
By email dated February 6, 2004, to Mr. Bahar, Gordon Kaufman expressed
his concern that "the reduction in the resale value of the property due to the
[facade] easement [is] so large as to overwhelm the tax savings that accrue from
it." He asked Mr. Bahar: "[D]o you have statistical documentation that bears on
how much of a reduction in resale value takes place for residential properties?"
Mr. Bahar responded by email of the same date, reassuring him as follows:
Impact of the Facade conservation easements on the value of the
property
1. In areas that are regulated by local historic preservation ordinances
and bodies such as Boston historic neighborhoods (including
yours) * * * properties with an easement are not at a market value
disadvantage when compared to other properties in the same
neighborhood.
In support of his conclusion, Mr. Bahar set forth the following data:
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[*11] 2. We have tracked 26 resold properties to-date on which we held an
easement, and none was resold at a loss or had any issues for resale that we
are aware of.
3. Over 100 lenders have approved to subordinate their loans to our
easements to-date in over 800 cases. * * * Why would these
banks (including yours) approve these transactions if they saw a
risk or adverse financial impact on their collateral??
* * * * * * *
7. One of our directors, Steve McClain, owns fifteen or so historic
properties and has taken advantage of this tax deduction himself.
He would have never granted any easement if he thought there
would be a risk or loss of value in his properties.
Mortgage Subordination
Before entering into the preservation agreement, Lorna Kaufman needed the
agreement of Washington Mutual Home Loans (Washington Mutual) to
subordinate its mortgage interest in the property to NAT's interest with respect to
the facade easement. To obtain that subordination, both petitioners executed and
submitted a statement to the Washington Mutual containing the following
paragraph.
The easement conveys the right of prior approval of any future
changes I wish to make on the exterior of the property. The Laws of
_______ already require government approval based on historic
preservation criteria. The easement restrictions are essentially the
same restrictions as those imposed by current local ordinances that
govern this property.
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[*12] Petitioners' Tax Returns
Petitioners filed joint Federal income tax returns for 2003 and 2004 (2003
return and 2004 return, respectively). On the 2003 return, petitioners reported a
charitable contribution of $220,800 for the contribution of the facade easement.
Before they filed the 2003 return, petitioners provided a copy of the Hanlon
appraisal to their long-time accountant, David Cohen, who reviewed it and found
that it was consistent in form with other real estate appraisals that he had seen.
Because of the limitations on charitable contribution deductions in section
170(b)(1)(C), petitioners claimed a charitable contribution deduction with respect
to the facade easement of only $103,377. On the 2004 return, petitioners claimed
a carryover charitable contribution deduction of $117,423 with respect to the
facade easement contribution.
Respondent's Examination
Respondent examined the 2003 and 2004 returns and, among other
adjustments, disallowed any deduction for the contribution of the facade easement
to NAT on, among other grounds, the ground that petitioners had failed to
establish the value of the contributed easement. Respondent also determined the
accuracy-related penalties in question. Petitioners have assigned error to
respondent's determination of the resulting deficiencies in tax and to the penalties.
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[*13] Respondent's Expert
In preparing for the trial of this case, respondent retained the services of
John C. Bowman III. Mr. Bowman has been certified by the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts as a State-certified general real estate appraiser. He has received a
Certificate of Completion for the Valuation of Conservation Easements program
offered by the American Society of Appraisers (and other organizations) and is
endorsed by the Land Trust Alliance. His appraisal work includes a particular
emphasis on conservation and preservation restrictions. He has served on the
Boston Landmarks Commission for 10 years, serving as chairman of the
commission for 6 years. He has extensive experience appraising partial interests
in real property, including conservation easements.
Mr. Bowman was retained by respondent to review the Hanlon appraisal
and to state his own view of the value of the facade easement. In advance of his
being retained by respondent, respondent's counsel provided Mr. Bowman with
copies of (1) the Hanlon appraisal and (2) an appraisal of the value of the facade
easement prepared by Joan Gootee (Gootee appraisal), an IRS employee. In his
proposal for expert witness services, Mr. Bowman expressed preliminary views as
to both appraisals. With respect to the Hanlon appraisal, he stated:
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[*14] In developing his opinion of the value of the facade easement
the appraiser acknowledged that "development potential is not
hampered as the property is currently improved to its highest and best
use as a single-family dwelling." Despite recognizing there would be
no change in the highest and best use of the property, the appraiser
made an extraordinary assumption that the facade easement would
result in a diminution in value.
First employing the sales comparison approach to develop an
opinion of the property value as unencumbered (before value), he
then applied a percentage discount to the before value to calculate the
value of the facade easement. The only support for the percentage
discount is a reference to an IRS memorandum. No appraisal of the
after value was performed so there was no paired sales data analysis
in support of an adjustment to otherwise comparable sales to make
them more comparable to the subject as encumbered by the facade
easement. Despite referencing the before and after method as the
correct method to be used in appraising conservation easements, the
appraiser inexplicably employed an inappropriate methodology.
With respect to the Gootee appraisal, he stated:
I also read the review appraisal report prepared by Joan Gootee
of the IRS. I agree with the reviewer that the application of a
discount percentage to the before value is not the appropriate
appraisal methodology for the valuation of the facade easement. I
also agree with the reviewer that the provisions of the facade
easement are duplicative of the underlying restrictions of the South
End Landmark District. Thus encumbrance by the facade easement
would likely have no measurable impact on the after value of the
property, resulting in only a nominal facade easement value.
Mr. Bowman is of the opinion that the grant of the facade easement to NAT
did not reduce the value of the property at all. In other words, in his opinion, the
value of the facade easement is zero.
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[*15] OPINION
I. Burden of Proof
In general, the taxpayer bears the burden of proof. See Rule 142(a)(1).
Section 7491(a)(1), however, shifts the burden of proof to the Commissioner if the
taxpayer both satisfies the preconditions set forth in section 7491(a)(2) and
introduces credible evidence with respect to any factual issue relevant to
ascertaining the taxpayer's proper tax liability. Petitioners argue that Mr. Hanlon's
testimony represents credible evidence that the value of the facade easement was
$220,800 and that, therefore, respondent has the burden of proving that it was not.
Respondent objects that Mr. Hanlon's testimony is not credible, nor have
petitioners satisfied the preconditions set forth in section 7491(a)(2).
Valuation does not present exclusively questions of fact. As the Supreme
Court stated recently in United States v. Woods, 571 U.S. __, __, 134 S. Ct. 557,
566 (2013):
[W]e doubt that "value" is limited to factual issues and excludes
threshold legal determinations. Cf. Powers v. Commissioner, 312
U.S. 259, 260 (1941) ("[W]hat criterion should be employed for
determining the 'value' of the gifts is a question of law"); Chapman
Glen Ltd. v. Commissioner, 140 T.C. No. 15, 2013 WL 2319282, at
*17 (2013) ("[T]hree approaches are used to determine the fair market
value of property," and "which approach to apply in a case is a
question of law"). * * *
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[*16] It is possible, however, that, when all threshold questions of law have been
settled or are not in dispute, there may remain no dispute as to the operative facts
and documents. In this case, because we are able to resolve the valuation question
on the basis of essentially agreed facts along with the assistance we may find
helpful in the parties' expert's opinions, we need not resolve the burden of proof
issue raised by petitioners. See Estate of Jelke v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2005-131, 2005 WL 1277407, at *4, vacated and remanded on another issue, 507
F.3d 1317 (11th Cir. 2007); see also Deskins v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 305, 322-
323 n.17 (1986); Payne v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-90, 2003 WL
1620725, at *6.3
3
As a bit more explanation as to why we need not here be concerned with
who bears the burden of proof, consider the following. "[T]he placement of the
burden of proof * * * would be controlling only if, as a matter of law, the evidence
presented by the parties must be deemed of equal weight." Brookfield Wire Co. v.
Commissioner, 667 F.2d 551, 553 n.2 (1st Cir. 1981), aff'g T.C. Memo. 1980-321.
As this Court has stated: "[E]xcept for extraordinary burdens (e.g., in fraud cases),
the burden of proof is merely a 'tie-breaker' * * * [it] is irrelevant unless the
evidence is in equipoise." Steiner v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1995-122, 1995
WL 121410, at *27. Although assignment of the burden of proof is potentially
relevant at the outset of any case, where (as in this case) the Court finds that a
preponderance of the evidence favors one of the parties, the case is not determined
on the basis of which party bore the burden of proof, and the assignment of burden
of proof becomes irrelevant. See Kean v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 575, 601 n.40
(1988) ("Our determinations have been made on the basis of the preponderance of
the evidence; accordingly, it is immaterial * * * who bears the burden of proof.
Deskins v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 305, 323 n.17 (1986).").
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[*17] The question of who bears the burden of proof with respect to the penalties
is different. Under section 7491(c), the Commissioner bears the burden of
production with regard to penalties and must come forward with sufficient
evidence indicating that it is proper to impose penalties. Higbee v. Commissioner,
116 T.C. 438, 446 (2001). However, if the Commissioner has met his burden of
production, the burden of proof remains with the taxpayer, including the burden of
proving that the penalties are inappropriate because of reasonable cause. Id. at
446-447.
II. The Value of the Facade Easement
A. Introduction
Section 170 allows a deduction for charitable contributions. In general,
section 170(f)(3) denies a deduction for a charitable contribution of an interest in
property that is less than the taxpayer's entire interest in the property. One
exception to that general rule, however, is for a qualified conservation
contribution. See sec. 170(f)(3)(B)(iii). We assume that by delimiting the
question before us with respect to Lorna Kaufman's contribution of the facade
easement to NAT to the diminution in value, if any, of the property on account of
that contribution, the parties agree that the contribution constituted a qualified
conservation contribution, to a qualified organization, of a qualified real property
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[*18] interest constituting, in particular, a perpetual conservation restriction. See
sec. 170(h)(1); sec. 1.170A-14(b)(2), Income Tax Regs. We will, therefore,
proceed directly to the question of value.
Section 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs., addresses the proper method
for valuing a contribution of a perpetual conservation restriction. The value of the
contribution is the fair market value of the perpetual conservation restriction at the
time of the contribution. If there is no substantial record of sales of easements
comparable to the donated easement, generally the fair market of the donated
restriction "is equal to the difference between the fair market value of the property
it encumbers before the granting of the restriction and the fair market value of the
encumbered property after the granting of the restriction." Id.
Petitioners defend the $220,800 value for the contribution reported on the
2003 return. Respondent believes that the facade easement had no value when it
was conveyed to NAT.
B. Arguments of the Parties
1. Introduction
The parties defend their respective valuations on the basis of expert and
other testimony and, for petitioners, by reference to the preservation agreement
and to an appraisal report by William J. Pastuszek, Jr.
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[*19] 2. Petitioners' Witnesses and Reports
a. Mr. Hanlon
i. Introduction
Petitioners offered, and the Court accepted, Mr. Hanlon as an expert on
valuation. We received the Hanlon appraisal as Mr. Hanlon's direct testimony.4
As stated, Mr. Hanlon is of the opinion that the value of the property before the
grant of the facade easement to NAT was $1,840,000. Mr. Hanlon reached that
conclusion principally on the basis of a sales comparison analysis, pursuant to
which he analyzed data from sales of three comparable properties (none
encumbered by a facade easement), all located near the property. He did not
express an opinion as to the value of the property after grant of the easement, but
he was of the opinion that "[t]he property is considered to have a reduction in fair
market value of 12% of the property's value prior to the easement donation, which
equates to a loss of $220,800 (rounded)." He therefore concluded that the fair
market value of the facade easement was $220,800.
4
Generally, we receive an expert's written report into evidence as his direct
testimony. Rule 143(g)(1) and (2).
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[*20] ii. South End Standards and Criteria
Mr. Hanlon ascribes the reduction in fair market value of the property to the
burdens imposed on Lorna Kaufman (and subsequent owners of the property) by
the preservation agreement. He recognizes that the property, like "[a]ll residential
buildings in Boston", is subject to substantial regulation, including building codes
and zoning laws, and that, because of its location in Boston's South End, it is
additionally subject to the South End Standards and Criteria.
The South End Standards and Criteria state that they are intended "to
preserve the physical features, architectural character and appearance of the South
End". With certain exceptions, they require approval by the South End Landmarks
Commission (commission) for all exterior alterations to any property within the
landmark district. They authorize the commission to issue a certificate of design
approval when it determines that proposed exterior alterations conform to the
South End Standards and Criteria. They provide that no building permit may be
issued for exterior alterations unless accompanied by a certificate of design
approval from the Commission. They provide specific repair criteria for many
elements of the exterior of a residential building, e.g., stairs, entrances, exterior
walls, windows, window openings and trim, bay, oriels and protrusions from
walls, roofs, signs, and utility and mechanical equipment. The detail of the
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[*21] specific repair criteria is illustrated by the criterion for railings, balustrades
and decorative balconies.
Existing cast iron stair railings, balustrades and decorative balconies
shall be retained. If they are badly deteriorated or non-existent,
replacement elements must be of a size and massiveness consistent
with the remaining original elements of the design or consistent with
the size, massing, profile and complexity of remaining examples of
iron work on nearby buildings. Simplified adaptions may be allowed
if they meet the above criteria. All iron work should be black in
color. * * *
iii. Overlap
Mr. Hanlon concedes that there is much overlap between the burdens
imposed on the owner of the property by the preservation agreement and the
burdens imposed on the owner by preexisting restrictions, particularly those found
in the South End Standards and Criteria. And while he believes that "changes or
alterations to the facade of the subject property * * * [were] already strictly
regulated", he also believes that "the Preservation Restriction Agreement imposes
stricter controls than those contained in the Landmark Commissions Standards and
Criteria." He concludes: "Properties encumbered by the Preservation Restriction
Agreement should sell at a penalty relative to unencumbered properties in similar
locations." His principal argument that the preservation agreement imposes
stricter controls is as follows:
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[*22] Unlike the South End Landmark Commission's Standards and
Criteria, the Preservation Agreement applies to more than just the
exterior walls, roof, and yard which are visible from the public way.
The agreement's broad definition of facade includes all exterior walls,
chimneys and roofs of the building and the land the building is
situated upon, imposing additional restrictions on the property over
and above those of the South End Landmark Commission.
He catalogs what he believes to be the comparative disadvantages (affecting the
value of the property) of the preservation agreement.
Some changes to the property which may be permitted by the South
End Historic District Standards and Criteria may not be allowed by
the National Architectural Trust. The Preservation Restriction
Agreement easement is granted in perpetuity while the historic
district ordinances and local zoning practices may change over time
to reflect changes in political, economic and aesthetic needs and
tastes in a community. The Historic District ordinances contain relief
for economic hardship, which the Preservation Restriction Agreement
does not. The Preservation Restriction Agreement may result in
higher insurance and property maintenance costs than those on
properties not so encumbered. Rehabilitation costs may be higher
also as the property owner could be obligated to restore or replace
deteriorated materials rather than replace them with cheaper substitute
materials. The requirement of obtaining consent prior to commencing
any exterior work on the property could result in delays in
construction and implementation of plans. The property owner is
subject to the inconvenience of periodic inspections of the facade to
assure compliance with the easement agreement and is at risk for
legal action to compel compliance with the terms of the easement
agreement in the event of a violation. Marketability could be affected
as a segment of the buying public may show resistance to being
subjected to yet additional limitations and restrictions on their
property rights. Marketability may be further diminished as future
buyers, in the event the Preservation Restriction Agreement is ever
extinguished, could bear the financial burden of having to pay back to
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[*23] the National Architectural Trust the full amount of the donation
upon any subsequent sale of the property. Resale value could also be
diminished because future owners are not able to benefit from the
substantial tax savings associated with the granting of a historic
facade easement. The potential for the greatest loss of value is
attributable to the National Architectural Trust's right to circumscribe
the owner's rights to utilize the property for its "highest and best use",
even if legally permissible. The loss of potential for demolition for
assemblage, subdivision or alternative use could have dramatic
financial implications. Although the subject property is severely
restricted by pre-existing regulations, any consideration of the
possibilities of variances and special permits is made moot by the
Preservation Restriction Agreement.
Notwithstanding those supposed comparative disadvantages of the preservation
agreement, Mr. Hanlon concedes that neither the preservation agreement nor the
preexisting restrictions hamper the potential for developing the property to its
highest and best use "as the property is currently [i.e., at the time of the
preservation agreement] improved to its highest and best use as a single family
home."
iv. Mr. Hanlon's Method
Mr. Hanlon found no record of sales in Massachusetts of easements
comparable to the facade easement. He understood that, where no established
market exists for easements, conservation restrictions are typically valued
indirectly by the difference between the fair market value of the burdened property
before and after the grant of the restriction. Because Mr. Hanlon was unaware of
- 24 -
[*24] any sales in the Boston area of residential properties encumbered by facade
easements, he was unable to determine the value of the property following the
contribution of the facade easement to NAT using comparable-sales data. Mr.
Hanlon had seen a document posted on a U.S. Department of the Interior, National
Park Service Web site that reproduced an article entitled "Facade Easement
Contributions", prepared by Mark Primoli (Primoli article), an IRS employee. The
Primoli article includes the following sentence (which Mr. Hanlon quoted in his
appraisal): "Internal Revenue Service Engineers have concluded that the proper
valuation of a facade easement should range from approximately 10% to 15% of
the value of the property." He also believed that court cases had consistently
decided that conservation easements had a value, typically in the range of 10% to
20% of the value of the encumbered property. Although the Primoli article does
not say so, Mr. Hanlon believes the range set forth in the article--from
approximately 10% of value of the encumbered property to approximately 15% of
that value--to be appropriate to properties (such as the property) situated in
historic districts already subject to architectural restrictions. He believes that, in
heavily restricted areas, additional restrictions would have less of an impact on the
value of the encumbered property and that, in lightly restricted areas, they would
have a greater impact on the value of the property. He believes that the percentage
- 25 -
[*25] reduction in value of the property on account of the contribution of the
facade easement to NAT fell somewhere between 10% and 15%.
To determine the appropriate percentage within that range, Mr. Hanlon first
made a list of the additional burdens that he believed would affect the value of a
residential property already developed to its highest and best use (i.e., as a
residence) if the owner encumbered the property with a facade easement.
Assuming that, in lightly restricted areas, those burdens would reduce the value of
the burdened property by the full 15% upper bound of the range, he assigned a
percentage to each of the burdens so that if each percentage were fully applied the
sum of the percentages would be 15%. His list, and the assigned percentages
(totaling 15%), is as follow:
(1) loss of development potential: 0%;
(2) additional regulation and bureaucracy: 2%;
(3) regulation on end walls: 0.25%;
(4) new regulation on rear and roof: 0.5%;
(5) diminishing of marketability: 2%;
(6) recapture:5 0.5%;
5
Explained by Mr. Hanlon as the recapture by NAT of a portion of the value
of the property if the facade easement is extinguished and the property
(continued...)
- 26 -
[*26] (7) maintenance and insurance requirements in excess of unencumbered
properties: 1.25%;
(8) legal exposure if easement is breached: 0.5% ;
(9) loss of right of future owners to receive tax benefits of
easements: 4.5%;
(10) new strict regulation of front facade: 1.5%;
(11) new regulation of yard and yard improvements: 0.5%; and
(12) restrictions on expansion of building: 1.5%.
He based those percentages on his judgment, experience, and, at least in the
case of burden (5) ("diminishing of marketability"), "common sense" that more
burdened property would sell for less. He presented no numerical data or
statistical analysis supporting the particular percentage he assigned to any of the
12 burdens. His next step in reaching his conclusion that contribution of the
facade easement to NAT reduced the fair market value of the property by 12% was
to compare the South End Standards and Criteria and the preservation agreement
and to make a list of what he thought to be the differences and similarities between
the two. He then adjusted the percentages he had determined in the first step to
reflect those differences and similarities. He increased to 0.75% the weight
5
(...continued)
subsequently sold.
- 27 -
[*27] accorded to burden (4), new regulation on rear, and roof (because of roofing
materials specified in the preservation agreement), and he accorded no weight to
burdens (3), regulation on end walls (since the encumbered building was mid-
block), (10), new strict regulation of front facade (since the preservation
agreement imposed no additional burden), and (12), restrictions on expansion of
building (since the property was developed to its highest and best use).
In response to a question from the Court, Mr. Hanlon acknowledged that his
deconstruction of the 15% upper bound of the range in the Primoli article into
smaller, particular percentages reflective of the separate burdens imposed by a
facade easement was a method unique to him and was not a generally accepted
appraisal practice or valuation method.
b. Pastuszek Report
Mr. Pastuszek, a Massachusetts certified real estate appraiser, prepared an
appraisal report (Pastuszek report) in which he used a matched sales analysis6 to
examine the effects of NAT's preservation restriction agreements on real property
6
For purposes of his report Mr. Pastuszek defines "matched sales analysis"
as "a comparison and analysis, using accepted appraisal methodologies, of sales of
residential properties encumbered by a perpetual historic preservation restriction
(or other comparable or analogous perpetual easement or restriction) compared to
one or more sales of comparable residential properties that are not encumbered by
such restriction."
- 28 -
[*28] prices in the Boston area. Mr. Pastuszek did not appear, and the Pastuszek
report was admitted solely for purposes of demonstrating that the question of
valuation is focused on the property at issue and that facade easements do not have
a zero value as a matter of law.
3. Respondent's Witness
a. Mr. Bowman
Respondent offered, and the Court accepted, Mr. Bowman as an expert in
appraising partial interests in property. We received his written report (Bowman
report) as his direct testimony. The report is styled "Summary Appraisal Review
Report Including Reviewer's Opinion of Value". Mr. Bowman states that his
assignment from respondent had two parts: (1) to review the analysis and
reasoning of the Hanlon appraisal, evaluate the adequacy of the supporting data,
and opine whether the valuation was credible, properly supported, and developed
in accordance with generally accepted valuation principles and standards and (2)
to opine as to the fair market value of the facade easement.
b. Appraisal Review
i. Introduction
Mr. Bowman's opinion of the Hanlon appraisal (i.e., the $220,800 value that
Mr. Hanlon determined for the facade easement) is as follows: "As the fruit of an
- 29 -
[*29] inappropriate valuation methodology employing a wholly unsupported
adjustment factor, the preservation restriction value of the Hanlon appraisal cannot
be said to be reasonable or credible." Mr. Bowman's reasons for reaching that
conclusion are as follows.
ii. Flaw in Method
Mr. Bowman believes that the preservation agreement resulted in the
subdivision of Lorna Kaufman's fee interest in the property into two partial
interests in the property and that Mr. Hanlon's appraisal task "should have been to
estimate the value of a partial interest, the preservation restriction, which is an
easement in gross." There being no market for perpetual conservation restrictions,
Mr. Bowman believes that Mr. Hanlon should have accomplished that task by
employing a three-step, two-appraisal procedure. The first step would be to
determine by appraisal the precontribution value of the property. The second step
would be to determine by a second (independent) appraisal the postcontribution
value of the property. The third step, if the difference between the first and second
determined values was negative, would be to assign that difference to the value of
the partial interest in property (the facade easement) contributed to NAT. That, he
states, would be consistent with the three-step procedure both suggested in section
- 30 -
[*30] 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs., and generally employed by
appraisers in valuing partial interests in property.
Mr. Bowman criticizes Mr. Hanlon for failing to take the second step; i.e.,
for not conducting a second appraisal of the property to determine its
postcontribution value. And while Mr. Bowman recognizes that Mr. Hanlon did
determine both pre- and post-contribution values of the property, he emphasizes
that Mr. Hanlon determined the postcontribution value not by appraisal but by
discounting the precontribution value that he had determined to reflect the range
of discounts set forth in the Primoli article, which Mr. Hanlon modified to reflect
his opinion of the added burdens imposed by the preservation agreement (over
those imposed by the South End Standards and Criteria). He believes that Mr.
Hanlon's method was flawed because Mr. Hanlon did not determine the
postcontribution value of the property independently from his determination of the
precontribution value of the property. In his opinion, relying on the Primoli article
to determine a discount to be applied to the precontribution value of the property
to estimate its postcontribution value "is not a valid methodology for the appraisal
of partial interests."
- 31 -
[*31] iii. Mr. Hanlon's Assumptions
Aside from his criticism of Mr. Hanlon's method, Mr. Bowman questions
Mr. Hanlon's basis for discounting the precontribution value of the property by
12% to determine its postcontribution value. He states: "Hanlon offers no data to
support either the direction or magnitude of this discount." He finds extraordinary
Mr. Hanlon's assumption that "[p]roperties encumbered by the Preservation
Restriction Agreement should sell at a penalty relative to unencumbered properties
in similar locations." He addresses under five headings the factors that he
understands Mr. Hanlon to have considered as contributing to the discount that he
applied to the precontribution value of the property.
Stricter Controls Result in Loss of Value. Mr. Bowman refers to a 2005
study by N. Edward Coulson and Michael L. Lahr, "Gracing the Land of Elvis and
Beale Street: Historic Designation and Property Values in Memphis", 33 Real Est.
Econ. 487 (2005),7 which concludes that the owners of properties in a more
restrictive local historic district enjoyed greater returns (more rapidly increasing
property values) than did owners of properties in less restricted local historic
districts or in national historic districts. Mr. Bowman believes that the study
7
An online version of the study was published in 2004 and can be found at
http://policy.rutgers.edu/faculty/lahr/Coulson&Lahr_July%202004_Memphis_RE
Economics.pdf (last visited Nov. 6, 2013).
- 32 -
[*32] implies that buyers value the additional preservation restrictions in the more
restrictive local district.8 To him "[the study] suggests that a potential buyer of a
preservation restriction-encumbered property does not see any less value in the
property even if the terms of the preservation restrictions are more strict than the
regulations governing the historic district."
The Restriction Constrains Highest and Best Use. Mr. Bowman points out
that Mr. Hanlon acknowledges that there is no change in the highest and best use
of the property on account of the preservation agreement. He adds: "As a matter
of zoning, the property already exceeds the maximum allowable building
envelope."
The Restriction Is Inflexible. In part, the preservation agreement provides
that "nothing contained herein shall be construed to limit the Grantee's right to
give its consent (e.g., to changes in the facade) or to abandon some or all of its
8
Mr. Bowman believes that homeowners in a historic district place premium
value on the assurance that the neighborhood surrounding their houses will remain
unchanged over time:
[The] assurance the neighborhood will not change in character has
value because the neighborhood condition impacts homeowner value
in the form of an externality. A well-maintained property will not be
as valuable in [a] neighborhood of poorly maintained properties as it
would be if the surrounding area were similarly well preserved.
Regulation of appearance in an historic district produces positive
neighborhood effects on value.
- 33 -
[*33] rights hereunder." Mr. Bowman states that, in 2003, NAT distributed a
document --Commonly Asked Questions About Conservation Easements (NAT
Q&As)--to prospective appraisers in the Boston area. To the question "What
criteria does the Trust use when reviewing a prospective change?", NAT answers:
"The Trust follows the 'Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Historic
Rehabilitation.' In general, the proposed change is acceptable if it is consistent
with the property's original architectural style." On the basis of the quotations
from the two documents, Mr. Bowman believes that, in approving changes to the
property, NAT need not be inflexible and, indeed, it would be no less flexible than
would be the commission in approving changes under the South End Standards
and Criteria.
The Restriction Imposes Higher Ownership Costs. Mr. Bowman disagrees.
He states that Mr. Hanlon provided no evidence of higher insurance or
maintenance costs. He believes: "The likely level of maintenance required under
the preservation restriction would be what any prudent owner occupant would do
to protect their [sic] investment absent the applicability of the historic district
guidelines or the preservation restriction." He does not believe that the
requirement to obtain consent from NAT before commencing outside work on the
property would impose costly delays. He points out that the NAT Q&As state that
- 34 -
[*34] it takes approximately two weeks to obtain approval from NAT for a
proposed exterior change to the property. That, he states, is the same period it
would take to obtain from the Commission a certificate of appropriateness with
respect to any exterior change. He concludes: "[A]n application filed
simultaneously with NAT and the * * * Commission could be approved
simultaneously two weeks later." Finally, he does not think that the periodic
inspection of the property's exterior required by NAT would inconvenience the
owner (as his presence is not required), nor does he think that the preservation
agreement increases the risk of legal action to enforce its terms: "The property
owner is already at risk for legal action by the [City of Boston's] Inspectional
Services Department for unauthorized alterations or for failure to maintain
(demolition by neglect)."
The Preservation Restriction Limits Marketability. Mr. Bowman disagrees.
He includes with his report an article entitled "Using the Historic Facade
Conservation Easement Deduction", reprinted from the Practical Real Estate
Lawyer (March 2003) and written by James M. Kearns, then president of NAT.
The article's lead reads: "By preserving a piece of historic architecture for future
generations, the property owner can get a big tax deduction with little cost or risk."
With respect to marketability, Mr. Kearns states:
- 35 -
[*35] Marketability
When considering whether a conservation easement might
interfere with a property's marketability, consider the three
overarching factors:
• Donating a conservation easement often places little additional
burden on the property owner over that which already exists
from the local governing authority;
• Those who purchase property in historic districts generally
value the architectural integrity of all the properties within the
community, and buyers of such properties are supportive of
regulations guarding historic preservation; and
• Properties in historic districts are uniquely different from each
other and few are available on the market at any given time.
Consequently, the presence or absence of an easement is only a
minor factor in the buying decision.
Because Mr. Bowman believes that no value is lost in granting a facade easement
on property in a local historic district (and, thus, no tax charitable contribution
deduction is available on account of the contribution), he believes that subsequent
owners would not discount the value of the property on account of the lost
opportunity for a charitable contribution deduction. Finally, he believes that, if
the facade easement has no monetary value, there would be no payback to NAT in
the event it was extinguished.
- 36 -
[*36] c. Opinion of Value
i. Introduction
Mr. Bowman's opinion is that there was no diminution in the value of the
property on account of the contribution of the facade easement to NAT. His
opinion follows from certain preliminary conclusions, viz:
• There is no change in the highest and best use resulting from
encumbrance by the preservation restriction.
• There is no difference between the terms of the preservation
restriction and the underlying South End Landmark Commission
Standards and Criteria that would likely be recognized by a typical
buyer.
• There is no market evidence of difficulty in marketing or financing
preservation restriction-encumbered properties.
• The evidence does not demonstrate a market recognition of
diminution in value.
His final conclusion is that, since the precontribution value of the property
($1,840,000) is equal to its postcontribution value (the same), the value of the
facade easement was zero.
ii. Procedures Mr. Bowman Followed and
Precontribution Value
Mr. Bowman states that, to determine the value of the facade easement, he
followed the procedures outlined in section 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs.
- 37 -
[*37] Finding no substantial record of sales of easements comparable to the facade
easement, he looked to the difference between the pre- and post-contribution
values of the property to determine the value (if any) of the facade easement. He
agrees with Mr. Hanlon that the highest and best use of the property before the
contribution was as a single-family dwelling, and he concurs with Mr. Hanlon's
conclusion based on his sales comparison analysis that the precontribution value
of the property was $1,840,000. He did no sales comparison analysis to determine
the postcontribution value of the property because, like Mr. Hanlon, he could find
no properties both burdened by a preservation restriction and sold
contemporaneously with the contribution of the facade easement to NAT.
iii. Postcontribution Value
As stated supra, Mr. Bowman believes that the highest and best use of the
property did not change on account of the contribution of the facade easement to
NAT. Taking that use into consideration, he believes that the sales of
unencumbered properties found by Mr. Hanlon may without further adjustments
serve as comparable sales to determine the postcontribution value of the property.
He explains:
Although none of the comparable West Newton Street sales is
encumbered by a preservation restriction, I conclude that the typical
buyer would find the restrictions of the preservation restriction no
- 38 -
[*38] more burdensome than the underlying South End Landmark
District Standards and Criteria.
To reach that conclusion, Mr. Bowman compared the South End Standards
and Criteria with the preservation agreement on a component by component
(comparing, for example, restrictions on alteration, replacement standards,
maintenance requirements, permitting, and access requirements). He found the
components of the preservation agreement to be "basically duplicative" of, and
"not materially different" from the South End Standards and Criteria. He believes
that exterior work approved under the South End Standards and Criteria would
meet the standards of the preservation agreement and that permitting for one set of
restrictions would serve for the other. He recognizes that the preservation
agreement requires additional (replacement cost) insurance coverage, which he
believes a prudent homeowner would be wise to carry in any event. He likewise
believes that a prudent homeowner would maintain his home to the standards
required by the preservation agreement.
Making no further adjustments to the precontribution comparables, he
concluded that the postcontribution value of the property was identical to its
precontribution value, viz, $1,840,000.
- 39 -
[*39] iv. Resale Study
To rebut Mr. Hanlon's opinion that encumbering a property with a
preservation restriction diminishes the marketability of the property, Mr. Bowman
obtained and analyzed data concerning sales and resales of residential properties
in the Boston area. He was looking to see whether encumbering a property with a
preservation restriction reduced its marketability. His approach was to first
identify properties for which information was available showing both the sale
price of the property before encumbrance with a conservation restriction and the
resale price of the property after encumbrance. He then compared the differences
between the individual sale and resale prices of an appropriate sample of those
properties with the differences between the individual sale and resale prices of the
population of properties sold during the same period. He was looking to see
whether encumbering a property with a conservation restriction affected the
change in value of the property over time as compared to the change in value of all
properties over time. He looked for sales of conservation restriction encumbered
properties in three historic districts in Boston, viz, Beacon Hill, Back Bay, and the
South End. He found seven sales of properties encumbered by preservation
restrictions conveyed to NAT, and he used six of them. All of those sales occurred
after the date of the preservation agreement. Three of the six sales were of
- 40 -
[*40] properties in the South End historic district. He compared the prices at
which each property sold before being encumbered to the price at which it sold
after having been encumbered. For all six sales, the postencumbrance sale price
exceeded the preencumbrance sale price.
Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are indices measuring
changes in the prices of single-family, detached residences using the repeat-sales
method, which compares the sale prices of the same properties over time. The
indices track such price changes both nationally and in various metropolitan areas,
including Boston. For each of the six properties, Mr. Bowman compared the
appreciation over the holding period of the property with the Case-Shiller Index
for upper-tier residential real properties in Boston for the same period. For four of
the six properties, appreciation over the holding period exceeded the change in the
Case-Shiller Index for the same period. For two of the six properties, total
appreciation was less. The median year-to-year appreciation rate among the six
properties was 8.1%, which exceed the 5.5% median year-to-year rate for the
index the same period. On the basis of his analysis, he concludes: "[N]o
downward adjustment to an unencumbered comparable sale is necessary to make
that sale more comparable to an encumbered property." On the basis of that
analysis, he further concludes that Mr. Hanlon was wrong in suggesting that
- 41 -
[*41] preservation restrictions diminish marketability: "The analysis of these six
preservation restriction-encumbered properties indicates that they were in fact
marketable".9
v. Interviews
As a check on his conclusions, he interviewed the buyers of four of the six
properties, "each of whom", he reports, "said the preservation restriction did not
affect their offering price." He also interviewed three brokers, who, he concedes,
had little experience from which to form an opinion about the impact of
preservation restrictions. He reports that the consensus of their opinions "was that
preservation restrictions in a historic district would likely have no effect on the
marketability, that is, either on buyer interest or time on the market, or on the
ability of a buyer to obtain a mortgage."
vi. Literature Search
He did a literature search, and he concludes:
Valuation literature on the influence of historic designation on
property value overwhelmingly points to a neutral to positive value
effect. Studies of historic district regulation offer no systematic
9
Recognizing that some buyers might perceive that the preservation
agreement diminished value, Mr. Bowman notes: "[U]nless all potential buyers
perceive a value diminution from the preservation restriction, the sale price will be
set by buyers who do not recognize a diminution."
- 42 -
[*42] evidence that markets have priced homes in historic districts at
a discount to reflect the additional burden of regulation.
Instead, the results suggest that properties burdened by historic
district regulation outperform comparable properties not subject to
historic district regulation. * * *
He believes:
Logically, it is unlikely that buyers in a historic district would value
the restrictions of a preservation restriction 180 degrees differently,
that is, as diminishing property value.
The purpose of a preservation restriction, continuity, is the same as
the purpose of a historic district. The Coulson and Lahr study in
Memphis [supra] suggests that a potential buyer of a preservation
restriction-encumbered property does not see any less value in the
property even if the terms of the preservation restrictions are more
strict than the regulations governing the historic district.
vii. Conclusions From Resale Study
Mr. Bowman summarizes the conclusions he draws from his resale study as
follows.
My analysis of resales of preservation restriction-encumbered
properties indicates that in this market neither buyers nor lenders
have shown resistence to properties encumbered by such preservation
restrictions.
Based on my analysis of preservation restriction-encumbered sales I
conclude no downward adjustment to an unencumbered comparable
sale is necessary to make that sale more comparable to an encumbered
property.
- 43 -
[*43] Stepping back from those conclusions, he states what he would have to
believe to be true to accept Mr. Hanlon's opinion that a preservation restriction on
a property in a local historic district diminishes the value of that property.
I would have to believe a potential buyer recognizes a marginal
difference in the respective restrictions, quantifies them as an
additional cost of ownership over the holding period that they then
apply as a discount to their perception of the unencumbered value to
result in their offer for the encumbered property.
However, it is unlikely that buyers would perceive an additional cost
as a certainty and factor that into their offer. Given that I, an
appraiser and real estate developer with 30 years of experience in the
field do no[t] perceive any additional cost associated with the
preservation restriction, it is even less likely that a typical buyer
would perceive such a cost.
The assumption that if there is a difference in applicable restrictions
there is a difference in value is incorrect. There is a difference in
value only, when the collective judgment of the market recognizes a
difference. There can be a distinction without a difference in value.
viii. Conclusions as to Value
Mr. Bowman concludes:
In my opinion, the encumbrance on 19 Rutland Square by the facade
easement preservation restriction cannot be seen to discernibly affect
the value of the property. I find that the after value was equal to the
before value.
Before value $1,840,000
- After value 1,840,000
= Preservation restriction value 0
- 44 -
[*44] I conclude that there was no market value associated with the
facade easement preservation restriction as of December 31, 2003.
C. Mr. Bowman's Objectivity
In his proposal for expert witness services, Mr. Bowman expressed his
preliminary views, set forth supra, with respect to both the Hanlon appraisal and
the Gootee appraisal. On the basis of those preliminary views, petitioners
complain: "Respondent proffered an expert who began his work to appraise the
facade easement donation at issue here with a foregone conclusion that the
easement had zero value."
Proceedings in this Court are conducted in accordance with the Federal
Rules of Evidence. See sec. 7453; Rule 143(a). Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of
Evidence states in part that expert opinion is admissible if it "will help the trier of
fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue".10 An expert whose
10
The full text of Fed. R. Evid. 702 is as follows:
Rule 702. Testimony by Expert Witnesses
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill,
experience, training, or education may testify in the form of an
opinion or otherwise if:
(a) the expert's scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge
will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to
determine a fact in issue;
(continued...)
- 45 -
[*45] statements indicate a lack of objectivity is not useful to the Court. See
Estate of Halas v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 570, 577 (1990) ("[E]xperts may lose
their usefulness and credibility when they merely become advocates for one
side."). In his proposal, Mr. Bowman did review the two appraisals he had been
given by respondent's counsel, apparently as she had requested. His agreement
with Ms. Gootee's conclusions that the South End Standards and Criteria are
duplicative of the restrictions imposed by the preservation agreement and,
therefore, the latter restrictions would have no measurable impact in determining
the postcontribution value of the property does not indicate a lack of objectivity
but, rather, his intimate knowledge of the South End Standards and Criteria. He
had served on the Boston Landmarks Commission for 10 years, 6 as chairman.
We find no fault with Mr. Bowman's objectivity. The thoroughness of his
report belies any suggestion that he was simply justifying preconceived
conclusions.
10
(...continued)
(b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
(c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods;
and
(d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the
facts of the case.
- 46 -
[*46] D. Analysis
1. Introduction
The parties agree that, in the absence of a market for perpetual conservation
restrictions, the value (if any) of the facade easement should be determined by the
before-and-after method outlined in section 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs.
The parties rely heavily on expert opinion testimony as to the pre- and post-
contribution values of the property.
2. Qualifications of Messrs. Hanlon and Bowman
Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence states that one is qualified as an
expert witness "by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education".
We have no doubt that, on the basis of his credentials set forth supra,
respondent's expert, Mr. Bowman, is qualified as offered, i.e., as an expert in
appraising partial interests in property. Mr. Hanlon, on the other hand, was
offered only as an expert on valuation, without any particular expertise in
appraising partial interests in property. Nevertheless, one may qualify as an expert
witness by dint of knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education. Indeed, in
determining the value of a conservation restriction, we have accepted the
testimony of a real estate appraiser with no prior experience in valuing that type of
restriction. Johnston v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-475; Losch v.
- 47 -
[*47] Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-230. What does concern us with respect
to Mr. Hanlon's qualification to testify, however, is his close relationship with
NAT. His only experience in appraising facade easements is the nine reports that
he did with respect to nine facade-easement contributions to NAT. He looked to
NAT to learn how appraisals of facade easements were done before he attempted
the first of those reports, and he submitted a draft of the first report to NAT for
validation before he completed it. He incorporated in his reports wording
suggested by NAT. After he completed eight reports, NAT's director of
operations, Ms. Bookwalter, expressed NAT's satisfaction with his work but
required that he add a document (the easement document) to all future reports.
The tone of her communication to him suggests that she believed that NAT had a
proprietary interest in Mr. Hanlon's reports. She begins her communication by
speaking of "the 8 appraisals you have done for the National Architectural Trust".
(Emphasis added.) Without asking permission from him, she says that NAT
would add the easement document to the reports he had already submitted. She
thanked him for his work and expressed NAT's expectation that it would work
with him in the future.
- 48 -
[*48] Moreover, NAT was not indifferent to the values Mr. Hanlon determined,
nor was he indifferent to what would please NAT. The Court of Appeals pointed
out:
As indicated by the large cash contributions required of donors,
the Trust had a substantial economic incentive for itself in facilitating
such conservation easements; and to this end and because of the 10
percent target for donations, it also had a stake in assuring a high
valuation. Similarly, the appraiser, who admitted receiving fees for a
succession of such appraisals for Trust easements, assuredly had an
interest in remaining on the list of those recommended by the Trust to
potential donors. [Kaufman v. Shulman, 687 F.3d at 32.]
Mr. Hanlon had what we might describe as a patron in the person of NAT.
It made work available to him by putting his name on its list of qualified
appraisers; it reviewed and commented on his work, and its views on the range of
values for facade easements may have influenced the development of his own
views. On the basis of his oral testimony articulating the development of his
method for valuing the facade easement, however, we are not persuaded that his
objectivity was fatally compromised or that he acted merely as an advocate for
NAT's views. See our discussion of objectivity supra pp. 44-45. However, we do
not ignore or disregard Mr. Hanlon's closeness to NAT and the singularity of his
experience in valuing facade easements for clients and for a patron all interested in
establishing high values for the easements; we weigh those factors in the balance
- 49 -
[*49] of whether--and the degree to which--to accept Mr. Hanlon's expert
testimony. See Martin Ice Cream Co. v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. 189, 222 (1998)
(similar resolution concerning closeness of appraiser to his client).
3. Mr. Hanlon's Testimony
Mr. Hanlon believes that contributing the facade easement to NAT reduced
the value of the property. Since he lacked sale-price data for sales of either facade
easements or residential properties encumbered by facade easements, he could not
use the methods of estimating the value of a facade easement approved in section
1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs. He had, however, estimated that the
precontribution value of the property was $1,840,000 (an amount not in dispute,
which we accept and find). With only that one data point, he testified that he "was
grasping" for some method to value the facade easement. He had the Primoli
article, and he had found repeated references to it. He had also found court cases
showing a range of discounts for perpetual conservation restrictions. He believed
that it was generally accepted appraisal practice to apply a discount within the
ranges he had found when sufficient market data was unavailable. We have
described how, to find an in-range discount, he deconstructed the 15% upper
bound of the range in the Primoli article into smaller, component percentages
reflective of the burdens that he thought were imposed by a facade easement; he
- 50 -
[*50] then made adjustments to those component percentages to reflect what he
believed to be the differences and similarities between the South End Standards
and Criteria and the preservation agreement, concluding that the value of the
facade easement was 12% of the precontribution value of the property. He
concedes that his deconstruction of the 15% upper bound in the Primoli article
into smaller, component percentages reflective of the burdens imposed by a facade
easement was a method unique to him and not a generally accepted appraisal
practice or valuation method.
Expert testimony must be "the product of reliable principles and methods".
Fed. R. Evid. 702(c). Expert witness testimony can be "reliable even though the
expert's methodology is not generally accepted in her field." 3 Stephen A.
Saltzburg, Michael M. Martin & Daniel J. Capra, Federal Rules of Evidence
Manual, sec. 702.02[5], at 702-19 (10th ed. 2011). Nevertheless, we need not rely
on the unsupported opinion of an expert witness. Holman v. Commissioner, 130
T.C. 170, 213 (2008), aff'd, 601 F.3d 763 (8th Cir. 2010). Mr. Hanlon's
deconstruction of the 15% Primoli article upper bound depended, first, on his
acceptance of 15% as the standard percentage reduction in value of a property in a
lightly regulated area on account of the owner's severance and conveyance of a
facade easement. He then had to identify the separate burdens that he thought
- 51 -
[*51] were imposed on the owner because of the conveyance of the easement,
assigning a percentage value to each so that the sum of the assigned percentages
was 15%. Even were we to accept that he identified the constituent burdens
constituting the overall burden imposed by a facade easement, we accept neither
his 15% starting point nor the relative percentages that he assigned to each
constituent burden.
Mr. Hanlon's starting point--that properties in lightly regulated areas suffer
a 15% reduction in value on account of the severance and conveyance of a facade
easement--is based on neither reliable market data nor specific attributes of the
property. It is based on what he believes the courts and the IRS had allowed in
prior cases. Whether it is an upper or lower bound, there is no standard percentage
to which one may make adjustments to arrive at a value appropriate for a particular
property. As we said in Nicoladis v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-163, 1988
Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 187, at *21,
we do not mean to imply that a general "10-percent rule" has been
established with respect to facade donations. There was a fair amount
of discussion by the parties at trial about whether the Court had
established a "10-percent rule" in * * * [Hilborn v. Commissioner, 85
T.C. 677 (1985)]. We did not there and do not here. Hilborn
establishes as acceptable the before and after method of valuation,
and while under the circumstances of that case a 10-percent figure
- 52 -
[*52] was relied upon, valuation itself is still a question of facts and
circumstances. * * *
See also Scheidelman v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-18, at *14.
Nor can we accept the component percentages that he assigned to the 12
constituent burdens that he identified. Again, there was no market data. He
testified that the assignments of percentages were "just based on [his] judgment."
He elaborated that the 2% that he assigned to the burden he identified as
"additional regulation and bureaucracy" was based on his judgment and
experience in working with buyers and sellers, although on cross-examination he
conceded that he had not worked with buyers and sellers who had been
considering easement donations. When asked how he came to the conclusion that
the marketability of property would be diminished by 2%, he answered: "[I]t's
common sense" that the more restricted property "is going to have lower
marketability." He did not, however, explain how he got to 2%. He testified that
he based the 0.5% that he assigned to "recapture" on "what I felt the limitation on
marketability would be." As to the 1.25% he assigned to "maintenance and
insurance requirements in excess of unencumbered properties", he admitted that he
did no analysis to arrive at that figure and "just chose" it. Similarly, with respect
to the 0.5% assigned to "legal exposure if easement is breached": "just judgment."
- 53 -
[*53] Simply put, given his limited experience appraising facade easements and
his apparent preconception that the component percentages would total 15% in a
lightly regulated area, we are not persuaded that Mr. Hanlon's common sense,
feelings, and judgment constitute a reliable basis for the percentage reductions in
value that he assigned to each of the constituent burdens constituting a facade
easement (and, further, the adjustments he made to those percentages to reflect
differences between the burdens imposed by the South End Standards and Criteria
and the burdens imposed by the preservation agreement). And while Mr. Hanlon's
method of deconstructing the burden imposed by a facade easement into
constituent elements and assigning a percentage value to each element is not per se
unreliable because it is unique to him and is not a generally accepted appraisal
practice or valuation method, the lack of general acceptance and the uniqueness of
his method are facts relevant to our determining its reliability, and those facts
support our conclusion that his method is not reliable.11 See Saltzburg et al.,
supra, at 702-19 ("general acceptance test * * * is relevant to but not dispositive of
admissibility"). Finding his method not to be reliable, we give no weight Mr.
11
As stated supra, Mr. Bowman, who is experienced in appraising partial
interests in property and conservation easements in particular, is of the opinion
that, "relying on the Primoli article to determine a discount to be applied to the
pre-contribution value 'is not a valid methodology for the appraisal of partial
interests.'"
- 54 -
[*54] Hanlon's testimony that the contribution of the facade easement to NAT
reduced the value of the property by 12% (i.e., by $220,800).12
4. The Pastuszek Report
As discussed supra pp. 27-28, Mr. Pastuszek, a Massachusetts certified real
estate appraiser, prepared an appraisal report in which he used a matched sales
analysis to examine the effects of NAT's preservation restriction agreements on
real property prices in the Boston area. At trial, petitioners put the Pastuszek
report before the Court as a component of an exhibit that petitioners offered and
that was acceptable to respondent but for the Pastuszek report, which respondent
objected to since petitioners had not qualified Mr. Pastuszek as an expert witness.
The parties agreed that the Pastuszek report would not be struck but would be
admitted solely for the purpose of demonstrating that the question of valuation is
focused on the property at issue and that facade easements do not have a zero
value as a matter of law, a proposition to which respondent readily assented. On
brief, petitioners propose that we find that, in his report, Mr. Pastuszek concluded
12
Whether we exclude his testimony under Fed. R. Evid. 702(c) as not being
the product of reliable principles and methods or consider it and give it no weight
would seem to make little difference in this bench trial. Cf. Metavante Corp. v.
Emigrant Sav. Bank, 619 F.3d 748, 760 (7th Cir. 2010) ("Although we have held
that the court in a bench trial need not make reliability determinations before
evidence is presented, * * * the determinations must still be made at some point.").
- 55 -
[*55] that properties with facade easements contributed to NAT suffer a
diminution in value of 8% to 11%. Respondent objects, citing the limited purpose
for which the Pastuszek report was admitted into evidence. We agree with
respondent, and make no such finding. Moreover, given respondent's assent to the
propositions that the question of valuation is focused on the property at issue and
facade easements do not have a zero value as a matter of law, we see no reason to
(and do not) consider the content of the Pastuszek report.
5. Mr. Bowman's Testimony
a. Introduction
The principal difference in opinion between Messrs. Hanlon and Bowman is
the latter's conclusion "that the typical buyer would find the restrictions of the
preservation restriction no more burdensome than the underlying South End
Landmark District Standards and Criteria." Once he reached that conclusion, the
precontribution comparable properties could do double duty for him as
postcontribution comparables since in his opinion the effect of the preservation
agreement on value was nil. His conclusion that "there was no market value
associated with the facade easement preservation restriction" naturally followed.
- 56 -
[*56] b. Comparing the Two Sets of Restrictions
Although we have rejected Mr. Hanlon's testimony that the contribution of
the facade easement to NAT reduced the value of the property by 12%, it does not
necessarily follow that the facade easement had no value, as Mr. Bowman
believes. Petitioners argue that, "[b]y donating the facade easement, the Kaufmans
ceded control of the maintenance and appearance of the protected facades to the
Trust." They also argue that, by conveying an interest in the property to NAT,
Lorna Kaufman diminished the marketability of the interest in the property she
retained. They conclude: "[L]ack of control and lack of marketability reduce the
value of the Property". Acknowledging that we might disregard Mr. Hanlon's 12%
reduction in value, they argue that we should not altogether disregard his
consideration of the impact of the preservation agreement on value. Mr. Hanlon's
opinion is: "Properties encumbered by the Preservation Restriction Agreement
should sell at a penalty relative to unencumbered properties in similar locations."
Petitioners summarize the factors that Mr. Hanlon considered in forming his
opinion as follows:
• the additional regulation and bureaucracy that resulted from the
donation of the facade easement;
• the new regulation on the rear and roof of the Property under the
Rutland Square Agreement;
- 57 -
[*57] • the impact of potentially higher maintenance and insurance costs
to comply with the terms of the Rutland Square Agreement;
• the risk that the owner of the Property might face legal action to
compel compliance with the Rutland Square Agreement; and
• the restrictions on the yard and yard improvements under the
Rutland Square Agreement.
Mr. Bowman, on the other hand, believes that the two sets of restrictions,
although using "slightly different language", share "the same intent and effect."
He is of the opinion that the restrictive components of the preservation agreement
are "basically duplicative" of, and "not materially different" from, the South End
Standards and Criteria. We think that Mr. Bowman has the better of the argument.
Mr. Hanlon has failed to persuade us that the preservation agreement is materially
more restrictive than the South End Standards and Criteria. We will not proceed
to a component-by-component comparison of the two sets of restrictions but will
address what seem to be Mr. Hanlon's key points. For the rest, we rely on and
adopt Mr. Bowman's opinion.
Most notably, in his discussion of the relative disadvantages of the
preservation agreement, Mr. Hanlon states: "The potential for the greatest loss of
value is attributable to the National Architectural Trust's right to circumscribe the
owner's rights to utilize the property for its 'highest and best use', even if legally
- 58 -
[*58] permissible. The loss of potential for demolition for assemblage,
subdivision or alternative use could have dramatic financial implications."
Inexplicably, however, he subsequently states: "[N]either the preservation
agreement nor the preexisting restrictions hamper the potential for developing the
property to its highest and best use as the property is currently [i.e., at the time of
the preservation agreement] improved to its highest and best use as a single family
home." Also, in his list of the constituent burdens encumbering properties in
lightly regulated areas, he shows 0% for "loss of development potential", and he
reduces from 1.5% to 0% the comparative disadvantage for the burden described
as "restrictions on expansion of building". Mr. Bowman states: "As a matter of
zoning, the property already exceeds the maximum allowable building envelope."
Mr. Holman has failed to persuade us that the preservation agreement
circumscribes the owner's rights to use the property for its highest and best use
and, thus, reduces its value.
Mr. Holman believes that the preservation agreement imposes additional
restrictions because, unlike the South End Standards and Criteria, "[it] applies to
more than just the exterior walls, roof, and yard which are visible from the public
way. The agreement's broad definition of facade includes all exterior walls,
chimneys and roofs of the building and the land the building is situated upon".
- 59 -
[*59] Nevertheless, he reduces from 1.5% to 0% the comparative disadvantages
for the burdens describe as "regulation on end walls" and "restrictions on
expansion of building". He increases from 0.5% to 0.75% the comparative
disadvantage for the burden described as "new regulation on rear and roof".
During cross-examination, in explaining his 0.25% increase, he testified to his
belief that the South End Standards and Criteria did not cover the roof of the
building, but he stood corrected when pointed by respondent's counsel to the
portion of those standards and criteria addressing roofs in detail. The heading of
that portion illustrates its comprehensiveness: "ROOFS (including rooflines,
cornices and dormers, skylights, greenhouses, arbors, penthouses, roof fences and
decks, mechanical penthouses, solar panels, and devices and the like)." After
reading the restrictions applicable to roofs, he insisted, nevertheless, that the
standards and criteria do not cover roofing material that might have to be replaced.
That is not universally true, since, with respect to slate roofs, the standards and
criteria state that, for visible portions of a slate roof requiring replacement, "slate
or a non-reflective material similar in color and texture to slate may be allowed."
In any event, the property's roof is described in the preservation agreement as
"asphalt shingle", a commonly used and widely available roofing material, and the
preservation agreement requires only that the grantor agree "to maintain in good
- 60 -
[*60] order the roof * * * in the condition and appearance existing on the effective
date of the this Restriction". It is difficult for us to see that a buyer of the property
would attach any penalty to what appears to be a nonexistent or, at best,
insignificant difference between the South End Standards and Criteria and the
preservation agreement as they apply to roof repairs.
Mr. Holman attaches a 0.5% loss in value to "new regulation of yard and
yard improvements". The preservation agreement regulates the property's facade
(a defined term), including "landscape features noted as character defining features
in Attachment B [to the preservation agreement]." Attachment B states: "A small
front garden area is covered in smooth rocks encircling a young deciduous tree,
and is protected by a low, decorative iron fence." It also states: "There does not
appear to be a back yard associated with this rowhouse." The preservation
agreement obligates the owner of the property to maintain the facade in good
order, as it existed on the date of the preservation agreement, and it restricts
repairs, replacements, and alterations. The South End Restrictions and Criteria
include among the "most important features of buildings * * * the front yard".
They require review of all proposed changes. Preference is given to "alterations
that maintain, preserve, or restore" according to stated criteria that disapprove in
advance changes such as covering the front yard with asphalt or similar materials
- 61 -
[*61] and that encourage planting. With respect to replacement of fences, they
incorporate the criteria that we quote supra p. 21 for railings, balustrades, and
decorative balconies. If anything, the South End Standards and Criteria applicable
to yards and fences appear to be more restrictive than the restrictions in the
preservation agreement similarly applicable. We are unconvinced that a potential
buyer of the property would consider any reduction in value to reflect the
preservation restrictions' governance of changes to his front yard.
Mr. Bowman states that Mr. Hanlon provided no evidence of higher
insurance or maintenance costs. He believes that a prudent owner would maintain
his residence at the same level required by either the preservation agreement or the
South End Standards and Criteria. He testified that insurance is required by most
lenders. We agree with Mr. Bowman; we are unconvinced that an owner
purchasing the property subject to the preservation agreement would attach a
negative value to the requirement that he maintain property damage insurance or
that he maintain his property to standards established in the preservation
agreement. We are also unconvinced by Mr. Hanlon that an owner would attach a
negative value to the additional regulation and bureaucracy resulting from the
donation of the facade easement or to the potential for legal action for lack of
compliance. For instance, Mr. Hanlon believes that a comparative disadvantage of
- 62 -
[*62] the preservation agreement is that it subjects the owner to the inconvenience
of periodic inspections. Mr. Bowman points out that the inspection is of the
exterior of the property, which should not be much of an inconvenience, since that
the owner does not have to be home. We agree. Nor are we convinced by Mr.
Hanlon that the legal threat under the preservation agreement is sufficiently more
severe than (or different from) the existing legal threat mentioned by Mr. Bowman
for action by the City of Boston's Inspectional Services Department for
unauthorized alterations or for failure to maintain the property.
Mr. Hanlon believes that the preservation agreement reduces the
marketability of the property because of the added burdens it imposes. Mr.
Bowman's resale study leads to the opposite conclusion, at least with respect to
properties encumbered by a preservation restriction conveyed to NAT. Moreover,
as Mr. Bowman reports, Mr. Kearns, past president of NAT, apparently is of the
opinion that the presence or absence of an easement is only a minor factor in the
buying decision.
We have little confidence in Mr. Hanlon's opinion that the preservation
agreement imposed on the owner of the property restrictions significantly different
from or more burdensome than the restrictions imposed by the South End
Standards and Criteria. Petitioners have failed to persuade us that, on account of
- 63 -
[*63] the preservation agreement, lack of control and lack of marketability reduce
the value of the property. To the contrary, our own comparison of the two sets of
restrictions and Mr. Bowman's expert testimony have convinced us that the
restrictive components of the preservation agreement are basically duplicative of,
and not materially different from, the South End Standards and Criteria, and we so
find.
c. Mr. Bowman's Opinions of Postcontribution Value and
Value of the Facade Easement
Accepting Mr. Bowman's opinion that the typical buyer would find the
restrictions of the preservation agreement no more burdensome than the
underlying South End Standards and Criteria, we agree with him (and find) that
the postcontribution value of the property was equal to its precontribution value
($1,840,000). We further agree with him that, in the absence of any record of
sales of easements comparable to the donated easement, and applying the before-
and-after valuation method of section 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs., the
facade easement had no fair market value when conveyed to NAT.
E. Conclusion
The facade easement had no fair market value when conveyed to NAT.
Therefore, respondent's adjustments to petitioners' 2003 and 2004 tax returns
- 64 -
[*64] disallowing any deduction for the contribution of the facade easement to
NAT are sustained.
III. Penalty
A. Introduction
Section 6662 imposes an accuracy-related penalty if any part of an
underpayment of tax required to be shown on a return is due to, among other
things, negligence or disregard of rules or regulations (without distinction,
negligence), a substantial understatement of income tax, or a substantial valuation
misstatement. Sec. 6662(a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3). The penalty is 20% of the
portion of the underpayment of tax to which the section applies. Sec. 6662(a). In
the case of a gross valuation misstatement, 20% is increased to 40%. Sec.
6662(h)(1). Only one accuracy-related penalty may be applied with respect to any
given portion of an underpayment, even if that portion is subject to the penalty on
more than one of the grounds set out in section 6662(b). Sec. 1.6662-2(c), Income
Tax Regs.
Section 6664(c) provides a reasonable cause exception to the accuracy-
related penalty. Generally, under section 6664(c)(1), no penalty is imposed under
section 6662 with respect to any portion of an underpayment if it is shown that
there was reasonable cause for such portion and that the taxpayer acted in good
- 65 -
[*65] faith with respect to such portion. The reasonable cause exception does not
apply, however, in the case of a substantial or gross valuation overstatement with
respect to property for which a charitable contribution deduction was claimed
under section 170 unless the claimed value of the property was based on a
"qualified appraisal" by a "qualified appraiser" and the taxpayer made a good-faith
investigation of the value of the contributed property. Sec. 6664(c)(2) and (3); see
also sec. 1.6664-4(h), Income Tax Regs.
B. Valuation Misstatement Penalty
1. Introduction
As stated above, section 6662(a) and (b)(3) imposes a penalty of 20% of the
portion of an underpayment of tax attributable to a substantial valuation
misstatement. A substantial valuation misstatement exists if the value of any
property reported on a tax return is "200 percent or more of the amount determined
to be the correct amount of such valuation". Sec. 6662(e)(1)(A). If the valuation
misstatement is 400% or more of the correct amount, a gross valuation
misstatement exists and the 20% penalty increases to 40%. Sec. 6662(h)(1) and
(2)(A)(i). "The value * * * claimed on a return of any property with a correct
value * * * of zero is considered to be 400 percent or more of the correct amount."
Sec. 1.6662-5(g), Income Tax Regs. No penalty, however, is imposed unless the
- 66 -
[*66] portion of the underpayment attributable to the valuation misstatement
exceeds $5,000. Sec. 6662(e)(2).
2. Positions of the Parties
Respondent argues that petitioners are liable for the 40% gross valuation
misstatement penalty for 2003 because, in taking a charitable contribution
deduction for 2003, petitioners claimed that the value of the facade easement was
$220,800 when in truth it was zero, resulting in an underpayment of tax
attributable to a gross valuation misstatement. Respondent argues likewise for
2004 on account of petitioners' carryover to that year of the unused portion of their
claimed 2003 charitable contribution deduction. See sec. 1.6662-5(c)(1), Income
Tax Regs.
Petitioners argue that they are liable for no valuation misstatement penalty
for either 2003 or 2004 because, notwithstanding any valuation misstatement,
there was reasonable cause for the resulting underpayments in tax, they acted in
good faith, the claimed value of the facade was based on a qualified appraisal
made by a qualified appraiser, and, in addition to obtaining that appraisal, they
made a good-faith investigation of the value of the facade easement.
- 67 -
[*67] 3. Respondent's Burden of Production
Respondent has met his burden of producing sufficient evidence that it is
proper to impose the valuation misstatement penalty. See discussion supra pp. 15-
17; see also sec. 7491(c). Petitioners' reported value for the facade easement
exceeds the correct value by 400% or more. Petitioners' 2003 and 2004
underpayments of tax, each underpayment exceeding the $5,000 requirement of
section 6662(e)(2) and each having been caused by a disallowed charitable
contribution deduction claimed on account of the contribution of the facade
easement to NAT, result directly from the valuation misstatement. Petitioners bear
the burden of proving that the penalties are inappropriate because they had
reasonable cause for the underpayments of tax and because they acted in good
faith.
4. Reasonable Cause Exception
a. Qualified Appraisal by a Qualified Appraiser
As stated above, before we may consider a taxpayer's reasonable cause,
good-faith defense to a valuation misstatement penalty, we must find that the
reported value of the property was based on a "qualified appraisal" by a "qualified
appraiser" and the taxpayer made a good-faith investigation of the value of the
contributed property. Sec. 6664(c)(2) and (3). The requirement of obtaining a
- 68 -
[*68] qualified appraisal is also a condition that most taxpayers must satisfy before
they can deduct more than $5,000 on account of a charitable contribution of
property. See sec. 1.170A-13(c)(2)(A), Income Tax Regs. On appeal of our prior
decision in this case, respondent argued as an alternative ground for disallowing
petitioners' deductions on account of the contribution of the facade easement that
they had failed to comply with "certain recordkeeping and reporting requirements
that are imposed by statute, * * * § 170(f)(11), and elaborated in an accompanying
regulation, * * * § 1.170A-13 [Income Tax Regs.]".13 Kaufman v. Shulman, 687
F.3d at 28. That regulation includes as part of the definition of the term "qualified
appraisal" the requirement that the appraisal be prepared by a qualified appraiser.
Sec. 1.170A-13(c)(3)(i)(B), Income Tax Regs. The term "qualified appraiser" is
defined in section 1.170A-13(c)(5), Income Tax Regs. The regulations provide
that an individual is not a qualified appraiser if "the donor had knowledge of facts
that would cause a reasonable person to expect the appraiser falsely to overstate
the value of the donated property". Sec. 1.170A-13(c)(5)(ii), Income Tax Regs.
13
Para. (11) was added to sec. 170(f) by the American Jobs Creation Act of
2004, Pub. L. No. 108-357, sec. 883(a), 118 Stat. at 1631. It is applicable to
contributions made after June 3, 2004. Id. sec. 883(b), 118 Stat. at 1632. It
codified the requirements in sec. 1.170A-13(c), Income Tax Regs., which
Congress had directed the Secretary to promulgate. See Deficit Reduction Act of
1984, Pub. L. No. 98-369, sec. 155(a), 98 Stat. at 691.
- 69 -
[*69] The Court of Appeals stated: "The procedural regulations requiring an
appraisal report and summary are designed to provide information 'sufficient to
permit [the IRS] to evaluate the [taxpayer]'s reported contribution and monitor and
address concerns about overvaluation.'" Kaufman v. Shulman, 687 F.3d at 29
(quoting Consol. Investors Grp. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-290, 2009
WL 4840246, at *23). Respondent had claimed "that the method of valuation used
by the Kaufmans' appraiser lacked 'analytical mooring' and produced an
indefensibly inflated valuation;" also, that petitioners' "contribution claim"
constituted a gross valuation misstatement. Id. While acknowledging the
seriousness of a gross valuation misstatement, the Court of Appeals stated that the
Commissioner's "argument is largely an attempt to convert an inherently factual
issue into a set of violations of the procedural requirements of section 1.170A-13
in disregard of their language and purpose." Id. The court added: "But whether
the valuation was overstated, grossly or otherwise, is a factual question different
from whether the formal procedural requirements were met, either strictly or under
the 'substantial compliance' doctrine which may forgive minor discrepancies." Id.
(emphasis added). In one respect, however, the court found that the Commissioner
has raised a pertinent point; i.e., whether Mr. Hanlon was not under the regulations
a qualified appraiser, which would be true if petitioners had knowledge of facts
- 70 -
[*70] that would cause a reasonable person to expect the appraiser falsely to
overstate the value of the donated property. Id. That question, the court stated,
like the question of whether the easement was overvalued, required further fact
finding by us. Id. at 29-30. The Court of Appeals rejected the Commissioner's
alternative ground that, as a matter of law, any deduction for the contribution of
the facade easement must be disallowed.
We take from the Court of Appeals' discussion that, except with respect to
Mr. Hanlon's possible disqualification on account of petitioners' knowledge,
petitioners satisfied the recordkeeping and reporting requirements of section
1.170A-13, Income Tax Regs. As stated, the regulations provide that an
individual is not a qualified appraiser if "the donor had knowledge of facts that
would cause a reasonable person to expect the appraiser falsely to overstate the
value of the donated property". Sec. 1.170A-13(c)(5)(ii), Income Tax Regs. By
way of example, the regulations add: "e.g., the donor and the appraiser make an
agreement concerning the amount at which the property will be valued and the
donor knows that such amount exceeds the fair market value of the property". Id.
We take from the example and from the modification of the infinitive "to
overstate" by the adverb "falsely" in the regulations that the expression "falsely to
overstate" is intended to convey a sense of collusion and deception as to the value
- 71 -
[*71] of the property.14 While we will state shortly our finding that petitioners
lacked reasonable cause and did not act in good faith with respect to the
underpayment resulting from the disallowance of their charitable contribution
deduction on account of the contribution of the facade easement to NAT, we do
not believe that, as we interpret the term, Mr. Hanlon acted falsely with respect to
his appraisal of the facade easement. We find that he was a qualified appraiser
within the meaning of section 6664(c)(2)(A). That is not to say that he was right
or that petitioners did not have reason to question his valuation; it is only to say
that, with respect to the technical meaning of the term "qualified appraiser", he
was qualified.
Petitioners have carried their burden of proving that the reported value of
the facade easement was based on a qualified appraisal made by a qualified
appraiser.15
14
Among the meanings for the word "false" in The American Heritage
Dictionary of the English Language 637 (5th ed. 2011) are "2. Deliberately
untrue" and "4. Intentionally deceptive".
15
Pursuant to sec. 1.170A-13(c)(5)(iv), Income Tax Regs., an individual is
not a qualified appraiser if the individual is, among other things, an appraiser who
is regularly used by the donor or donee and who does not perform most of his or
her appraisals for other persons. Respondent makes no claim regarding whether
Mr. Hanlon is excluded from qualifying as a qualified appraiser pursuant to sec.
1.170A-13(c)(5)(iv), Income Tax Regs., so we do not further address that issue.
- 72 -
[*72] b. Good-Faith Investigation of Value
Petitioners have not carried their burden of proving that, in addition to
obtaining a qualified appraisal of the facade easement, they made a good-faith
investigation that confirmed that the value of the facade easement was $220,800.
The term "good faith" appears in both section 6664(c)(1) and (2)(B). Although the
term has no precise definition, it means, among other things, "honesty in belief".
Black's Law Dictionary 762 (9th ed. 2009); see also United States v. Goodchild,
25 F.3d 55, 59 (1st Cir. 1994) (similar definition approved in jury instruction on
intent to defraud). Therefore, to satisfy the good-faith-investigation requirement
imposed on them by section 6664(c)(2)(B), petitioners must demonstrate how they
honestly came to believe that, beyond being simply the amount determined in the
Hanlon appraisal, the value of the facade easement was $220,800. See
Whitehouse Hotel Ltd. P'ship v. Commissioner, 139 T.C. 304, 358 (2012).
Petitioners argue: "After receiving the appraisal from Hanlon, the
Petitioners verified that the value attributed to the easement was correct." In
support of that argument, petitioners point first to Gordon Kaufman's testimony
that he believed that the preservation agreement reduced the value of the property
because it imposed restrictions more stringent than those imposed by the South
End Standards and Criteria. He conceded, however, that he had not compared the
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[*73] burdens imposed by the preservation agreement with those imposed by the
South End Standards and Criteria. In any event, believing that the preservation
agreement reduced the value of the property is not by itself verification that the
preservation agreement reduced the value of the property by $220,800 or anything
close to $220,800. Petitioners add: "Reading the appraisal also caused * * *
Gordon Kaufman to question the impact the facade easement would have on the
resale value of the Property", which prompted him to send an email to Mr. Bahar,
expressing his concern that "the reduction in the resale value of the property due to
the [facade] easement [is] so large as to overwhelm the tax savings that accrue
from it." Mr. Bahar immediately responded to him, assuring him that properties in
neighborhoods (such as petitioners') subject to local regulation and also subject to
preservation agreements were not at a market disadvantage when compared to
neighboring properties not so additionally burdened. Gordon Kaufman testified
that he found the Bahar email only "mildly informative" because he questioned the
statistical basis of Mr. Bahar's conclusions. It is somewhat odd, and not at all
persuasive, that, in support of their argument that Gordon Kaufman verified that
the $220,800 value for the facade reached by Mr. Hanlon was correct, petitioners
bring to our attention Mr. Bahar's email, in which, whether Gordon Kaufman
accepted it or not, Mr. Bahar expressed his opinion that the conveyance of the
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[*74] facade easement to NAT had little or no effect on the value of the property.
Petitioners have not convinced us that they made a good-faith investigation of the
value of the facade easement by virtue of Gordon Kaufman's email
correspondence with Mr. Bahar.
Before they filed the 2003 return petitioners provided a copy of the Hanlon
appraisal to their longtime accountant, Mr. Cohen, who reviewed it and found that
it was consistent in form with other real estate appraisals that he had seen. On that
basis, petitioners argue that they "justifiably * * * [relied] on Mr. Cohen's positive
review of the Hanlon appraisal." Mr. Cohen, however, testified that he did not
express to petitioners any opinion as to whether the valuation was reasonable.
Indeed, in response to a question from the Court, he agreed that it was fair to say
that he had "no idea whatsoever" as to whether the value reported by petitioners on
the basis of the Hanlon appraisal was accurate. We do not find that by way of Mr.
Cohen petitioners made a good-faith investigation as to whether the value of the
facade easement was $220,800.
Finally, petitioners point to the Primoli article and argue that their reliance,
"personally and through their advisors", on the 10% to 15% range described in the
article demonstrates the reasonableness of their reporting on the 2003 and 2004
returns $220,800 as the value of the facade easement. First of all, Mr. Cohen
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[*75] disavowed advising petitioners as to the reasonableness of the value they
claimed for the facade easement, and he did not in his testimony mention the
Primoli article. Mr. Hanlon did include in his appraisal a reference to the Primoli
article, and he quoted the portion of the article saying that IRS engineers have
conceded the proper valuation of a facade easement should range from
approximately 10% to 15% of the value of the burdened property. There is,
however, no evidence that, other than perhaps having read that reference to the
Primoli article, petitioners saw the Primoli article or any material mentioning it.
Indeed, there is no evidence that, other than consulting Mr. Bahar, petitioners
made any independent investigation of the value of the facade easement, much less
an investigation confirming that its value was the value they reported on the 2003
and 2004 returns, viz, $220,800.
Because petitioners have failed to prove that they made a good-faith
investigation of the value of the facade easement, there is no reason for us to
consider for purposes of a valuation misstatement penalty whether with respect to
the resulting underpayments in tax petitioners acted with reasonable cause and in
good faith. See sec. 6664(c)(1). Nevertheless, for the sake of completeness, and
because the issue is relevant for a negligence- or substantial-understatement-of-
income-tax-based penalty we will do so.
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[*76] c. Reasonable Cause and Good Faith
Under the regulations, "the most important factor" in determining whether
the taxpayer had reasonable cause for his tax treatment and whether he acted in
good faith "is the extent of the taxpayer's effort to assess the taxpayer's proper tax
liability." Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. We are here concerned with the
underpayments in petitioners' tax resulting from respondent's disallowance of their
deductions on account of Lorna Kaufman's contribution of the facade easement to
NAT, which, in turn, results from petitioners' overstatement of the value of the
easement. Petitioners state that they had no background in "tax, real estate, or in
appraising real property interests." "Therefore," they continue, "they looked to an
accountant and an appraiser, who had the requisite experience to provide them the
guidance that was required." It is true that good-faith reliance on professional
advice may provide a basis for a reasonable cause defense. United States v. Boyle,
469 U.S. 241, 250-251 (1985); sec.1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs.
With respect to their reliance on Mr. Cohen, their accountant, petitioners
state:
Mr. Cohen is an accountant with over 35 years of experience with
advanced education in accounting. Mr. Cohen researched the tax
deduction in conjunction with the facade easement donation when
approached by the Kaufmans. Mr. Cohen also received and reviewed
a copy of the appraisal performed by Mr. Hanlon and believed it to be
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[*77] a qualified appraisal. Mr. Cohen received a Form 8283 from
the Trust which verified the donation.
While all of that may be true, the underpayment here resulted from petitioners'
overstatement of the value of the facade easement. There is no evidence that
either petitioner asked Mr. Cohen whether, as an accountant or as a return
preparer, he had any expertise reviewing easement values. Indeed the value of the
facade easement involves an issue (valuation) on which Mr. Cohen neither was
qualified to advise petitioners nor advised them.
With respect to their reliance on Mr. Hanlon, petitioners state:
[They] retained Timothy Hanlon, a qualified appraiser, to appraise the
property interest that they intended to donate to the Trust. Mr.
Hanlon, a state licensed broker and appraiser, was qualified to
perform the duties for which he was retained. The Kaufmans
received an appraisal report from Mr. Hanlon that purported to
comply with USPAP requirements and to be a "qualified appraisal."
The Kaufmans believed that they had received a qualified appraisal
from Hanlon.
While reliance on an appraiser may demonstrate reasonable cause and good faith,
the regulations caution that reliance on the advice of an appraiser "does not
necessarily demonstrate reasonable cause and good faith." Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1),
Income Tax Regs. Indeed, the regulations continue: "Reasonable cause and good
faith ordinarily is not indicated by the mere fact that there is an appraisal of the
value of the property." Id. "Other factors to consider include the methodology
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[*78] and assumptions underlying the appraisal, the appraised value, the
relationship between appraised value and purchase price, the circumstances under
which the appraisal was obtained, and the appraiser's relationship to the taxpayer
or to the activity in which the property is used." Id.
Petitioners had reason to question the conclusion in the Hanlon appraisal
that the facade easement was worth $220,800. Mr. Bahar's email to Gordon
Kaufman suggested that giving the facade easement to NAT did not reduce the
value of the property at all. Gordon Kaufman testified that he found the
information in the Bahar email only "mildly informative". He thought that the key
information in the email was Mr. Bahar's discussion of the 26 properties
encumbered by facade easements and tracked by NAT, none of which Mr. Bahar
reported subsequently sold at a loss. Gordon Kaufman admitted that the
"discussion of 26 properties * * * may or may not have been correct". He
accorded it not very much weight, however, because he found it to lack statistical
rigor. He admitted that (1) he did not ask Mr. Bahar for his underlying data
concerning the 26 sales, and (2) he did not actually know that the study carried no
weight. Certainly, as an MIT professor specializing in analytical statistics, he is
qualified to have an opinion about the statistical rigor of Mr. Bahar's claims.
Indeed, preparatory to his testimony voicing criticism of Mr. Bowman's
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[*79] (respondent's expert's) sampling techniques, he identified himself as a
"professional statistician", whose "profession is examining data and interpreting
its meaning using modern statistical tools". Mr. Bahar's discussion involved a
resale study, while Mr. Hanlon's appraisal was of the value of a single facade
easement. Nevertheless, there was obvious discordance between Mr. Bahar's
resale statistic and Mr. Hanlon's value conclusion, suggesting that one or the other
was (or possibly both were) in error. Yet Gordon Kaufman, who was particularly
well equipped to apply statistical rigor both to Mr. Bahar's data and to Mr.
Hanlon's value conclusion, chose to do neither. That lack of initiative is certainly
in contrast to the professional attention that Gordon Kaufman paid to Mr.
Bowman's opinion that the facade easement had no value. In fact, Gordon
Kaufman testified that he accepted the Hanlon appraisal on the basis of (1) Mr.
Hanlon's credential as a professional appraiser and (2) his (Gordon Kaufman's)
uncritical acceptance of the 10% to 15% range that Mr. Hanlon relied on to fix the
value of the facade easement. During a discussion with the Court, he agreed that
there was no basis in the Hanlon appraisal for judging the accuracy of that range
and that to judge its accuracy you would have to see the sample data on which it
was based. Gordon Kaufman is an expert in statistics, and he as much as admitted
that he recognized the risks in Mr. Hanlon's unquestioning acceptance of the range
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[*80] in the Primoli article. He also failed to ask for the data that might have
supported Mr. Bahar's conclusion that contributions of facade easements did not
reduce value. In determining whether a taxpayer has reasonably relied in good
faith on advice, we take into account his education, sophistication, and business
experience. See sec. 1.6664-4(c)(1), Income Tax Regs. Gordon Kaufman was a
sophisticated consumer of statistical analyses, and both the Bahar email and the
Hanlon appraisal gave him good reason to question Mr. Hanlon's value
conclusion. We do not believe that he acted with reasonable cause and in good
faith in relying without question on the Hanlon appraisal in subscribing tax returns
on which he represented the value of the facade easement to be $220,800.
Petitioners have failed to prove that the underpayments in tax resulting from
their overstatement of the value of the facade easement are the result of their good-
faith reliance on professional advice establishing reasonable cause for the
underpayments.
5. Conclusion
Petitioners underpaid the tax required to be shown on their 2003 and 2004
returns on account of a gross valuation misstatement. They have failed to show
that, with respect to the resulting underpayments, they acted with reasonable cause
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[*81] and in good faith. We will, therefore, sustain respondent's imposition of
accuracy-related penalties on account of that valuation misstatement.
C. Negligence Penalty
In the alternative, we sustain respondent's imposition of accuracy-related
penalties due to a valuation misstatement on account of either negligence or
substantial understatements of income tax. Negligence has been defined as lack of
due care or failure to do what a reasonably prudent person would do under like
circumstances. See, e.g., Ocmulgee Fields, Inc. v. Commissioner, 132 T.C. 105,
123 (2009), aff'd, 613 F.3d 1360 (11th Cir. 2010). Negligence also "includes any
failure to make a reasonable attempt to comply with the provisions of the internal
revenue laws or to exercise ordinary and reasonable care in the preparation of a tax
return." Sec. 1.6662-3(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. We have in our discussion of
reasonable cause and good faith described the warning signs that should have
alerted Gordon Kaufman to the chance of error in the Hanlon appraisal but that he
ignored. We also have in front of us the fact that when, after receiving the Hanlon
appraisal and before executing the 2003 return, it came time for Lorna Kaufman to
ask Washington Mutual to subordinate its mortgage to NAT's interest in the
property, Gordon Kaufman joined his wife in certifying to the bank that "[t]he
easement restrictions are essentially the same restrictions as those imposed by
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[*82] current local ordinances that govern this property." After first testifying that
he did not notice the statement when he signed the certification, he then testified
that he did not read it carefully and signing the certification was a mistake, since
he believed that the preservation restrictions were more stringent than those in the
preservation agreement. He conceded, however, that that was his subjective
judgment, since he had never compared the burdens imposed by the preservation
agreement with those imposed by the South End Standards and Criteria. Lorna
Kaufman testified that when she signed the certification she did not focus on the
quoted statement. She also testified that she could not remember whether she had
read and compared the preservation agreement to the South End Standards and
Criteria. In any case, petitioners were careless, whether in not reading what they
signed, in not reading carefully what they signed, or, in Gordon Kaufman's case, in
reaching a subjective conclusion in willful ignorance of relevant data. We think
that their carelessness is reflected in their ready acceptance of the Hanlon
appraisal in the face of warning signs that it overstated the value of the facade
easement, viz, the Bahar email and defects in the appraisal that should have been
apparent to Gordon Kaufman. The underpayments in tax attributable to the
disallowed deductions for contribution of the facade easement to NAT are
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[*83] attributable to petitioners' negligence, and they have failed to show that they
had reasonable cause and acted in good faith with respect to those underpayments.
Finally, petitioners argue that they escape any negligence penalty because
they had a reasonable basis for claiming deductions on account of their
contribution of the facade easement to NAT. Section 1.6662-3(b)(1), Income Tax
Regs., provides that a return position that has a reasonable basis is not attributable
to negligence. "Reasonable basis is a relatively high standard of tax reporting"
and is "not satisfied by a return position that is merely arguable or that is merely a
colorable claim." Sec. 1.6662-3(b)(3), Income Tax Regs. Petitioners argue:
"Petitioners' facade easement donation was part of a federal tax incentive program.
When Congress provides a general tax incentive through a deduction from income,
those falling within the general beneficiary class are entitled to participate in the
benefit." Petitioners' argument misses the point. Petitioners claimed a charitable
contribution deduction of $220,800 for Lorna Kaufman's contribution of the
facade easement to NAT on the basis of the Hanlon appraisal, which concluded
that it was worth that amount. While we have on occasion accepted expert
testimony that a facade easement reduced the value of the subject property by a
particular percentage, e.g., Hilborn v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 677, 698-699
(1985), we have cautioned that there is no general safe-harbor percentage with
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[*84] respect to the value of facade easements, Nicoladis v. Commissioner, 1988
Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 187, at *21 ("[V]aluation itself is still a question of facts
and circumstances."). Petitioners can rely neither on caselaw nor on IRS
engineers' statements that the proper value of facade easements "should" range
between 10% and 15% of the value of the encumbered property to overcome the
fact that the value of the facade easement that Lorna Kaufman contributed to NAT
was nil. The mere fact that they obtained an appraisal claiming that the value of
the facade easement was $220,800 does not in and of itself constitute a reasonable
basis for claiming on their returns that the facade easement was worth $220,800.
See sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. Petitioners have failed to show a
reasonable basis for claiming a charitable contribution deduction of $220,800 on
account of the contribution of the facade easement to NAT.
D. Substantial Understatement of Income Tax
Section 6662(a) and (b)(2) imposes a 20% accuracy-related penalty on any
portion of an underpayment of tax required to be shown on a return which is
attributable to any substantial understatement of income tax. An "understatement
of income tax" generally means the excess of the amount of tax required to be
shown on the return for the taxable year over the amount of the tax imposed that is
shown on the return. Sec. 6662(d)(2)(A). The understatement is deemed
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[*85] "substantial" if the amount of the understatement for the taxable year
exceeds the greater of 10% of the tax required to be shown on the return for the
taxable year or $5,000. Sec. 6662(d)(1)(A).
The amount of the understatement, however, is reduced by that portion of
the understatement attributable to the tax treatment of any item (1) supported by
substantial authority or (2) for which the relevant facts affecting the item's tax
treatment are adequately disclosed in the return or in a statement attached to the
return and there is a reasonable basis for the tax treatment of such item. Sec.
6662(d)(2)(B). Adequate disclosure has no effect where the return position lacks a
reasonable basis. Sec. 1.6662-3(c)(1), Income Tax Regs. Since, as discussed in
the immediately proceeding part III.C. of this report, petitioners have failed to
show a reasonable basis for their tax treatment of Lorna Kaufman's contribution of
the facade easement to NAT, petitioners cannot satisfy the adequate disclosure,
reasonable basis standard. "The substantial authority standard is an objective
standard involving an analysis of the law and application of the law to relevant
facts." Sec. 1.6662-4(d)(2), Income Tax Regs. Petitioners' argument with respect
to substantial authority are substantially the same as their arguments with respect
to reasonable basis, and, for the same reasons, we reject them. Petitioners have
failed to show substantial authority for claiming a charitable contribution
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[*86] deduction of $220,800 on account of the contribution of the facade easement
to NAT.
We have sustained respondent's disallowance of charitable contribution
deductions on account of the contribution of the facade easement to NAT. For
both 2003 and 2004, the resulting understatement of income tax exceeds the
greater of 10% of the tax required to be shown on the return or $5,000.
Respondent has met his burden of production regarding the existence of
substantial understatements. Petitioners have failed to show that they had
reasonable cause and acted in good faith with respect to the underpayments
attributable to those understatements.
IV. Conclusion
We sustain respondent's adjustments to petitioners' 2003 and 2004 returns
disallowing any charitable contribution deductions on account of Lorna Kaufman's
contribution of the facade easement to NAT. We further sustain respondent's
imposition of accuracy-related penalties on account of the resulting
underpayments of tax, as discussed.
Decision will be entered under
Rule 155.