T.C. Summary Opinion 2012-90
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
CHARLES A. FOSTER AND SUSAN C. FOSTER, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 12024-08S. Filed September 11, 2012.
Charles A. Foster and Susan C. Foster, pro sese.
Scott L. Little, for respondent.
SUMMARY OPINION
CARLUZZO, Special Trial Judge: This case was heard pursuant to the
provisions of section 7463.1 Pursuant to section 7463(b), the decision to be entered
1
Unless otherwise indicated, subsequent section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, in effect for the relevant period. Rule
(continued...)
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is not reviewable by any other court, and this opinion shall not be treated as
precedent for any other case.
In a notice of deficiency dated February 20, 2008 (notice), respondent
determined a $21,148.75 deficiency in petitioners’ 2003 Federal income tax and
imposed a $6,212.49 addition to tax under section 6651(a)(1).2 The issue for
decision is whether petitioners are entitled to a charitable contribution deduction for
the donation of a facade easement (easement) to L’Enfant Trust, Inc. (L’Enfant).3
Background
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Petitioners,
who are, and were at all times relevant here, married to each other, resided in the
District of Columbia when the petition was filed.
1
(...continued)
references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
2
Petitioners now concede liability for a sec. 6651(a)(1) addition to tax as
appropriate.
3
L’Enfant, a District of Columbia nonprofit corporation chartered in 1978,
qualifies as a sec. 501(c)(3) organization organized and operated for the purpose of
holding and enforcing conservation easements on historic designated properties in
Washington, D.C.
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On November 26, 2002, Maria P. Logan and James Wade Logan (Logans)
and Charles A. Foster (petitioner) purchased, as tenants in common, a two-story
residence on 34th Street in the Georgetown Historic District of Washington, D.C.
(34th Street). At all times relevant 34th Street was and is subject to restrictions
imposed pursuant to the Old Georgetown Act and the Historic Landmark and
Historic District Protection Act of 1978 (Preservation Acts).
The $739,000 purchase price of 34th Street was paid in part by cash
contributed by the Logans and petitioner--petitioner contributed $6,000--and in part
by the proceeds of a $639,200 loan (loan) from Branch Banking & Trust Co. The
loan is secured by a deed of trust executed by petitioner and the Logans and
guaranteed by petitioners. Immediately following the purchase of 34th Street, the
Logans held an undivided 88% ownership interest in it, and petitioner held an
undivided 12% ownership interest.
In 2003 petitioner and the Logans conveyed an easement to L’Enfant that,
among other things, prohibits changes to the facade of 34th Street without the
express written consent of L’Enfant. According to the deed granting the easement
(easement deed), the easement’s purpose is to preserve an open space for the scenic
enjoyment of the general public and to preserve a historically important land area.
The easement deed, although executed on April 25, 2003, was not tendered to
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L’Enfant until November 12, 2003. A “Lender acknowledgment - Conservation
Easement”, acknowledging the grant of the easement deed to L’Enfant, is attached
to and was recorded with the easement deed in the appropriate office of the District
of Columbia.
As occurred in this case, L’Enfant requires all donors to affix a bronze plaque
to the donated facade. The plaque serves to inform the public that the facade will be
preserved, and L’Enfant often receives calls or tips from local citizens about any
construction or alterations to the facades of historic buildings bearing the L’Enfant
plaque. L’Enfant actively and periodically inspects buildings on which it holds
easements. L’Enfant: (1) routinely reviews all building permits received by the
District of Columbia Historic Preservation Office; (2) annually inspects its
properties; and (3) when necessary, takes legal action to enforce its rights under the
easements.
According to L’Enfant, its role is not to prohibit changes to a property subject
to a facade easement it holds but to “mediat[e] change over the years and decades”.
L’Enfant allows renovations, updates, and improvements when appropriate.
Furthermore, the restrictions imposed upon a property subject to a facade easement
held by L’Enfant overlap in many respects with restrictions placed upon
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a property subject to the Preservation Acts. According to L’Enfant, its facade
easement restrictions are enforced more robustly.
On August 23, 2003, an employee of J. Lee Donnelly & Son, Inc.
(Donnelly), appraised 34th Street in connection with the planned donation of the
easement. According to Donnelly, the fair market value of 34th Street without
taking into account the easement (which had not yet been effected) was $895,000
(before-donation value). Donnelly found that the “sales comparison approach”
was the most appropriate valuation method for estimating the market value of 34th
Street before the donation of the easement. According to Donnelly, if things went
as planned, the “historic architectural facade easement” would reduce the value of
34th Street by approximately 11% ($98,500)4 to $796,500 (after-donation value).
Donnelly’s determination of the after-donation value relies extensively, if not
solely, on an article prepared by Mark Primoli, an Internal Revenue Service
employee, which stated that “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” (Primoli article). In contrast to the
analysis of the before-donation value included in the Donnelly report, the
4
Rounded to the nearest hundred dollars.
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after-donation value is summarized in a single paragraph, reproduced in its entirety
as follows:
AS DEFINED AND CERTIFIED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
INTERIOR, NATIONAL REGISTER OF ISTORIC [sic] PLACES
AND THE L’ENFNT [sic] TRUST, THE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS
AN EXAMPLE OF HISTORIC RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE
LOCATED IN AN “HISTORIC” MARKET AREA. IT IS NOW
GENERALLY RECOGNIZED BY THE INTERNAL REVENUE
SERVICE (IRS) THAT THE DONATION OF A FACADE
EASEMENT OF A SINGLE FAMILY PROPERTY RESULTS IN A
LOSS OF VALUE (“DEDICATED CHARITABLE
CONTRIBUTION”) BETWEEN 10% AND 15%. THE DONATION
OF A COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RESULTS IN A LOSS OF
VALUE OF BETWEEN 10% AND 12%, OR HIGHER IF
DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS ARE LOST. THE INCLUSIVE DATA
SUPPORT AT LEAST THESE RANGES. SINCE THE SUBJECT IS
A VERY VALUABLE BUILDING AND LAND PARCEL WITH
EXTENSIVE FACADE AREA, WE ESTIMATE THAT THE
SUBJECT’S LOSS OF VALUE FROM THE DONATION OF THE
EASEMENT IS 11% OF THE VALUE BEFORE THE EASEMENT
($895,000), WHICH EQUATES IN A LOSS OF:
NINETY-EIGHT THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED AND 00/100
DOLLARS
($98,500.00)
(ROUNDED)
On November 12, 2003, Donnelly issued a letter updating the appraisal and
reaffirming its findings.
On September 26, 2003, petitioner and the Logans executed an agreement
reallocating their interests in 34th Street. The agreement called for the easement
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to be taken entirely from petitioner’s interest in 34th Street, resulting in a reduction
from 12% to 1%. Petitioner realized the economic consequences of this reallocation
of interests when 34th Street was sold in December 2007 for approximately
$1,395,000, and his share of the proceeds reflected his reduced ownership interest.
Petitioners’ joint 2003 Federal income tax return (return), due with extension
on October 15, 2004, was not filed until February 27, 2005, and thus was untimely.
As relevant here, on the return petitioners claimed a $98,500 charitable contribution
deduction for the donation of the easement.
According to the notice, petitioners are not entitled to the deduction for the
donation of the easement. Respondent supports the disallowance of that deduction
with an appraisal report prepared by Brian J. Flynn on October 14, 2009
(respondent’s appraisal report). Although respondent’s appraisal report is dated
October 14, 2009, it is a retrospective valuation of 34th Street as of November 12,
2003. According to respondent’s appraisal report the before-donation value of 34th
Street was $925,000.5 Concluding that there was no reduction in value due to the
5
The parties used the same valuation method to determine the fair market
value of 34th Street before the donation of the easement, and except for some
nitpicking on points not particularly determinative to the specific issue before us, the
parties agree, more or less, on the before-donation value of 34th Street.
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donation of the easement, however, respondent’s appraisal report shows the after-
donation value of 34th Street to be the same as the before-donation value and
concludes that the easement has no value.
Discussion
Section 170(a)(1) provides that there shall be allowable as a deduction any
charitable contribution, “payment of which is made within the taxable year.”
Section 170(a)(1) further provides that a charitable contribution shall be allowable
as a deduction only if verified under regulations prescribed by the Secretary.
Generally, section 170(f)(3) does not permit a deduction for a charitable gift
of property consisting of less than the donor’s entire interest in that property.
Section 170(f)(3)(B)(iii), however, provides an exception to this general rule in
the case of a “qualified conservation contribution.” Section 170(h)(1) provides that
a contribution may constitute a qualified conservation contribution if the
contribution is of a “qualified real property interest”, the donee is a qualified
organization, and the contribution is “exclusively for conservation purposes.”
The parties disagree on many points. According to respondent, petitioners
are not entitled to a deduction for the contribution of the easement because: (1)
the easement granted to L’Enfant was not a “qualified conservation contribution”
within the meaning of section 170; (2) petitioners failed to meet the substantiation
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requirements of section 170 and its corresponding regulation; (3) petitioners have
not met their burden of proof to establish the fair market value of the easement; (4)
at most, petitioners are entitled to a deduction equal to only 12% of the fair market
value of the easement at the time of the contribution; and (5) assuming petitioners
are entitled to a deduction for the contribution of the easement, the deduction is
subject to the limitations of section 170(e)(1)(A). Petitioners disagree and have
responded, point by point, to each of respondent’s positions. Under the
circumstances, we think it appropriate to first address the disagreement between the
parties with respect to the fair market value of the easement.
Although the parties disagree on the fair market value of the easement at
the time of its donation, they agree that the appropriate valuation method is the
before-donation and after-donation method. See Hilborn v. Commissioner, 85 T.C.
677, 688 (1985); Griffin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-130, aff’d, 911 F.2d
1124 (5th Cir. 1990); Stotler v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1987-275; see also sec.
1.170A-14(h)(3)(i), Income Tax Regs. They also agree on the method used to
arrive at the fair market value of 34th Street before the donation of the easement;
they sharply part ways on the valuation method used to arrive at the fair market
value of 34th Street after the donation of the easement.
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According to Donnelly’s report, elements that generally reduce the after-
donation value of a property subject to a facade easement include the loss of
development rights “up to the maximum density allowed”, and “the loss that may
occur if market preference changes as to exterior design, color, windows and doors,
roof lines, etc.”. We have some concerns with the influence on value that the
Donnelly report attributes to the restrictions imposed on 34th Street by L’Enfant.
First, the restrictions imposed on 34th Street by L’Enfant, as explained at trial by the
president of L’Enfant, are not as inflexible as the report seems to suggest. Second,
the same or similar restrictions imposed on 34th Street as a result of the
Preservation Acts are, for the most part, ignored in the report. Third, the December
2007 sale of 34th Street, as encumbered by the easement, suggests that the value of
the easement as determined by Donnelly was overstated. See Trout Ranch, LLC v.
Commissioner, ___ Fed. Appx. ___, 2012 WL 3518564 (10th Cir. Aug. 16, 2012),
aff’g T.C. Memo. 2010-283.
Donnelly’s report explains the operation and purpose of L’Enfant, but the
explanations support more the reason or reasons that a facade easement is created
and donated, rather than show how the after-donation value of a property, and in
particular the after-donation value of 34th Street, is determined. Donnelly’s
generalized discussions aside, the report, as noted, relies extensively, if not solely,
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on the Primoli article in arriving at an 11% reduction in the value of 34th Street as a
result of the charitable contribution of the easement to L’Enfant. We are unable to
distance ourselves from the notion that Donnelly considered the range set forth in
the Primoli article as a “safe harbor” for establishing the value of the easement. In
effect, the Donnelly report does not so much determine the after-donation value of
34th Street in order to determine the value of the easement as much as it values the
easement in order to determine the after-donation value of 34th Street.
We recognize that in other cases we found that encumbering a property with a
facade easement reduced the property’s fair market value and therefore allowed for
the easement to be valued using the before-donation and after-donation method.
Needless to say, we are unfamiliar with the evidence included in the records of
those cases. We assume that such evidence supported the values of the encumbered
properties as determined through the use of a recognized method of valuation. See,
e.g., Simmons v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-208, aff’d, 646 F.3d 6 (D.C.
Cir. 2011); Griffin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-130; Losch v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-230. We have no such evidence here; instead
petitioners rely upon what they apparently consider to be a safe harbor estimate to
determine the value of the easement and resulting after-donation value of 34th
Street. As we noted in Nicoladis v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-163, “we do
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not mean to imply that a general “10-percent rule” has been established with respect
to facade donations. * * * We did not * * * [do so in Hilborn] and do not here.”
The after-donation value for 34th Street shown in the Donnelly report is
largely unsupported by any analysis of qualitative factors that support that value.
Instead, the after-donation value is determined by applying a percentage reduction,
within a range suggested by the Primoli article, to the before-donation value of 34th
Street. The valuation method employed in the Donnelly report to arrive at the after-
donation value of 34th Street is not persuasive.
Respondent disallowed the charitable contribution deduction for the
donation of the easement to L’Enfant, and the burden is on petitioners to show that
this disallowance was in error. See Rule 142(a); Anselmo v. Commissioner, 757
F.2d 1208, 1210-1211 (11th Cir. 1985) (taxpayer had the burden of proving that
the valuation of donated property should have been higher than that stated in the
notice of deficiency), aff’g 80 T.C. 872 (1983). All things considered, we find
that they have failed to satisfy their burden in that regard. Furthermore, to the
extent that the easement might have value, there is insufficient evidence in the
record that would allow us to establish that value. Because the value of the
easement cannot be determined, respondent’s disallowance of the deduction for
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the donation of that easement is sustained. Because of this finding, we need not
address the other issues addressed by the parties.
To reflect the foregoing and petitioners’ concession of the section 6651(a)(1)
addition to tax,
Decision will be entered
for respondent.