FILED
United States Court of Appeals
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Tenth Circuit
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT July 24, 2019
_________________________________
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
MARION J. WELLS,
Petitioner - Appellant,
v. No. 18-9007
(CIR No. 13889-14)
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL
REVENUE,
Respondent - Appellee.
_________________________________
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
_________________________________
Before BRISCOE, BALDOCK, and BACHARACH, Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
Marion J. Wells appeals an Order and Decision of the United States Tax Court
computing her tax deficiencies for 2010 and 2011. In a memorandum opinion, the
Tax Court disallowed business deductions she sought under § 162 of the Internal
Revenue Code (I.R.C.) but permitted Wells to depreciate a portion of those
disallowed expenses. The Tax Court later entered the Order and Decision denying
her motion for reconsideration and adopting the Commissioner’s deficiency
*
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist in the determination of
this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is not binding
precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral
estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with
Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
calculation. Wells appeals the Tax Court’s denial of bonus depreciation. She also
challenges the Tax Court’s treatment of certain expenses as non-deductible personal
expenses. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7482, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Pretrial Filings and Memoranda
In 2014 the Commissioner issued Wells a notice determining deficiencies in
her individual Federal income tax of $66,178 for 2010 and $9,802 for 2011. The
deficiencies arose from disallowed business expense deductions for work performed
on her agricultural property in Garfield County, Colorado. In the notice, the
Commissioner offset some of the disallowed deductions by permitting Wells to claim
increased depreciation.
Wells filed a tax court petition seeking a redetermination of the deficiency. In
her petition she accepted the Commissioner’s calculation of increased depreciation,
stating, “[n]o error is assigned to the Commissioner’s determinations to increase
Petitioner’s Schedule F1 depreciation and Section 179 deduction in the amounts of
$9,952.00, and $21,289.00, for [the 2010 and 2011 tax years].” Aplt. App. at 6.
The parties filed pretrial memoranda. Wells identified the pertinent issue as
whether the Commissioner had incorrectly recharacterized repair and maintenance
expenses for tax years 2010 and 2011 as capital improvements. The Commissioner
2
stated the issue similarly.1 The parties did not list the calculation of depreciation as
an issue for trial.
Prior to trial the parties reached an agreement limiting the scope of the issues.
During a pretrial hearing involving a subpoena duces tecum issued to a non-party,
Wells’ counsel suggested a stipulation that “if we establish that . . . this was not
capital, then we win the deduction.” Id. at 170. The Commissioner’s counsel
responded that so long as Wells did not seek an alternative loss deduction under
I.R.C. § 165, the Commissioner would not seek to reduce the depreciation adjustment
he had already conceded to Wells.
Tax Court’s Memorandum Opinion
The Tax Court held a trial and issued its Memorandum Findings of Fact and
Opinion. Its findings may be summarized as follows.
Wells owns and lives on a 265-acre agricultural property in Garfield County,
Colorado. On the northern end of this property she cultivates grapevines, whose
grapes she crushes for juice that she sells to local buyers. She also leases a portion of
the southern part of the property for horse and cattle grazing.
In 2010 Wells hired Robert Schwartz to perform projects on the property. She
paid him “$198,207 for labor, equipment, and materials costs” for “work on, or
relating to, [her] private roads; work on the spring line [an underground pipe leading
1
The parties also identified issues concerning an accuracy-related penalty
and the Tax Court’s standard of review; the rulings on those issues are not contested
as part of this appeal.
3
from a spring on the southern part of the property to other areas of the property];
digging holes for new grape vines; spreading manure; and construction of a storage
yard.” Id. at 55. She also hired a fencing company to reset fences after the spring
line and storage yard work, paying them $824.30 for their fencing work.
In 2011 Wells paid Schwartz an additional $47,630 to rehabilitate an area of
the property that had burned in 2007. Schwartz removed burned tree stumps and
boulders and turned the soil so that the burned area could be used for forage.
Wells’ position at trial was that the work performed on her property in 2010
and 2011 represented deductible repair or maintenance to existing structures or
improvements, rather than replacements of those features or “new” construction. But
the Tax Court determined that most of the expenses were not deductible. The 2010
spring line expenditures had to be capitalized because the replacement of the spring
line was not a deductible “repair” but was instead “part of a general plan of
rehabilitation, modernization, and improvement to completely replace the spring line
. . . the costs of which must be capitalized.” Id. at 66 (internal quotation marks
omitted). The Court similarly denied a deduction for replacement of an access road
damaged by flooding on the property, reasoning that “[b]y petitioner’s own
admission . . . the work done on the access road was a complete replacement of that
portion of the road . . . from the south field to below the spring [that] must be
capitalized.” Id. at 75. The money Wells spent on construction of the storage yard
and related fencing was “new construction on top of previously unimproved land”
and “necessarily an improvement, and consequently the costs must be capitalized.”
4
Id. at 77 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Tax Court did allow a § 162
deduction of $9,000 for repair of a culvert, tree cutting, and manure spreading.2
The Tax Court determined that the 2011 work involving the burn rehabilitation
area was part of a plan of rehabilitation that must also be capitalized. It therefore
sustained the Commissioner’s determination that Wells could not deduct any of the
$47,630 for 2011 disallowed in the notice of deficiency.3 Finally, the Tax Court
acknowledged the Commissioner’s allowance of additional depreciation for tax years
2010 and 2011.
Tax Court’s Order & Decision
Wells moved for reconsideration under Tax Court Rule 161. In her motion she
argued, for the first time, that to the extent the Tax Court had determined that she had
incurred capital improvement expenses that constituted new construction she was
entitled to “bonus depreciation.” Her argument relied on I.R.C. § 168, which allowed
2
The Tax Court completed its examination by reviewing certain invoices
Wells submitted related to work performed in 2010, and determined that § 162
deductions were unavailable for most of the expenses described. It determined that
(1) excavation to set a new grade around a garage near Wells’ father’s house was a
capital improvement to the garage, and also likely a non-deductible personal
expenditure; (2) expenses for digging holes for grape plants must be capitalized;
(3) no evidence showed that work done for “driveways” was for anything other than
Wells’ personal driveways; (4) work done for road maintenance around a newly
constructed barn was part of the barn construction project, and hence a capital
improvement; and (5) there was insufficient evidence to determine deductible
expenses with regard to an access road known as Kuiper Road.
3
The Tax Court rejected a penalty the Commissioner had assessed under
I.R.C. § 6662(a) based on the 2010 underpayment. That penalty is not at issue in this
appeal.
5
a taxpayer to depreciate “qualified property” acquired after December 31, 2007, and
before January 1, 2013, by an additional amount in its first year of use. See I.R.C.
§ 168(k)(1)(A) (2011). This special allowance is referred to colloquially as “bonus
depreciation.”
Wells stated she was “not attempting to bring the issue of bonus depreciation
before the Court,” but merely sought “clarification” concerning two of her expenses.
Aplt. App. at 97. First, she asked the Tax Court to make a specific determination that
she spent $16,859.30 for storage yard construction in 2010. Second, she challenged
the Tax Court’s finding that the 2010 road maintenance expenses were for her
personal driveways (and hence, non-depreciable). The Commissioner opposed her
motion for reconsideration.
Before the Tax Court ruled on the motion, the parties further explored the
bonus depreciation issue in their Computations for Entry of Decision filed pursuant
to Tax Court Rule 155(b).4 In her Computation, Wells claimed bonus depreciation
for her new storage yard, road maintenance expenses around the barn, and 2011
expenses relating to the burn rehabilitation area. She asserted that because the Tax
Court had found these expenses were for new construction she was automatically
entitled to bonus depreciation under I.R.C. § 168. As a result, by contrast with the
4
Rule 155(b) provides that “[i]f the parties are not in agreement as to the
amount to be included in the decision in accordance with the findings and
conclusions of the Court, then each party shall file with the Court a computation of
the amount believed by such party to be in accordance with the Court’s findings and
conclusions.”
6
Commissioner’s allowed depreciation deductions totaling $9,952 for 2010 and
$20,434 for 2011,5 she calculated depreciation deductions of $35,265 for 2010 and
$63,106 for 2011.
In his Computation, the Commissioner argued that I.R.C. § 168(k) only
permits bonus depreciation for “qualified property.” He contended Wells had failed
to explain how the burn rehabilitation area qualified under § 168(k). He further
argued that her arguments were untimely and she had waived them by failing to raise
them previously.
The Tax Court issued an Order and Decision denying Wells’ motion for
reconsideration and adopting the Commissioner’s computations. It found she had
raised “new issues, which would require reopening the record for presentation of
additional evidence.” Aplt. App. at 153. The Tax Court further reasoned that Wells
had fair notice of, and an opportunity to dispute, the Commissioner’s depreciation
adjustment, but she had failed to raise any dispute concerning this issue or to present
evidence concerning it at trial. It therefore found that issue waived. The Tax Court
adopted the Commissioner’s calculations and determined deficiencies of $63,028 for
2010 and of $10,101 for 2011.
5
The allowed 2011 depreciation deduction decreased slightly from the
figure used in the notice of deficiency because the Tax Court had authorized $9,000
in additional deductions under § 162.
7
DISCUSSION
“We review tax court decisions in the same manner and to the same extent as
decisions of the district courts in civil actions tried without a jury. The Tax Court’s
legal conclusions are subject to de novo review, and its factual findings can be set
aside only if clearly erroneous.” Petersen v. Comm’r, 924 F.3d 1111, 1114 (10th Cir.
2019) (internal quotation marks omitted). We review for an abuse of discretion the
Tax Court’s adoption of the Commissioner’s Rule 155 computation, see Powell v.
Comm’r, 581 F.3d 1267, 1269 (10th Cir. 2009); its denial of Wells’ Rule 161 motion
for reconsideration, see Am. Stores Co. v. Comm’r, 170 F.3d 1267, 1270 (10th Cir.
1999); and its waiver determination, see Klaas v. Comm’r, 624 F.3d 1271, 1273
(10th Cir. 2010).
1. Bonus Depreciation
Wells presents two challenges to the Tax Court’s denial of bonus depreciation.
She argues, first, that bonus depreciation is not a new issue in the case because it
(1) requires only a mathematical calculation; (2) is mandatory; and (3) was fully
supported by the Tax Court’s findings, the parties’ stipulations, and the evidentiary
record developed at trial. Second, she argues she did not waive the bonus
depreciation issue, because her opportunity to present the issue did not arise until the
Tax Court adopted the Commissioner’s trial position that certain disallowed items
constituted new construction.
8
A. New Issue
A motion for reconsideration is not the appropriate forum for tendering new
legal theories to the Tax Court. Estate of Quick v. Comm’r, 110 T.C. 440, 441-42
(1998). Nor are parties permitted to raise “new issues” in connection with their Rule
155 computations, though they may address “purely mathematically generated
computational items” that are “automatically trigger[ed]” by adjustments made in the
Tax Court’s decision. Home Grp., Inc. v. Comm’r, 91 T.C. 265, 268-69 (1988), aff’d,
875 F.2d 377 (2d Cir. 1989); accord DeNaples v. Comm’r, 674 F.3d 172, 180
(3d Cir. 2012).
Contrary to Wells’ argument, the bonus depreciation issue was not simply a
matter of mathematical computation. The initial decision of whether bonus
depreciation applies (as opposed to calculation of the amount of such depreciation)
involves a fact-intensive inquiry into whether the property to be depreciated meets
the statutory criteria:
(1) the property to be depreciated must have a recovery period of 20 years or
less, or be computer software, water utility property, or qualified leasehold
improvement property;
(2) its original use must have commenced with the taxpayer after December
31, 2007;
(3) it must have been acquired by the taxpayer after December 31, 2007, and
before January 1, 2013 (except in certain circumstances involving written binding
contracts for its acquisition); and
9
(4) it must generally have been placed in service by the taxpayer before
January 1, 2013.
I.R.C. § 168(k)(2)(A) (2011).
As Wells acknowledges, bonus depreciation is available only when these
criteria have been met. See Aplt. Opening Br. at 18-19 (citing I.R.C. § 168(k)(2)).
Because the criteria require specific factual findings, the bonus depreciation issue is
not purely mathematical. The Tax Court therefore did not abuse its discretion by
failing to categorically exempt this issue on purely computational grounds from Rule
155’s “new issue” bar.
Wells further argues that irrespective of the “calculation” issue the Tax Court
abused its discretion by declining to consider bonus depreciation. She contends
application of bonus depreciation is mandatory once the statutory requirements are
met. She cites I.R.C. § 168(k)(1)(A), which provides that the depreciation deduction
for qualified property “shall include an allowance equal to 50 percent of the adjusted
basis of the qualified property” (emphasis added).
“Shall” as used in this context appears to refer to what is allowed or included
as a benefit to the taxpayer, rather than a mandate directed at the Tax Court. See
Treas. Reg. § 1.168(k)-1 (referring to “additional first year depreciation deduction
allowable” under section 168(k)). But even if we read § 168(k) to mandate the use of
bonus depreciation in Tax Court proceedings, Wells fails to establish that this alleged
mandate requires the Tax Court to consider issues that have not been properly
10
presented to it.6 Wells does not argue, for example, that if the issue of bonus
depreciation had never been raised, the Tax Court would have been obligated to raise
the issue sua sponte and to develop the record on its own initiative to comply with the
statutory mandate. Cf. Jafarpour v. Comm’r, T.C. Mem. 2012-165, 2012 WL
2122475, at *4 n.13 (June 12, 2012) (holding Commissioner waived any challenge to
whether statutory requirements for bonus depreciation were met by failing to
challenge the fulfillment of those requirements, noting “it is not the Court’s
obligation to research and construct the parties’ arguments”).7
6
Wells makes two arguments that only serve to muddy the waters on the
waiver issue. First, quoting a dissent from a 1929 Board of Tax Appeals case, she
contends her waiver had to be “knowing and intentional.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 22.
The authority she cites is not binding on us and is inconsistent with the Tax Court
waiver principles we have cited, supra. Second, she argues, citing Treas. Reg.
§ 1.168(k)-1(e), that because she never elected out of bonus depreciation as provided
in the regulatory procedures, she could not have waived the issue. This confuses a
waiver in connection with her Federal tax return with waiver in Tax Court
proceedings.
7
We have implicitly recognized that a taxpayer may waive the proper
depreciation method before the Tax Court. In Kurzet v. Commissioner, 222 F.3d 830
(10th Cir. 2000), the taxpayers argued to the Tax Court that they should be permitted
to change the cost recovery period for a reservoir they had constructed on their
timber farm. On their tax return, taxpayers had used a 31.5-year period based on
straight-line depreciation. They argued, and the Commissioner conceded, that a 15-
year recovery period applied under the then-current Modified Accelerated Cost
Recovery System (MACRS). Id. at 842. But the Commissioner argued the taxpayers
had waived their MACRS argument before the Tax Court, citing “the fact that . . .
none of the [taxpayers’] petition, amended petition, or pretrial memorandum referred
to this issue and . . . that the [Tax Court] stated during its bench opinion that the court
only ‘reluctantly’ treated the issue as having [been] raised.” Id. at 843.
In reviewing the depreciation issue in Kurzet, we did not intimate that the
application of the proper depreciation method could never be waived. Instead, we
reached the merits only because we determined the Tax Court did not treat the issue
as waived, and instead “elected to treat the question of the recovery based on the
11
That said, had the Tax Court found that the qualifying statutory criteria were
met, its refusal to consider an argument for bonus depreciation—even if raised in the
first instance in a motion for reconsideration or in Rule 155 proceedings—might be
considered an abuse of discretion. Cf. McLane Co. v. EEOC, 137 S. Ct. 1159, 1168
n.3 (2017) (a district court “necessarily abuse[s] its discretion if it base[s] its ruling
on an erroneous view of the law” (internal quotation marks omitted)). But the Tax
Court never made the findings required for the application of bonus depreciation.
In the absence of such explicit findings, Wells argues that the parties’
stipulation concerning the scope of the issues at trial, coupled with the Tax Court’s
finding that the improvements were “new construction,” implicitly satisfied the
statutory requirements and thereby triggered the mandatory application of bonus
depreciation. The Rule 155 procedure does seek to “compute the redetermined
deficiency based upon matters agreed by the parties or ruled upon by the [Tax]
Court.” Powell, 581 F.3d at 1271 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks
omitted). But Wells’ argument reads too much into the parties’ stipulation.
Notwithstanding Wells’ references to a “Depreciation Agreement,” see, e.g.,
Aplt. Opening Br. at 22, the pretrial agreement between the parties plainly served
only to limit the issues at trial to the question of deductibility versus depreciability.
Wells attempts to combine this stipulation with the tax examination changes
identified in the notice of deficiency, see Aplt. App. at 13-15, in asserting that the
belief that the issue had been tried by consent of the parties.” Id. The Tax Court
made no such determination in this case.
12
Commissioner agreed or conceded that three of the four requirements of § 168(k)(2)
were satisfied, see Aplt. Opening Br. at 19. But we agree with the Commissioner that
the Tax Court was not obliged to find these requirements satisfied. The notice, for
example, does not determine that the property has a 15-year recovery period, as
Wells claims. At best, the information she cites in the notice of deficiency might
bear on the § 168 issues. The Tax Court was not obligated on this record to
determine that the Commissioner had conceded or agreed that three of the § 168
criteria were met.8
Wells also argues that the bonus depreciation issue should not be considered a
new issue because all the facts needed to make the findings concerning it are
contained in the record. “Rule 155 does not allow for the introduction of new
evidence that was not before the Tax Court in the original proceeding.” DeNaples,
674 F.3d at 180. But “[t]here is no new evidence if the evidence necessary to resolve
a dispute between parties regarding such computations is already in the record or
within the scope of the evidence presented in support of issues already pleaded.” Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted).
The Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the evidentiary
record required further development to rule on the bonus depreciation issue. For
8
Wells has attached a Depreciation Lead Sheet as Exhibit B to her reply
brief. She asserts that the document contains evidence that the Commissioner
determined that three of the requirements of § 168(k)(2) were met. But the document
is not part of the record on appeal. In addition, because it was submitted as an
exhibit to the reply brief, the Commissioner had no opportunity to make any
argument concerning it. We therefore decline to consider this exhibit.
13
example, the Commissioner had not elicited testimony from Mr. Schwartz to
determine the allocation of the amounts on his invoices among the various projects he
performed. See Aplt. App. at 112-13. As for the burn area, the Tax Court noted
Wells’ testimony that it could take decades before it would grow forage, which could
mean it had not been placed into service as qualifying property under § 168(k). See
id. at 85. Given the state of the record, the Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in
ruling that Wells’ issues “would require reopening the record for presentation of
additional evidence” and “would require introduction of evidence that could have
been introduced at trial.” Id. at 153.
B. Waiver
Wells argues she did not waive her bonus depreciation argument because she
did not know bonus depreciation could be at issue until the Commissioner raised the
issue of new construction at trial and the Tax Court ruled that certain improvements
she made constituted “new construction.” The force of this argument is somewhat
undercut by her position that the Commissioner’s notice of deficiency revealed that
75% of the required factors had been satisfied. 9 She does not explain why she could
9
Although Wells argues that requiring her to raise bonus depreciation “at
any earlier time before the Tax Court issued its Findings” would require a level of
prescience about the fourth, new construction factor that she did not possess, Aplt.
Opening Br. at 16, we note the Commissioner’s pretrial memorandum states that
“Mr. Schwartz . . . described the work as essentially new construction rather than
repair. For example, in describing the work done on the irrigation line, Mr. Schwartz
explained that items were installed that never existed before and that some pre-
existing items were replaced with new items . . . .” Aplt. App. at 32.
14
not have built on this knowledge by making an alternative argument that if the last
factor was also satisfied, she should receive bonus depreciation.10
But even if it was unfair to require Wells to anticipate that she could argue her
improvements met all the requirements for bonus depreciation, in exercising its
discretion the Tax Court was entitled to consider any such unfairness in light of
several other factors: (1) in her petition, Wells expressed her agreement not only
with the Commissioner’s allowance of increased depreciation, but with the exact
dollar figures the Commissioner specified, see Aplt. App. at 6, ¶ 4(a); (2) the parties
had agreed prior to trial that they would seek to prove that the expenses were either
depreciable or deductible, which limited the scope of issues pursued at trial; (3) even
in her motion for reconsideration, Wells did not make a bonus depreciation argument,
or present any concomitant discussion of the appropriate standards and factors; and
(4) a Rule 155 proceeding is not the appropriate place in which to pursue issues that
require additional factual development. We conclude the Tax Court did not abuse its
discretion in determining that Wells waived the bonus depreciation issue.
2. Personal Expense Determination
Wells also argues that the Tax Court erred in determining that some of her
expenses were personal and therefore ineligible for depreciation. She contends that
because the notice of deficiency did not raise a personal-expenses issue, and the
10
Wells does not argue that taxpayers cannot make alternative arguments
to the Tax Court. See Schelble v. Comm’r, 130 F.3d 1388, 1392 (10th Cir. 1997)
(addressing taxpayer’s alternative arguments, which had been presented to the Tax
Court).
15
parties agreed before trial that repair and maintenance deductions disallowed by the
Tax Court would be depreciated, she had no notice that she needed to prove that the
expenditures were not for personal items. She complains that the Tax Court rejected
entire allocations to specific projects as unreliable because they contained personal
expenses, and impermissibly used personal expenses to reject her claims for bonus
depreciation.
The Commissioner responds that Wells was not prejudiced by the Tax Court’s
findings that some of her expenses were personal. He argues that under his Rule 155
calculation, adopted by the Tax Court, she was permitted to keep her depreciation
deduction even for the expenses the Tax Court had characterized as personal.
Wells replies that she was in fact prejudiced because in its decision on her
Rule 161 motion and Rule 155 computation, the Tax Court rejected bonus
depreciation of her 2010 road maintenance expenses based on the personal nature of
these expenses.11 But a review of the Tax Court’s order, see Aplt. App. at 150-54,
shows that it reached its decision based on waiver, and did not discuss whether
certain expenses were personal expenditures and therefore ineligible for bonus
depreciation.
11
Although in her opening brief, Wells suggests that the “personal
expenses” issue adversely affected her ability to immediately deduct certain
expenses, see Aplt. Opening Br. at 28, she appears to have abandoned this contention
in her reply brief, where she focuses exclusively on being deprived of bonus
depreciation. See Reply Br. at 13 (“[T]he Tax Court seems to have adopted the
Commissioner’s post trial argument [concerning personal use] and, on that basis,
[held] she was not entitled to bonus depreciation.”).
16
Wells also complains that the Commissioner continues to argue in its briefing
to this court that some of her expenses were personal expenses, thus prejudicing her.
But our decision is not based on any comments by the Commissioner relative to
personal expenses.
Finally, Wells contends that because she did not have notice that she would
have to defend her business use of her assets, the Tax Court’s reliance on the
personal nature of these assets deprived her of due process of law. This generalized
assertion fails in light of her failure to demonstrate prejudice from the Tax Court’s
decision.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the Tax Court’s Order and Decision.
Entered for the Court
Mary Beck Briscoe
Circuit Judge
17