*1282OPINION.
Marquette:The question presented in this appeal is the fair market value of the taxpayer’s interest in the real estate oh March 1, 1913. Section 202(a) of the Revenue Act of 1918 provides:
That for .the purpose of ascertaining the gain derived or loss sustained from the sale or other disposition of property, real, personal, or mixed, the basis-shall be—
(1) In the case of property acquired before March 1, 1913, the fair market price or value of such property as of that date; and
(2) In the case of property acquired on or after that date, the cost thereof; * * *
That the title to the property involved herein was vested in the taxpayer prior to March 1, 1913, is settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Hewes v. Miller, 254 Pa. St. 57; 98 Atl. 776; and Stearns Co. v. Hewes, 256 Pa. St. 577; 100 Atl. 1054.
The Commissioner has considered the value as of March 1, 1913, as equal to the amount at which the taxpayer offered to sell the property to the litigant abutting owners some time around 1916, to wit, $6,500. The taxpayer, on the other hand, brings in expert testimony to prove a value of about $30,000 as of March 1, 1913. The Barber Asphalt Paving Co. considered the property of such little value in June, 1915, that it accepted $500 in full payment and deemed the chance of final success in the litigation so very remote that it refused absolutely to bear any of the expense.
Obviously, the land had a value much in excess of $500, if all persons who claimed title, including the City of Erie, had been willing to join in a conveyance to a willing buyer. Sales of adjacent land then would have clearly justified the value of $30,000 expressed by the several experts. But the fact that.adjoining land had a value is not conclusive in determining the value of the land in question. If the conditions existing as to one parcel of land are the same as those relating to an adjacent parcel, proof of value evidenced by sale as to the former may assist in the determination of the value of the latter, but it does not follow that, because one parcel is valued at a certain price per front foot or per square foot, an adjoining parcel, not similarly situated, has the same or a similar value.
The question is not what the land herein was worth in 1913, in the light of subsequent events, but what was its fair market value on March 1,1913, under the then known conditions as between a willing buyer and a willing seller? No offers to purchase the land were made at or about that time. The taxpayer himself offered to sell it in 1916 or thereabouts for $6,500. Apparently there was no willing purchaser at that price. The expression of value nearest to March 1,1913, was contained in the letter of June 8,1912, written *1283by the taxpayer to the Barber Asphalt Paving Co. He therein states:
The whole matter is so high in the air I cannot anticipate landing. We have one chance in a hundred of winning in an ejectment for the premises and it ought to be brought with an idea of making some kind of a settlement. I think the idea of the parties is to pay about one thousand dollars to me for a Quit Claim Deed, and before I could discuss a settlement I ought to know just what you expect. * * * If your company will agree to accept Five Hundred Dollars, I will be in shape to deal with the parties. On the other hand, I am adverse to a suit against the parties under an indefinite agreement with your company. To be frank with you, I don’t have the least idea what I may recover either by suit or settlement in anything, which accounts for my asking you to fix your share, if anything is recovered, as low as possible.
That letter shows no opinion of the taxpayer at that time that the property had a real valne. His only hope was to force a settlement out of the abutting owners through an ejectment proceeding, and to split “ fifty-fifty ” with the Barber Asphalt Paving Co. in the “ one hundred to one shot.”
The reply of that company was not produced in evidence, but under date of January 12,1915 (almost two years after March 1, 1913), we find them stating:
Our position in the matter is as stated in our Vice President’s letter to you of June 11,1912, to wit: that we will accept $500 as our share in any settlement, but we did not then agree nor do we now feel that under any circumstances should we obligate ourselves to share any expense of litigation, regardless o'f the outcome of same.
It is not conceivable that, if the taxpayer himself believed the property had a value of $30,000 in 1913, he would have done otherwise than remove the Barber Asphalt Paving Co. from the situation by paying them the $500 forthwith. It is not conceivable that the Barber Asphalt Paving Co. would have limited itself to the possible receipt of $500 from property which it believed to be worth $30,000, since it was given a full opportunity to trade in the deal. It is not conceivable that the abutting owners would have refused to pay $6,500 for property which was worth $30,000, or that the taxpayer would have made the offer.
We can reach no conclusion, upon all the evidence before us, other than that the fair market value of the property on March 1, 1913, was no greater than the $500 which the taxpayer was obligated to pay therefor. But in determining the gain realized upon the sale in 1918, consideration should be given to an additional capital expenditure of $5,250 attorney’s fees. The resulting total cost (since no greater March 1, 1913, fair market value has been proved) should be deducted from the $33,230 received in 1918, and the deficiency should be computed upon that amount as gain realized in 1918.
*1284The amount of $4,202.28 received by the taxpayer in 1918 as mesne profits was properly included in income of that year.