*3 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Decedent died on Jan. 3, 1982. Petitioner attempted to elect
*16 The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal estate tax in the amount of $ 34,814.42.
After concessions by petitioner, the sole issue remaining for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to value real property in the decedent's estate at its special use value pursuant to
*4 FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts of this case have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and accompanying exhibits are incorporated by this reference.
Della Rose Schwartz, personal representative of the Estate of Pauline E. Strickland (the decedent), was a resident of Edmond, Oklahoma, at the time the Federal estate tax returns and the petition were filed in this case.
The decedent, Pauline E. Strickland, died on January 3, 1982, owning seven tracts of land which were being used for farming. At the time of her death, decedent was a resident and citizen of the United States.
*17 Petitioner timely filed a Federal estate tax return, Form 706, on September 8, 1982. On October 4, 1982, petitioner filed an amended Federal estate tax return, Form 706. The applicable box was not checked on either return signifying that
A separate notice of election to value the above-described real property under
Election and Agreement to Have Certain | |
Property Valued Under Section 2032A | |
for Estate Tax Purposes | |
1. DECEDENT: | Pauline E. Strickland |
SSAN 445-48-1467 | |
2. QUALIFIED USE: | Decedent operated the real property |
subject to election as a farm. | |
3. REAL PROPERTY: | This election applied to Tract I, Tract |
II, Tract III, Tract IV and Tract V | |
on Schedule A. | |
4. VALUATION: |
Market | 2032A | |
Tract I | 16,000 | 8,489 |
Tract II | 80,000 | 24,786 |
Tract III | 138,800 | 38,684 |
Tract IV | 99,000 | 16,823 |
Tract V | 77,400 | 12,495 |
Total | 411,200 | 101,277 |
5. ADJUSTED VALUE: | The adjusted value of all real |
property used in Qualified Use and | |
passing to qualified heirs is $ 405,155. | |
The adjusted value of all real | |
property to be specially valued is | |
$ 405,155. | |
6. PERSONAL PROPERTY: | Personal property passing to |
qualified heirs and used in a qualified | |
use includes only an undivided one | |
half interest in Item 3, Schedule F, | |
and the adjusted value thereof is | |
$ 4,077. | |
7. ADJUSTED GROSS ESTATE: | The adjusted value of the gross |
estate, as defined in Section 2032A | |
(b)(3)(A) is $ 752,420. | |
8. METHOD OF VALUATION: | The method of valuation was that |
method prescribed in section 2032A | |
(e)(7). The subject real property has | |
an established annual cash rental | |
value of $ 45.00 per acre for cultivated | |
(wheat) land and $ 9.375 per acre for | |
pasture land. Real property average | |
taxes were determined by averaging | |
actual assessments for the years | |
1979, 1980, & 1981. The interest rate | |
factor was provided by I.R.S., | |
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to-wit: | |
10.26%. | |
9. APPRAISALS: | Written appraisals of Fair market of |
real property are attached to | |
Schedule A. | |
10. OWNERSHIP: | Decedent owned all specially valued |
real property for at least 5 of the 8 | |
years immediately preceding the date | |
of decedent's death. | |
11. QUALIFIED USE: | During the entire eight years |
immediately preceding decedent's | |
death, Decedent owned and operated | |
the specially valued property as a | |
farm, and materially participated in | |
the operation thereof. | |
12. QUALIFIED HEIRS: | The following persons, both of whom |
are daughters of the decedent, will | |
receive the following specially valued | |
property: |
Della Rose Schwartz | ||
505 N. Blvd. | ||
Edmond, Oklahoma 73034 | ||
SSAN: 444-28-9285 | ||
Tract | Market value | 2032A value |
One-half Tract I | 8,000 | 4,245 |
One-half Tract II | 40,000 | 12,393 |
Tract III | 138,800 | 38,684 |
Willa Mae Abercrombie | ||
Rt. 1, Box 16 | ||
Crescent, Oklahoma 73028 | ||
SSAN: 444-28-8963 | ||
Tract | Market value | 2032A value |
One-half Tract I | 8,000 | 4,245 |
One-half Tract II | 40,000 | 12,393 |
Tract IV | 99,000 | 16,823 |
Tract V | 77,400 | 12,495 |
13. AFFIDAVITS: | Attached hereto are affidavits to the |
effect that decedent materially | |
participated in the operation of her | |
farm. Alos [sic], attached are Forms | |
4835 of decedent for years 1979 and | |
1980 (most recent available). | |
14. LEGAL DESCRIPTION: | The legal description of specially |
valued property is reflected as Tracts | |
I, II, III, IV and V on Schedule A. | |
15. AGREEMENT: | WILLA MAE ABERCROMBIE, |
with respect to Tracts I, II, IV and V | |
of Schedule A, and DELLA ROSE | |
SCHWARTZ, with respect to Tracts | |
I, II and III of Schedule A, being the | |
only persons having an interest in | |
said tracts, hereby agree and consent | |
to the application of I.R.C. Section | |
2032A (c) in the event of certain early | |
dispositions of the property or early | |
cessation of the qualified use; consent | |
to personal liability for taxes imposed | |
thereunder; and designate | |
themselves, at the addresses above, | |
as agents in all dealings with Internal | |
Revenue Service on matters arising | |
under Section 2032A. |
*7 *20 With respect to the method of valuation, petitioner submitted, with the amended Federal estate tax return, a lease for a period of June 1, 1982, through May 31, 1983, covering comparable pasture land adjoining tract III. Petitioner submitted an opinion letter from the vice president of Farmers & Merchants Bank in Crescent, Oklahoma, setting forth a cash rental value of $ 40 to $ 45 per acre per year for the cultivated land for a period subsequent to decedent's death. Other comparable cultivated and pasture land existed in the geographical area of the respective tracts, but petitioner did not submit evidence of them. Taxes paid on tracts III, IV, and V for the years 1979, 1980, and 1981 were submitted by petitioner in a letter from the Logan County treasurer's office. In addition, copies of receipts were submitted from the Grant County treasurer's office for taxes paid on tracts I and II for the years 1979, 1980, and 1981.
The agreement as to special use valuation was filed with the amended Federal estate tax return and was signed by all the required parties.
On March 8, 1984, and again on May 30, 1984, petitioner was notified by letter from respondent, that the information*8 and documentation submitted with respect to the special use valuation was not sufficient and a request was made for the required information. Petitioner responded on October 3, 1984, stating that petitioner was determining whether or not to contest the disallowance of the
On October 23, 1986, petitioner was informed by letter that respondent had not yet received the required information and documentation to support the special use value. On January 7, 1987, petitioner submitted two documents in response to respondent's request. One document was the same cash lease submitted with the notice of election from comparable property adjoining tract III, the only difference being that the lease covered a period from June 1978 through 1984. The second document was a statement from the Logan County treasurer setting forth the taxes paid in 1981 on this comparable parcel.
On February 17, 1987, petitioner was notified that it failed to qualify for the special use valuation provided under
*9 In the statutory notice of deficiency, the Commissioner determined that petitioner was not entitled to the special use valuation under
OPINION
The value of property included in the gross estate of a decedent is usually the fair market value of the property interest as of the date of death of the decedent. Sec. 2031. Prior to 1976, there were no provisions in the Internal Revenue Code that permitted any other valuation.
Under
*11
*22 A
(i) The decedent's name and taxpayer identification number as they appear on the estate tax return;
(ii) The relevant qualified use;
(iii) The items of real property shown on the estate tax return to be specially valued pursuant to the election (identified by schedule and item number);
(iv) The fair market value of the real property to be specially valued under
*23 (v) The adjusted value (as defined in
(vi) The items of personal property shown on the estate tax return that pass from the decedent to a qualified heir and are used in a qualified use under
(vii) The adjusted value of the gross estate, as defined in
(viii) The method used in determining the special value based on use;
(ix) Copies of written appraisals of the fair market value of the real property;
(x) A statement that the decedent and/or a member of his or her family has owned all specially valued real property for at least 5 years of the 8 years immediately preceding the date of the decedent's death;
(xi) Any periods during the 8-year period preceding the date of the decedent's death during which the decedent*14 or a member of his or her family did not own the property, use it in a qualified use, or materially participate in the operation of the farm or other business within the meaning of
(xii) The name, address, taxpayer identification number, and relationship to the decedent of each person taking an interest in each item of specially valued property, and the value of the property interests passing to each such person based on both fair market value and qualified use;
(xiii) Affidavits describing the activities constituting material participation and the identity of the material participant or participants; and
(xiv) A legal description of the specially valued property.
We must decide whether petitioner "substantially complied" with the regulations in submitting a notice of election which did not contain all of the required information. If we find that petitioner has "substantially complied" with the regulations, then, in determining whether petitioner completed the notice of election, we will take into account any documents submitted by petitioner within 90 days after notification by the Internal Revenue Service. If petitioner has not "substantially complied" with*15 the regulations,
It is well established that the Commissioner's determination is presumed to be correct and that the taxpayer has *24 not only the burden of proving error in that determination, but the burden of producing evidence from which a proper determination can be made. Most of the information required under
In determining special value based on use,
*17 Gross cash rental is the amount of cash received during the year for the use of actual tracts of comparable farmland in the same locality, undiminished by any expenses or liabilities associated with the farm operation.
The second method of valuation under
Petitioner elected to value the respective property under
*19 Petitioner submitted tax statements for only 3 of the prescribed 5 years preceding the decedent's date of death. The tax statements were those taxes paid on tracts I, II, III, IV, and V. Petitioner was required to submit tax *26 figures with respect to comparable real property, not on the tracts themselves.
Petitioner has failed to identify comparable real property, annual gross cash rentals, and State and local taxes therefrom for the requisite 5 calendar years preceding the decedent's date of death. It is impossible for the Court to ascertain from petitioner's amended Federal estate tax return and notice of election the special use value of the respective properties under
We must now decide whether petitioner's failure to properly document and substantiate the method used in determining the special value based on use is fatal under the "substantial compliance" language of
Neither party has cited any authority addressing this specific point. We are aware of a Memorandum Opinion of this Court in which almost none of the required information of
*21 In
The test for determining the applicability of the substantial compliance doctrine has been the subject of a myriad of cases. The critical question to be answered is whether the requirements relate "to the substance or essence of the statute."
We found that
With respect to the method of valuation under
Petitioner submitted, with the timely amended Federal estate tax return, one lease from a comparable parcel, *25 for a period subsequent to the decedent's date of death. The only tax information submitted was those taxes paid on the respective tracts themselves and not on comparable property. Thus, we find that petitioner cannot avail itself of the "substantial compliance" language of
We are aware that Congress believed, in enacting
Illustrations of the type of information that may be supplied after the initial filing of a notice of election are omitted social security numbers and addresses of qualified heirs and copies of written appraisals of the property to be specially valued. This provision does not, however, permit such appraisals to be obtained only after the estate tax return is made. Rather, the provision simply permits the submission of previously obtained appraisals. Likewise, a notice of election which does not provide a legal description of the property to be specially valued may not be perfected unless the notice, as initially filed with the estate tax return, described the property with reasonable clarity, even though the full legal description was not provided. [H. Rept. 98-861 (Conf.) (1984), 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 495.]*27
We do not hold that the failure to submit 1 out of 14 items in a notice of election will never meet the "substantial compliance" standard of
Petitioner contends that there was no comparable land from which the average annual gross cash rental values could be determined. It argues that the net-share-value method under
Petitioner contends that Mr. Ben Abercrombie testified that he had attempted to locate written cash leases for property in the area, but was unable to locate any leases other than the one which was submitted to the Internal Revenue Service (Mr. Abercrombie refers to this lease as "leases to the pasture land to the west of us" in his *30 testimony). As we noted, this lease was for a period subsequent to the decedent's death, June 1, 1982, through May 31, 1983. We read Mr. Abercrombie's testimony differently.
Q. Mr. Abercrombie, did you make an effort to locate cash leases on both cultivated land and pasture land in preparation, not only for this case, but all through this proceeding?
A. Yes. On the land that surrounded our land.Q. Okay. Were you able to locate any cash leases?A. The cash leases I knew about, I was unable to get any documents on.
Q. Okay. Did you actually talk to people and see if they had cash -- had written cash leases?
A. Yes. We contacted our neighbor to the north there. She has a cash lease, and we could not get papers from her. But I did get copies of leases on pasture land to the west of us.
* * * *
Q. Mr. Abercrombie, *29 did you -- were you able to locate any other cash leases?
A. I also tried to check on the quarter east of us which belonged to a real estate man in Enid, and he has sold that, and I couldn't complete my check on that because the new owner doesn't live there.
Q. You were not able to find a cash lease in this instance.A. On him, no.From Mr. Abercrombie's testimony, cash leases existed on both cultivated land and pasture land, but he was not able to obtain any documents on them. In addition, it appears that Mr. Abercrombie visited neighboring farms that bordered the cultivated land and the pasture land, but he never investigated other properties. 10
*30 Petitioner's second witness, Mr. Dwayne Johnson, was a farmer who participated in the operation and management of the cultivated land and pasture land in question. Petitioner contends that Mr. Johnson testified that it was not common for cultivated land to be leased on a cash *31 basis, and that such leases are rare. We read Mr. Johnson's testimony differently.
Q. Is it common to lease pasture land on a cash rental basis?A. Yes. Mostly. All of the leases, nearly, from August 1 until August 1 on pasture.
Q. Okay. How about cultivated land? What is the common method of leasing or renting cultivated land?
A. I would say the majority is leased on a crop one-third or two-thirds share, but some is rented for cash, too.
Q. Do you have any personal knowledge of any cash rental leases that either existed or have existed concerning cultivated land?
A. Well, I know of some. Yes.Q. Okay. What are those that you know of? Can you recall?A. I really couldn't tell you what price they paid because I am not that familiar with them. It varies, the type of ground and location, and so forth.
Although cash leases may not be the most common method for leasing cultivated land, Mr. Johnson*31 was aware of the existence of some of these cash leases, which petitioner has failed to produce.
It is apparent that there were cash leases for comparable cultivated land and pasture land from which average annual gross cash rental values could be computed. Petitioner failed to produce evidence of them in her notice of election filed with the amended Federal estate tax return. We hold, therefore, that because comparable land from which average annual gross cash rental values could be submitted, petitioner, in electing to use
In an effort to substantiate the values reflected in the notice of election, item 8, petitioner has devised a formula to value the respective tracts based upon "average production" in bushels per acre and in price per bushel. We need only point out that
Petitioner argues that information pursuant to
(C) Exception. -- The formula provided by subparagraph (A) shall not be used --
(i) where it is established that there is no comparable land from which the average annual gross cash rental may be determined and that there is no comparable land from which the average net share rental may be determined, or
(ii) where the executor elects to have the value of the farm for farming purposes determined under paragraph (8).
The statute provides that, if it can be demonstrated that no comparable property exists for either method,
*33 It is important to note that there is an apparant inconsistency between the statute, at
*35 We hold that petitioner has not "substantially complied" with the regulations under
In order to allow the deduction of any administration expenses occasioned by this litigation,
*36 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Footnotes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section numbers refer to the Internal Revenue Code as in effect as of the date of death of decedent.↩
2. The decedent must have been a citizen or a resident of the United States, and the subject property must be located in the United States.
Sec. 2032A(a)(1)(A) ;sec. 2032A(b)(1) . The real property must have been used as a farm or in a trade or business by the decedent or by a member of the decedent's family, and the decedent or a member of the decedent's family must have materially participated in the operation of the farm or the business.Sec. 2032A(b)(1)(A)(i) and(ii) . In addition, the property must pass to a qualified heir, who must be a member of the decedent's family. Ownership and use requirements must be satisfied as set forth in the statute to avoid recapture of part of the tax savings resulting from special use valuation.Sec. 2032A(c)↩ .3. In addition to the requirements listed above,
sec. 2032A includes requirements regarding the makeup of the estate, as set forth insec. 2032A(b)(1)(A) and(B)↩ . These percentage requirements limit tax relief to those situations where the family farm or business is a major asset, in terms of value, in the decedent's estate. We need not address this issue for this information was sufficiently set forth in petitioner's notice of election.4. Petitioner erroneously contends on brief that because the passage of sec. 1025(a) of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 was subsequent to the date of the amended Federal estate tax return, the 90-day requirement has no application because it was not in existence at the time of the filing or auditing of the amended Federal estate tax return. Petitioner has failed to take notice of the fact that sec. 1025(a) was made retroactive to apply to decedents dying after Dec. 31, 1976. Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-369, sec. 1025(b)(1), 98 Stat. 1030.↩
5. The Internal Revenue Service issues an annual revenue ruling setting forth the effective interest rate for each of the 12 regional Federal Land Bank Districts. The effective interest rate for the Federal Land Bank District in which the respective property is located, for 1982, was 10.26 percent.
Rev. Rul. 82-104, 1 C.B. 129">1982-1 C.B. 129↩ , 130.6. Petitioner has presented an utterly confusing picture as to which method of valuation is being elected. In the notice of election, petitioner merely states that an election is being made under
sec. 2032A(e)(7) . On brief, petitioner argues thatsec. 2032A(e)(7)(A) valuation was elected, then contends that evidence was submitted to the Internal Revenue Service regarding net share rental undersec. 2032A(e)(7)(B)↩ . Petitioner then submits a formula based upon "average production" in bushels per acre and in price per bushel. Finally, petitioner contends that "every effort was made to value the land in accordance with the formula contained in [sec. 2032(e)(7)] (A)."7.
Estate of Killion v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-244↩ .8. This is not a case in which no election was attempted on a timely original Federal estate tax return and an amended return was filed after the due date of the original return, including extensions containing a
sec. 2032A notice of election.Carmean v. United States, 4 Cl. Ct. 181">4 Cl. Ct. 181 (1983);Estate of McCoy v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-509 , affd.809 F.2d 333">809 F.2d 333 (6th Cir. 1987);Estate of Williams v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1984-178 ;Estate of Young v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983-686 ;Estate of Boyd v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983-316↩ .9. We are aware of other decisions which generally hold that strict compliance with
sec. 2032A is required to receive statutory relief.Estate of Cowser v. Commissioner, 736 F.2d 1168 (7th Cir. 1984) , affg.80 T.C. 783">80 T.C. 783 (1983);Estate of Abell v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. 696">83 T.C. 696 (1984);Estate of Coon v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. 602 (1983) ;Estate of Geiger v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 484↩ (1983) .10. We are unable to ascertain what tract of land Mr. Abercrombie was referring to when he referred to "our land." However, for purposes of this analysis, it is not relevant which specific tract is referred to, as no evidence of comparable property was produced.↩
11. This assumes that the executrix has not initially made an election under
sec. 2032A(e)(7)(ii) to value the property undersec. 2032A(e)(8)↩ .12. If
sec. 2032A(e)(8) is used for valuation purposes, none of the documentation requirements ofsec. 2032A(e)(7)(A) would be required. Therefore, the only disputed issue remaining would be whether there was "material participation" by the decedent in the operation of the farm as required bysec. 2032A(b)(1)(C)(ii)↩ . We assume that this standard would have been met for purposes of this analysis only. We express no opinion as to whether petitioner "materially participated," as our holding does not require us to reach this issue.