The district court has granted a taxpayer an income tax refund for the year 1949 and the, government has appealed. The only matter in dispute is the amount of depreciation allowable upon the taxpayer’s former residence which had been converted into rental property at the beginning of the taxable year.
The taxpayer built the house at a cost of approximately $30,000. Several years later, when he converted the structure into income producing property, its market value had increásed, without additional capital investment, to more than $50,000. The Commissioner has required the taxpayer to use the $30,000 figure as the basis for depreciation. The taxpayer contends that $50,000 is the correct basis.
Both parties agree that the controlling language of the Internal Revenue Code 1939, is the provision of Section 113(a), 26 U.S.C.A. § 113(a), that “the basis of property shall be the cost of such property.” They differ as to whether in the present circumstances “cost” means the taxpayer’s capital investment in the property or its value at the time of conversion from residential to business use.
The taxpayer’s position is demonstrably unsound. He is treating the rental enterprise, to which he has newly committed his property, as if it were a taxpayer. It will hardly be disputed that “cost to the taxpayer” as represented by “the taxpayér’s' outlay is the measure of his recoupment through depreciation accruals.” See Detroit Edison Co. v. Commissioner, 1943,
The taxpayer seeks to avoid this result by urging his view of the logic of certain depreciation cases in which the value- of former residential property at the time of conversion to rental use has been less than the taxpayer’s original cost. It is true that in this situation the taxpayer cannot use a basis greater than market value on conversion for his projection and computation of depreciation. McKean v. Commissioner, 1946,
An analogy may make this clearer. The Internal Revenue Code has long pro
*439
vided that in determining the deduction allowable for loss on the sale of property acquired before March 1, 1913, the taxpayer’s basis shall be the fair market value on March 1, 1913. But cases have arisen in which the March 1, 1913 value has been greater than the taxpayer’s cost. In that situation no loss deduction is permitted on a subsequent sale which yields the taxpayer less than his statutory basis, the 1913 value, but more than his actual capital outlay. United States v. Flannery, 1925,
In the present case we are concerned with property which as a matter of law was not depreciable for tax purposes so long as the taxpayer used it for a residence. However, the taxpayer’s cost, his capital investment in the structure, remains under Section 113(a) a limitation upon the total depreciation which may be allowable after conversion to business use. At the same time, because the value at the time of conversion represents the maximum loss that can be suffered during the entire period of allowable depreciation, that value also is a limitation.
If property has decreased in value between purchase and conversion this second limitation is the smaller amount and, therefore, is controlling. In the unusual situation of the present case where market value has increased between purchase and conversion without additional capital investment, the smaller capital outlay is the effective limitation.
Finally, it may be noted that this is one of the many situations in which the annual allowances for depreciation may not aggregate the replacement value of the business property. But if this is viewed as harsh or objectionable, the vice is inherent in the fact that the present statutory scheme of depreciation allowances is based upon cost rather than replacement value. See Turner, Treatment of Depreciation on Replacement Values, 1949, Proceedings 7th Annual Institute of-Federal Taxation, 58, 62.
It follows that the district court was mistaken in allowing a basis of depreciation greater than the taxpayer’s capital outlay.
The judgment will be reversed.
