In this petition for reversal of a decision by the Tax Court,
The deficiencies in income taxes paid amount to $5,687.23 for 1955, $33,029.13 for 1956, and $17,019.67 for 1957. The reason for most of the deficiencies in the latter two years is the disallowance of the deduction for research and experimental expenditures incurred while constructing the personal residence referred to above. We will deal with this issue first.
RESEARCH AND EXPERIMENTAL ■ EXPENDITURES
For a detailed discussion of the facts involved reference should be made to the opinion of the lower court:
In 1956 petitioner commenced construction of a personal residence in Dallas, Texas. At this time he and his wife and five children were residing in a small three-bedroom house on Cinderella Lane in Dallas. The new house was completed in 1957 and petitioner moved his family into this $287,474.11 luxury home at that time. Three years later, in 1960, petitioner sent several letters describing his new house to various metal manufacturers. This allegedly was done in the hope that these companies would be interested in marketing some of the supposed new features which petitioner had developed while constructing his house. As of the date of the Tax Court proceedings nothing had been done by either these independent companies or Mayrath himself in exploiting any of the features incorporated into his. house. Petitioner still derives almost all of his income from his “farm implements” corporations; the remainder of his income coming from oil interests and other investments.
Mr. Mayrath contends that he was pursuing his inventive bent in the construction of his new house and that he definitely had the intention all along to commercialize on any of his ideas which proved worthwhile. Whether petitioner actually harbored this thought is important in determining if he was engaged in the “trade or business” of developing new techniques for housing construction.
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Section 174 of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code
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allows a deduction for
In determining whether the taxpayer was engaged in a trade or business to which these alleged research or experimental expenditures could be connected, it is important to consider the “profit motive.”
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As was stated by the Tenth Circuit in Wiles v. United States,
Certainly, the profit motive is the essence of any trade or business. And where, as here, none of the taxpayers’ reported income for the taxable years was derived from the claimed business, * * * non-profitability is, to be sure, cogent evidence of the non-existence of the alleged business.
From the evidence presented by the taxpayer it seems unlikely that he undertook the construction of this luxury house as a business venture for profit rather than as a hobby. No research was done before the commencement of this costly construction to determine if a market in fact existed for the types of innovations petitioner had in mind. Scant records were kept during the construction process for use in any commercial application. And the taxpayer moved his large family into the house immediately upon completion and, apparently, forgot about taking any further steps towards profiting on his “housing experiments” until 3 years later — at about the same time that the Internal Revenue Service was auditing his income tax returns for these years in question. Furthermore, these belated efforts to turn his activities into a trade or business were “token” at best.
The question of whether the taxpayer is engaged in a trade or business is one of fact, Higgins v. Commis
There are several Tax Court decisions dealing with this question of trade or business in connection with deductions under Section 174. In Kenneth Reiner, 24 TCM 1005 (July 20, 1965), the Tax Court ruled that the taxpayer was entitled to a deduction for research and experimental expenses incurred while building a personal residence. The evidence, however, was very strong that the primary motive for the construction was “profit:” (1) There was an oral and a written agreement between the partners concerning the business venture of constructing an experimental residence. (2) Patent counsel was used continually during the construction process to keep records on all the potential patentable developments. At the time of the Tax Court proceedings in that case, 20 to 30 preliminary patent applications had been prepared, an additional 10 patent applications had been filed, and 2 patents had already been issued. (3) One person was employed full time to evaluate the market potential of the ideas being developed. (4) Because of the continual experimentation with the unfinished house, taxpayer was forced to purchase another residence rather than moving into this experimental home. Construction started in 1956 and as of 1963 the house was still being used strictly for research. (5) One development is already being produced and sold. (6) Detailed records of expenses and materials used were maintained throughout the construction process. We feel that these numerous factors clearly distinguish the Reiner case from the matter now in question. 5
The most recent Tax Court decision concerning Section 174 concerns a corporation which specializes in the manufacture and sale of locks and desired a research and experimental deduction for work on an isothermal air compressor. Best Universal Lock Co., Inc.,
In circumstances such as exist here, where there is a grave concern whether the expenses incurred by the taxpayer are personal rather than “in. connection with his trade or business,”
We conclude that the lower court was not clearly erroneous in deciding from the facts presented that Mr. Mayrath did not intend to profit from the work done in building his own personal “made-to-order” house and so his expenses were not connected with a trade or business. The Tax Court’s decision to disallow all deductions to the taxpayer which were claimed under Section 174 is affirmed.
DEDUCTIONS UNDER SECTION 162 FOR BUSINESS USE OF RESIDENCES
The petitioner also claimed deductions of $1,072.92 for 1955, $2,372.46 for 1956, and $1,265.40 for 1957 for alleged use of his three personal residences in his trade or business. One of these houses was located in California and was used to store the equipment and files which Mr. Mayrath had used in the early 1950’s in a music business which he allegedly was engaged in with two other men. There appeared to be ample evidence, however, from which the Tax Court could conclude that this was a music hobby of petitioner’s, rather than a bona fide business venture. Similarly, the business nature of Mayrath’s use of his two houses in Dallas was very unclear from the evidence. He claimed that one-half of the costs of operating his three-bedroom house on Cinderella Lane were attributable to his business in that he stored music equipment and files there and made telephone calls. Yet he and his family of seven lived in this same house. No serious effort was made by the taxpayer at the trial to even attempt to prove that the telephone calls were “business.” We feel that the Tax Court was correct in disallowing these business deductions for lack of substantiation. 8
Petitioner contends, however, that lack of substantiating evidence should not rule out the allowance of at least
some
of his claimed deductible expenses. For this proposition he relies on the rule laid down by Judge L. Hand in Cohan v. Commissioner,
Referring to the research and experimental expenses on taxpayer’s new luxury house, discussed in part I of the opinion, taxpayer would also have us apply the Cohan rule to allow him at least some of his claimed deductions under Section 174. However, his contention fails for the same reason as that given above. He must first prove that his expenses are truly deductible before approximation will be made as to amount.
DEPRECIATION OF TAXPAYER’S WORKSHOP
Mr. Mayrath also built a workshop adjacent to his new luxury home at an alleged cost of $42,000. The workshop is a one-story, 20- by 40-foot concrete and glass structure which petitioner claims he uses for business, i. e., work on his experimental house, on his music business, and his farm implements business. The taxpayer claimed a depreciation deduction for this workshop in 1956 and 1957 based on a useful life of 20 years. The Tax Court felt that the business use of the workshop, its actual cost, and its useful life were all completely unsubstantiated by any documentary evidence, and so disallowed the entire depreciation deduction. 9 Here again we feel that the taxpayer has failed to carry the burden of proving to the satisfaction of the trier of fact that any of the uses of the workshop were connected with a trade or business, and not purely a hobby. And until the taxpayer meets this burden, the rationale of Cohan is inapplicable. We therefore affirm the Tax Court in disallowing the complete deduction for depreciation of the workshop.
The decision of the Tax Court is, in all matters, affirmed.
Notes
. In his income tax returns for 1956 and 1957, taxpayer attempted to deduct a total of $174,797.77 for research and experimental expenses. He arrived at this figure by subtracting what it would have cost to build a conventional luxury house from his total cost of $287,474.11. He assumed that all the excess expenses over and above the cost of a conventional luxury house would be attributable to his research and experimentation.
. Section 174, 26 U.S.C. § 174 (1958), provides in part:
“A taxpayer may treat research or experimental expenditures which are paid or incurred by him during the taxable year in connection with his trade or business as expenses which are not chargeableto capital account. The expenditures so treated shall be allowed as a deduction.
die * * * *
“(c) Land and other property.
“This section shall not apply to any expenditure for the acquisition or improvement of land, or for the acquisition or improvement of property to be used in connection with the research or experimentation and of a character which is subject to the allowance under section 167 (relating to allowance for depreciation, etc.) * * * but for purposes of this section allowances under section 167, * * * shall be considered as expenditures.”
. Cf. Doggett v. Burnet, Commissioner,
. The Reiner decision raised a point that would be of serious concern to us if we were to hold that the taxpayer-does qualify under Section 174. That point is whether cost of constructing the experimental house, in excess of its residual value as an eventual personal residence, should he depreciated under Section 174 (c) or deducted under 174(a) as expenses. Mr. Mayrath, in his tax returns for 1956 and 1957, deducted as expenses in the tax year the excess of the construction costs over what, in his estimation, it would have cost to build a conventional luxury house. Respondent contends that Section 174(c) excludes the taxpayer from deducting the expenses incurred in building an experimental house, since a house is depreciable under Section 167. There is no necessity for us to reach this issue since we uphold the Tax Court’s conclusion that taxpayer’was not engaged in a trade or business.
. Cf. White v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, N. 4; American Properties, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, N. 4.
. 26 U.S.C. § 262 (1958).
. Cf. Williams v. United States,
. Section 167 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 167 (1958), provides in part:
“There shall be allowed as a depreciation deduction a reasonable allowance for the exhaustion, wear and tear (including a reasonable allowance for obsolescence) — “(1) of property used in the trade or business, * *
