Huda T. SCHEIDELMAN, Petitioner-Appellant-Cross Appellee, v. COMMISSIONER of INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellee-Cross Appellant.*
Docket Nos. 10-3587-ag(L), 10-5316-ag(XAP)
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Argued: Dec. 15, 2011. Decided: June 15, 2012.
682 F.3d 189
* The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to amend the caption as listed above.
Patrick J. Urda (Kenneth L. Greene, on the briefs), for Gilbert Rothenberg, Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Respondent-Appellee-Cross Appellant.
Before: JACOBS, Chief Judge, LEVAL and LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judges.
Taxpayer Huda Scheidelman appeals a decision of the Tax Court disallowing her deduction for the value of a “facade conservation easement” that she donated to the National Architectural Trust (the “Trust“). The Tax Court ruled that the appraisal she obtained insufficiently explained the method and basis of valuation, and thereby failed to comply with the Treasury Regulation defining a qualified appraisal. See
Accordingly, we vacate the decision of the Tax Court and remand the case for further consideration consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
A facade conservation easement is an undertaking by a property owner, granted to an organization, that a building‘s facade will be maintained unchanged in perpetuity. Such an easement is designed to protect the historical integrity of properties and communities. Congress has created a tax benefit for taxpayers willing to donate property rights for conservation purposes, including the right to alter a property‘s facade. See
In early 2003, Scheidelman submitted an application to the Trust to donate a facade conservation easement for her brownstone row house in Brooklyn‘s historic Fort Greene neighborhood. The easement would prohibit Scheidelman from altering the facade without permission of the Trust and would require her to maintain the facade and the rest of the structure. The easement would give the Trust the right to inspect the facade and to require Scheidelman to cure any violation of her easement obligation. It would run with the land in perpetuity.
In order to complete the donation process (and obtain the associated tax benefit), Scheidelman needed to have the easement appraised. She hired Michael Drazner, a qualified real estate appraiser. Drazner valued the easement at $115,000. He employed the “before-and-after method,” which, as the name suggests, subtracts the value of a house burdened with an easement from the value of the house without one. Drazner estimated the unencumbered value of Scheidelman‘s property at $1,015,000, a figure the parties do not dispute. He estimated the value of the property after the granting of the easement at $900,000, yielding an easement value of $115,000. This appeal concerns primarily the bases for the $900,000 after valuation, which he arrived at by applying an 11.33 percent reduction to the pre-easement value.
Scheidelman claimed a $115,000 deduction on her federal tax return for the 2004 tax year. Pursuant to IRS rules, Scheidelman had to carry over $63,083 to future years ($59,959 in 2005 and $3,124 in 2006). After an audit, the IRS decided that she failed to establish a fair market value for the easement; notified her of resulting deficiencies in her taxes of $16,873, $17,537, and $1,015 for the years 2004 through 2006, respectively; and imposed a statutory penalty of $3,374.60, $3,507.40, and $203.00 for each year, respectively.
Scheidelman sought a redetermination of her tax liability from the Tax Court. The Tax Court found that Scheidelman was ineligible for the deduction because the Drazner appraisal was not a “qualified appraisal“—a prerequisite for deducting a noncash charitable contribution—because it failed to state the method of valuation and the basis of valuation, as required by
The Tax Court also rejected Scheidelman‘s attempt to deduct her cash contribution to the Trust.1 Citing the principle that “a charitable gift or contribution must be a payment made for detached and disinterested motives,” Graham v. Comm‘r, 822 F.2d 844, 848 (9th Cir. 1987), aff‘d sub nom., Hernandez v. Comm‘r, 490 U.S. 680 (1989), it reasoned that Scheidelman had made the donation for the purpose of inducing the Trust to accept her easement so that she could enjoy a tax benefit. Scheidelman, 2010 WL 2788205, at *13.
DISCUSSION
We review the legal rulings of the Tax Court de novo and its factual determinations for clear error. See
I
A
Normally a taxpayer may not take a deduction for the contribution of a partial interest in property. See
A taxpayer deducting the value of a donated facade conservation easement must first obtain a “qualified appraisal” of the partial interest donated—a requirement left to the Secretary of the Treasury for further explication. See
(J) The method of valuation used to determine the fair market value, such as the income approach, the market-data approach, and the replacement-cost-less-depreciation approach; and
(K) The specific basis for the valuation, such as specific comparable sales transactions or statistical sampling, including a justification for using sampling and an explanation of the sampling procedure employed.
Scheidelman was required to obtain an appraisal before claiming the deduction, but at the time it was sufficient to submit a summary of the appraisal (Form 8283) with her tax return, not the appraisal itself. See
B
The first defect identified by the Tax Court was that Drazner omitted “[t]he method of valuation used to determine the fair market value, such as the income approach, the market-data approach, and the replacement-cost-less-depreciation approach.”
The before-and-after method used by Drazner is an accepted means of valuing conservation easements. The purpose of an appraisal is to determine the “fair market value” of the donated property, which is “the price at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts.” Id.
If no substantial record of market-place sales is available to use as a meaningful or valid comparison . . . the fair market value of a perpetual conservation restriction is equal to the difference between the fair market value of the property it encumbers before the granting of the restriction and the fair market value of the encumbered property after the granting of the restriction.
Id.
Drazner‘s appraisal proceeded as follows. After some boilerplate,4 the appraisal considers the IRS‘s past treatment of facade conservation easements:
It is now generally recognized by the Internal Revenue Service that the donation of a facade easement of a property results in a loss of value . . . of between 10% and 15%. The donation of a commercial property results in a loss of value of between 10% or 12% or higher if development rights are lost. The inclusive data support at least these ranges, depending on how extensive the facade area is in relation to the land parcel.
JA 184. The “inclusive data” is not identified. The appraisal does, however, rely on a Tax Court case that values a facade conservation easement at ten percent of the property value, see Hilborn, 85 T.C. at 700-01, and a government-published article (the “Primoli article“) reporting that “Internal Revenue Service engineers have concluded that the proper valuation of a facade easement should range from approximately 10% to 15% of the value of the property.”5 Drazner narrowed the range to 11 to 11.5 percent by considering the location of the property in New York City and the existing restraints imposed by the City‘s historic preservation laws. JA 183 (“For most attached row properties in New York City, where there are many municipal regulations restricting changes to properties located in historic districts, the facade easement value tends to be about 11-11.5% of the total value of the property.“).
Drazner then expressly selected the before-and-after method. He first used comparable sales to calculate a baseline value for the property ($1,015,000). To arrive at the after value, he applied an 11.33 percent discount to the original value. Id. The difference is given as the value of the easement. See
The Tax Court concluded that there was no method of valuation because “the application of a percentage to the fair market value before conveyance of the facade easement, without explanation, cannot constitute a method of valuation.” Scheidelman, 2010 WL 2788205, at *9. We disagree. Drazner did in fact explain at some length how he arrived at his numbers. For the purpose of gauging compliance with the reporting requirement, it is irrelevant that the IRS believes the method employed was sloppy or inaccurate, or haphazardly applied—it remains a method, and Drazner described it. The regulation requires only that the appraiser identify the valuation method “used“; it does not require that the method adopted be reliable.6 By providing the information required by the regulation, Drazner enabled the IRS to evaluate his methodology.
C
The second defect identified by the Tax Court is that the appraisal failed to “include . . . [t]he specific basis for the valuation, such as specific comparable sales transactions or statistical sampling, including a justification for using sampling and an explanation of the sampling procedure employed.”
The business end of Drazner‘s analysis is the 11.33 percent loss in value he attributed to the easement. We conclude that he sufficiently supplied the bases for the valuation: IRS publications (since removed from circulation), tax court decisions, Drazner‘s past valuation experience, and the location of the house in the regulatory environment of New York City. The Primoli article and the Hilborn case yielded the initial range of 10 percent to 15 percent diminution in value; whether that range is accurate or reliable is not at issue on this appeal. He then considered the location of Scheidelman‘s row house in New York City, “where there are many municipal regulations restricting changes to properties located in historic districts” that tend to limit the incremental loss in value to a range of about 11 to 11.5 percent of the total value of the property.
Drazner‘s approach is nearly identical to that approved by the Tax Court in Simmons v. Comm‘r, 98 T.C.M. (CCH) 211, 2009 WL 2950610 (2009), aff‘d, 646 F.3d 6 (D.C. Cir. 2011). Simmons concerned an appraisal of facade conservation easements for row houses in Washington, D.C.; the appraisals “adequately describe[d] the parcels of land owned by petitioner and the structures built thereon,” “contain[ed] lengthy discussions of historic preservation easements in general,” and “identif[ied] the method of valuations used and the basis for the valuation reached.” Id. at *7. True, the Simmons appraisals also contained “statistics gathered by [the preservation trusts] that [the appraiser] took into account in preparing the appraisals.” Id. Such data may render an appraisal more persuasive, but it does not distinguish a qualified appraisal from one that is unqualified.
The Tax Court cited Friedman v. Comm‘r, 99 T.C.M. (CCH) 1175, 2010 WL 845949, at *4 (2010), for the proposition that “[w]ithout any reasoned analysis, the appraiser‘s report is useless.” (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). In that case, however, the appraisal failed altogether to “even indicate
The cited cases are therefore inapposite. The Commissioner may deem Drazner‘s “reasoned analysis” unconvincing, but it is incontestably there. Treasury Regulations do provide substantive requirements for what a qualified appraisal must contain.7 Some would seem to be inapplicable, and others are expressly considered by Drazner. And of course, the Treasury Department can use the broad regulatory authority granted to it by the Internal Revenue Code to set stricter requirements for a qualified appraisal. Moreover, the Commissioner could review the Drazner appraisal in the context of a considerable body of data. Around the time Scheidelman was audited, the IRS had undertaken a project in which it reviewed about 700 facade conservation easements, about one-third of them all. See Internal Revenue Service Advisory Council 2009 General Report, available at http://www.irs.gov/taxpros/article/0,,id=215543,00.html.
In sum, the Drazner appraisal accomplishes the purpose of the reporting regulation: It provides the IRS with sufficient information to evaluate the claimed deduction and “deal more effectively with the prevalent use of overvaluations.” Hewitt v. Comm‘r, 109 T.C. 258, 265 (1997), aff‘d, 166 F.3d 332 (4th Cir. 1998) (per curiam). And since the Commissioner‘s bottom line is that the donation had no value at all, it is hard to see how any defect in the appraisal would matter.
D
The Tax Court also found that the summary Form 8283 filed by Scheidelman failed to include the date and manner of acquisition of the property or its cost basis, see
Scheidelman submitted two Form 8283s, which together contained the information required. In support of her deduction, Scheidelman submitted the Form 8283 completed by Drazner and the Trust as well as a supplemental Form 8283 filled out (but not signed) by her tax preparer, John Samoza. The second Form 8283 contained the information omitted from the Form 8283 completed by the Trust and signed by Drazner and the Trust.
The second Form 8283 was not signed by Drazner or the Trust. But the two forms were both attached to Scheidelman‘s tax return and together contained all of
* * *
Drazner‘s delivery of a qualified appraisal does not itself entitle Scheidelman to a deduction. In the Tax Court, the Commissioner argued that Scheidelman failed to comply with other statutory and regulatory requirements, including that the contribution be exclusively for conservation purposes (as required by
If the Tax Court agrees with Scheidelman on these remaining issues, it would remain for the Tax Court to determine the value of the Scheidelman easement on the basis of the parties’ submissions. Our conclusion that Drazner‘s appraisal meets the minimal requirements of a qualified appraisal mandates neither that the Tax Court find it persuasive nor that Scheidelman be entitled to any deduction for the donated easement.
II
The second issue on appeal is whether Scheidelman‘s $9,275 contribution to the Trust was “charitable,” and therefore deductible under Section 170 of the Internal Revenue Code. Charitable gifts under the tax code are those “made with no expectation of a financial return commensurate with the amount of the gift.” Hernandez v. Comm‘r, 490 U.S. 680, 690 (1989) (internal quotation marks omitted). “The sine qua non of a charitable contribution is a transfer of money or property without adequate consideration.” United States v. Am. Bar Endowment, 477 U.S. 105, 118 (1986). The consideration need not be financial; medical, educational, scientific, religious, or other benefits can be consideration that vitiates charitable intent. See Hernandez v. Comm‘r, 819 F.2d 1212, 1217 (1st Cir. 1987), aff‘d, 490 U.S. 680 (1989).
Congress and the Supreme Court have illustrated this principle using the example of donations made to a charitable hospital: a contribution is not deductible if given in exchange for a binding obligation to provide medical treatment. See Hernandez, 490 U.S. at 690. In this way, Section 170 distinguishes between “unrequited payments to qualified recipients and payments made to such recipients in return for goods or services.” Id.
Courts have implemented this quid pro quo principle by looking to “the external features of the transaction in question“:
If a transaction is structured in the form of a quid pro quo, where it is understood that the taxpayer‘s money will not pass to the charitable organization unless the taxpayer receives a specific benefit in return, and where the taxpayer cannot receive the benefit unless he pays the required price, then the transaction does not qualify for the deduction under section 170.
Graham, 822 F.2d at 849; see also Hernandez, 490 U.S. at 690-91 (approving “structural” analysis of transac-
While Scheidelman‘s $9,275 donation might be described as a prerequisite of the Trust‘s acceptance of the easement donation, the Trust gave the taxpayer no “goods or services,” or “benefit,” or anything of value in return for her making the money gift. The only transfer of benefit was what the taxpayer gave to the Trust in the two gifts.8 Earlier cases applying the quid pro quo principle concerned bargained-for exchanges for services desired by the taxpayer, such as religious or adoption services. See Hernandez, 819 F.2d at 1217 (religious “auditing“); Murphy v. Comm‘r, 54 T.C. 249, 253 (1970) (adoption fee). But Scheidelman received no such benefit from the Trust in exchange for her cash donation. A donee‘s agreement to accept a gift does not transfer anything of value to the donor, even though the donor may desire to have his gift accepted, and may expect to derive benefit elsewhere (such as by deductibility of the gift on her income taxes).
Scheidelman‘s cash payment was part of her donation to the Trust. She gave the Trust the easement to hold, she endowed the maintenance of it, and the whole was an unrequited contribution. Contributions toward operating expenditures are commonplace among entities like the Trust that hold and administer facade contribution easements. The National Park Service has explained that
Many easement holding organizations require the easement donor to make an additional donation of funds to help administer the easement. These funds are often held in an endowment that generates an annual income to pay for easement administration costs such as staff time and travel expenses, or needed legal services.
JA 232. Without some way of monitoring compliance, an easement of this kind is easily violated, withdrawn, or forgotten. When a cash contribution (even mandatory in nature) serves to fund the administration of another charitable donation, it is likewise an “unrequited gift.” Scheidelman received nothing in return for her cash donation and facade conservation easement. It is true the taxpayer hoped to obtain a charitable deduction for her gifts, but this would not come from the recipient of the gift. It would not be a quid pro quo. If the motivation to receive a tax benefit deprived a gift of its charitable nature under Section 170, virtually no charitable gifts would be deductible. See Mount Mercy Assocs. v. Comm‘r, 67 T.C.M. (CCH) 2267, 1994 WL 53665, at *4 (1994).
Our conclusion is amply supported by Kaufman v. Comm‘r, 136 T.C. 294 (2011), which rejected the argument advanced here by the Commissioner, and held that a mandatory cash contribution was deductible:
Seeing no benefit to [the taxpayer] other than facilitation of her contribution of the facade easement . . . and an increased charitable contribution deduction, we shall not deny petitioners’ deduction of the cash payments on the ground that the application required a
“donor endowment” to accompany the contribution of facade easement.
Id. at 319. We agree, and hold that the contribution was deductible.
III
The Commissioner has cross appealed the Tax Court‘s decision not to impose a 20% accuracy-related penalty on Scheidelman for a “substantial understatement of income tax.” See
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the decision of the Tax Court and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
