Philadelphia Park Amusement Co. v. United States

Philadelphia Park Amusement Co. v. United States

In Philadelphia Park Amusement Co. v. United States, 126 F.Supp. 184, the United States Court of Claims ruled that the costs basis of property received in a taxable exchange is the fair market value of the property given.

Background

After it was discovered that the bridge owned by the taxpayer needed significant repairs, the taxpayer gave the bridge to the City of Philadelphia on the condition that he be allowed to continue to use the bridge for the next 10 years. Since the 10-year extension had no market value, the taxpayer used the depreciating bridge as his new basis, then preceded to claim overpayment of tax due to his failure to claim any depreciation. The Internal Revenue Service disagreed with the taxpayer’s reasoning, and disallowed his claim for a larger depreciation deduction. [Philadelphia Park Amusement Co. v. United States, 126 F. Supp. 184 (US Ct. of Claims, 1954).]

Initially, a disagreement also arose out of the fact that the Commissioner amortized the original cost of the franchise over the period beginning on the date the franchise was granted, while the taxpayer amortized it over the period beginning on the date the railway began operating. [If.] However, this disagreement was abandoned by the both parties and is not mentioned in either parties’ brief, nor was there any mention of it during the oral arguments. ["Philadelphia Park", 126 F. Supp. at 187. [http://asci.uvm.edu/equine/law/cases/taxes/prieto.htm] ]

The opinion was written by Judge Laramore, with Judges Madden, Whitaker, Littleton, and Chief Judge Jones all concurring. No concurring opinion was published. [Id.]

Court Holding

The court found that both Strawberry Bridge and the 10-year exchange had a value and the contract between the taxpayer and the City of Philadelphia had the proper amount of consideration. ["Philadelphia Park,"126 F. Supp. 184 (1954),] Looking to §1012 (then §113) of the tax code, which defines basis as the cost of the property the court found that “one view is that the cost basis of property received in a taxable exchange is the fair market value of the property given in the exchange.” [Id. at 188.] [ [http://asci.uvm.edu/equine/law/cases/taxes/prieto.htm Prieto v ] ] The reverse, that one could determine the value of the property given by considering the value of the property received, was likewise true. Thus, the court found that in order to maintain harmonization between the different sections of the tax code, it was necessary that the fair market value of the property received was the cost basis to the taxpayer. [Id.]

Though the taxpayer contested that the value of the either the extended franchise or the Strawberry Bridge was no ascertainable, the court disagreed. [Id.] Though the court acknowledged that it was possible that a piece of property’s value was not quantifiable (citing "Helvering v. Tex-Penn Oil., 200 U.S. 481, 499; Gould Securities Co. v. United States, 96 F.2d 780") it believed that those circumstances were rare. [Id.] Therefore, the case was remanded back to the Commissioner to determine the price. [Id.]

Implications

This case implies that almost anything can be quantified, and greatly narrows the cases in which the courts (and the I.R.S.) would expect the premise that the exchange could not be quantified.

There are three implications from the holding in "Philadelphia Park": [See Donaldson, Samuel A., Federal Income Taxation of Individuals: Cases, Problems and Materials, 131(2nd. Ed. 2007).]

1) Following a taxable exchange the taxpayer's basis in the property he received in the exchange is always equal to the fair market value of the property received. Therefore, a taxpayer can always determine his or her basis in something exchanged, because it will be the value of the thing it is exchanged for. "Philadelphia Park" demonstrates that the taxpayers' basis in the thing he/she received must be the fair market value of the thing at the time of receipt.

2) Every taxable year stands alone--the Court uses the idea of basing the current year's tax consequences based on what should have happened in the prior year.

3) Where the taxpayer does not know, or cannot reasonably ascertain the value of the property received in the exchange, all he needs to do is determine the value of the property received as consideration; he will then be able to assume that the value of the property given is equal to the value of property received.

Notes


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