There are
certain tax issues that seem to repeat in practice.
A client asked
me how we handled his rental this year. The
answer was that we had stopped treating it as a rental in 2013. He was no
longer renting the property. It needed repairs, and he was saving money to fix
it up. He intended to then let his son live there.
There comes
a point – if one does not rent – that it is no longer a rental. It may have
been a rental once, in the same capacity that we once played football or ran
track in high school. We did but no longer do. We are no longer athletes. We
certainly are no longer young.
Let’s tweak
this a bit: when does a property first start as a rental?
Obviously,
when you first rent it.
What if you
can’t rent it?
You would
answer that you would not have bought a property that you couldn’t rent, so the
scenario doesn’t make sense. It is the tax equivalent of the Kobayashi Maru.
What if you
owned the property as a non-rental but decided to convert it to a rental? You didn’t
actually rent it, unfortunately, but in your mind you had converted it to a
rental.
But is it a
rental or is it not?
Granted, the
passive loss rules have put a dampener on this tax issue, as one is allowed to
deduct passive losses only to the extent of passive income. There is a break
for taxpayers with income less than $150 thousand, but it is quite likely that
someone with this tax issue has income beyond that range. There is still a tax
bang when you sell the property, though, regardless of your income.
The Redisch case takes us to Florida. We are
talking about second homes.
The
Redisches are Michigan residents. They bought land in a private oceanfront
community (Hammock Dunes) in Palm Coast, Florida. They rented an oceanfront
condo while meeting with an architect for ideas for building on the land. They
decided they liked oceanfront more than non-oceanfront, so they sold the land
in 2003 and bought an oceanfront condo in 2004. It must have been a very nice
condo, as it cost $875,000.
The condo was
their second home, and they often spent time there with their daughter.
Their
daughter passed away tragically in 2006.
The
Redisches could not stay at the condo any more. The memories were too painful.
In 2008 they
decided to sell the condo. You may remember that 2008 was a very bad year for
real estate. They decided instead to rent the property for a while and allow
the market to recover.
They
contacted a realtor associated with Hammock Dunes to market the rental. Hammock
Dunes itself was still under development, so any potential sale of the condo would
have been competing with new construction. Renting made sense.
The
Redisches hired a realty company. They figured they had gotten an edge, as most
of the company realtors lived in Hammock Dunes themselves. The company operated
an information center there, which would help to market their rental. The realty
company even used the condo as a model, although they did not pay the Redisches
for such use. They did however persuade the Redisches to change one of the bedrooms
to a child’s room. There was hope that someone with a child (or, more likely, a
grandchild) would be interested.
The
Redisches received a couple of inquiries. One person wanted to rent the
property for two months, but the condo association did not permit short-term
rentals. The other person had a big dog, which also ran afoul of condo restrictions.
It was now a
year later and the rental effort was going nowhere. Other owners in Hammock
Dunes were losing their properties to foreclosure. The Redisches were becoming keenly
concerned with selling the property while there was still something to sell. They
switched realty companies. They had the property reappraised. They dropped to
price to $725,000 and finally sold the condo in December 2010.
They claimed
the condo as a rental on their 2009 and 2010 tax returns. They reported a
long-term capital loss on the sale of the property.
OBSERVATION: Which is incorrect. If the property was a
rental, the loss would be a Section 1231 transaction, reportable as an ordinary
loss on the tax return. If the property was a second home, then any loss would
be disallowed.
And the IRS
looked at their 2009 and 2010 tax returns.
The tax issue
was whether the property was a rental.
What do you
think: did the Redisches do enough to convert the property to a rental?
One the one
hand, they had a valid non-tax reason to sell the property. There was a business-like
reason to withdraw it from the market and rent it instead. They hired experts
to help with the rental. They transacted with potential renters, but condo
restrictions disallowed those specific rentals. What more could they do, as
they themselves were living in Michigan?
On the other
hand, the IRS wondered why they did not try harder. After all, if one’s trade
or business is renting real property, then one goes to great lengths to,
you know, rent real property. The IRS wanted to see effort as though the
Redisches’ next meal depended on it.
Here is the
Court:
After considering all the facts and circumstances, we find that the […] property was not converted to a rental property. The Redisches used the property for four years before abandoning personal use of it …. Although Mr. Redisch testified that he signed a one-year agreement with a realty company […], he did not provide any other evidence of such an agreement. Even if the Redisches had produced the contract, Mr. Redisch stated that the efforts of the realty company to rent out the Porto Mar property were limited to featuring it in a portfolio kept in the company’s office and telling prospective buyers that it was available when showing it as a model.
It is unsurprising that this minimal effort yielded only minimal interest.”
Ouch.
The Court
decided that the Redisches were not acting in a business appropriate manner, if
their business was that of renting real property. The Court unfortunately did
not indicate what they could have done that would have persuaded it otherwise.
Clearly, just hoping that a renter would appear was not sufficient.