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Depreciation method changes.


Recent taxpayer-favorable decisions from the Fifth and Eight Circuits have created a conflict on whether a change in a depreciable depreciable

Of, relating to, or being a long-term tangible asset that is subject to depreciation.
 asset's recovery period is an accounting-method change under Sec. 446, requiring IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  consent. In Brookshire Brothers Brookshire Brothers Grocery is a supermarket retailer founded in 1921 (and still headquartered) in Lufkin, Texas.

Brookshire Brothers operates 70 stores under the names Brookshire Brothers and B&B Foods, and seven stand-alone pharmacies in a market area covering east Texas
 Holding, Inc., 320 F3d 507 (5th Cir. 2003), and Roger O'Shaughnessy, 8th Cir., 6/13/03, the courts held that such changes were not accounting-method changes; however, three years earlier, in Kurzet, 222 F3d 830 (10th Cir. 2000), the Tenth Circuit had reached the opposite conclusion.

Reasoning

The Fifth and Eight Circuits relied heavily on the fact that a change to a depreciable asset's recovery period is analogous to a change in the asset's useful life under pre-modified accelerated cost recovery system Accelerated cost recovery system (ACRS)

Schedule of depreciation rates allowed for tax purposes.
 (MACRS See Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System.

MACRS

See Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS).
) law. They pointed to Kegs. Sec. 1.446-1(e)(2)(ii)(b), under which an accounting-method change does not include an adjustment to a depreciable asset's useful life.

In Kurzet, on the other hand, the Tenth Circuit deferred to the IRS as to how it interprets its own regulation. The fact that the Service amended the Sec. 446 regulations several times after Congress enacted MACRS without ever specifically stating that MACRS recovery-period changes did not require permission, indicated that such consent was required.

Changing Recovery Periods

A decision against the IRS is typically taxpayer-friendly. However, a closer look at the issues in Brookshire, Kurzet and O'Shaughnessy casts some doubt on that assumption. In at least one instance, Brookshire could create serious roadblocks for a taxpayer wanting to make a change.

Example 1: In 1997, X Co. (a passthrough entity with 10 individual owners), constructed a facility. It capitalized the entire cost as 39-year property for Federal depreciation purposes. In 2003, after conducting a cost-segregation study, X realizes that it should have classified 25% of the cost as five- or 15-year property. To effect recovery-period changes for the assets in question, it files Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, under Rev. Proc. 2002-9, for automatic consent to change the recovery periods, and takes the cumulative additional depreciation expense as a current-year deduction, under Sec. 481(a) and Rev. Proc. 2002-19.

Under the Brookshire methodology, a taxpayer would not have to file Form 3115, because a change in asset recovery periods is not an accounting-method change. In the example, X's mechanism for recovering the accelerated depreciation Accelerated Depreciation

Any method of depreciation used for accounting or income tax purposes that allows greater deductions in the earlier years of the life of an asset.

Notes:
The straight-line depreciation method spreads the cost evenly over the life of an asset.
 it was supposed to take in prior years would be to file amended returns Amended Return

A return filed in order to make corrections to a tax return from a previous year. It can be used to correct errors and claim a more advantageous filing.

Notes:
An amended return is filed using Form 1040X.
 for those years. However, the statute of limitations A type of federal or state law that restricts the time within which legal proceedings may be brought.

Statutes of limitations, which date back to early Roman Law, are a fundamental part of European and U.S. law.
 (SOL) would preclude pre·clude  
tr.v. pre·clud·ed, pre·clud·ing, pre·cludes
1. To make impossible, as by action taken in advance; prevent. See Synonyms at prevent.

2.
 X from filing returns for tax periods more than three years prior to the current year, which effectively prohibits it from recovering much of the prior accelerated depreciation expense on the reclassified assets.

Even if all of the prior years were within the SOL, X would have to file amended returns for all of the affected years; each owner of X would also have to file an amended return to recover the lost depreciation expense. As a result, X would probably prefer to treat the asset-recovery-period changes as accounting-method changes.

On the other hand, a taxpayer under audit may find the O'Shaughnessy and Brookshire results preferable.

Example 2: The facts are the same as in Example 1, except when X capitalized the costs in 1997, it misclassified an additional 20% as five-year property; thus, it recorded more depreciation expense in 1997-2003 than it was supposed to record.

Under O'Shaughnessy and Brookshire, X would not have to change its depreciation expense for closed years, if the IRS were to uncover the error in an audit.

Current Status

Since the Fifth Circuit's decision in Brookshire, the IRS released Rev. Rul. 2003-54, which addresses proper classification of gasoline gasoline or petrol, light, volatile mixture of hydrocarbons for use in the internal-combustion engine and as an organic solvent, obtained primarily by fractional distillation and "cracking" of petroleum, but also obtained from natural gas, by  pump canopies for depreciation purposes. It states, "[a]ny change in a taxpayers [sic] treatment of the cost of gasoline pump canopies or the cost of the supporting concrete footings to conform with this revenue ruling is a change in method of accounting to which the provisions of 446 and 481 and the regulations thereunder apply." This indicates that the Service has not changed its position; taxpayers have to treat recovery-period and method changes for MACRS purposes as accounting-method changes.

Conclusion

Until the issue is resolved by the Supreme Court or a new revenue procedure, taxpayers should assume the IRS still views asset-recovery-period changes as accounting-method changes, requiring consent. They would also be wise to consider that the IRS could change its position on the issue--voluntarily or otherwise--at any time.

FROM EDWARD D. MEYETTE, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , AND ROBERT C. ZWIERS, GRAND RAPIDS Grand Rapids, city (1990 pop. 189,126), seat of Kent co., SW central Mich., on the Grand River; inc. 1850. The second largest city in the state, it is a distribution, wholesale, and industrial center for an area that yields fruit, dairy products, farm produce, , MI
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Article Details
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Author:O'Connell, Frank J., Jr.
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Sep 1, 2003
Words:747
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