Edward R. Arevalo v. Commissioner , 124 T.C. No. 15 ( 2005 )


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    124 T.C. No. 15
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    EDWARD R. AREVALO, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 13272-04.               Filed May 18, 2005.
    P entered into a contract with American
    Telecommunications Co., Inc. (ATC). Under the terms of
    the contract, P paid $10,000 to ATC and ATC provided P
    with legal title to two pay telephones (pay phones). P
    also entered into a service agreement with Alpha
    Telcom, Inc. (Alpha Telcom), the parent company of ATC,
    under which Alpha Telcom serviced the pay phones and
    retained most of the profits.
    1. Held: Because P did not have the benefits and
    burdens of ownership with respect to the pay phones, P
    did not have a depreciable interest in the pay phones.
    Therefore, P is not entitled to claim a deduction for
    depreciation with respect to the pay phones in 2001.
    2. Held, further, because P’s pay phone
    activities did not obligate him to comply with the
    requirements set forth in either title III or title IV
    of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Pub. L.
    101-336, 
    104 Stat. 353
    , 366, P’s $10,000 investment in
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    the pay phones is not an eligible access expenditure.
    Therefore, P is not entitled to claim the disabled
    access credit under sec. 44, I.R.C., for his investment
    in the pay phones in 2001.
    Edward R. Arevalo, pro se.
    Catherine S. Tyson, for respondent.
    OPINION
    COHEN, Judge:   Respondent determined a deficiency of $1,999
    in petitioner’s Federal income tax for 2001 that was attributable
    to respondent’s disallowance of depreciation deductions and tax
    credits claimed by petitioner with respect to two public pay
    telephones (pay phones).   In an amendment to answer, respondent
    asserted an increased deficiency of $30,247 and a penalty of
    $6,049 under section 6662 as a result of petitioner’s failure to
    report income from dividends and stock sales.   After concessions
    by the parties, the issues for decision are:
    (1) Whether petitioner is entitled to claim a deduction for
    depreciation under section 167 with respect to the pay phones in
    2001 and
    (2) whether petitioner is entitled to claim a tax credit
    under section 44 for his investment in the pay phones in 2001.
    Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
    the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and
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    all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    Background
    This case was submitted on a stipulation of facts and
    supplemental stipulation of facts, and the stipulated facts are
    incorporated in our findings by this reference.    Petitioner
    resided in Austin, Texas, at the time that he filed his petition.
    Petitioner’s Investment in the Pay Phones
    On June 7, 2001, petitioner entered into a contract with
    American Telecommunications Co., Inc. (ATC), a wholly owned
    subsidiary of Alpha Telcom, Inc. (Alpha Telcom), entitled
    “Telephone Equipment Purchase Agreement” (ATC pay phone
    agreement).   Under the terms of the ATC pay phone agreement,
    petitioner paid $10,000 to ATC, and ATC provided him with legal
    title to the “telephone equipment” that was purportedly described
    in an attachment to the ATC pay phone agreement entitled
    “Telephone Equipment List”.    The attachment, however, did not
    identify any pay phones subject to the agreement.    The ATC pay
    phone agreement also included the following provision:
    1.   Bill of Sale and Delivery
    a.   Delivery by Seller shall be considered complete
    upon delivery of the Equipment to such place(s) as are
    designated by Owner.
    b.   Owner agrees to take delivery of Equipment within
    (15) fifteen business days. If Seller has not
    delivered the equipment within (90) ninety days, Owner
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    may terminate this Agreement upon Seller’s receipt of
    signed notice from Purchaser.
    c.   Upon delivery, Owner shall acquire all rights,
    title and interest in and to the Equipment purchased.
    Exhibit E, “Buy Back Election”, to the ATC pay phone
    agreement stated:
    1.0 Buy Back Election: Should Owner elect to sell any
    telephone equipment, itemized in Exhibit “A”, American
    Telecommunications Company, Inc., (hereinafter
    “Seller”), agrees to buy back such equipment from
    Owner, according to the following terms and conditions:
    1) If exercise of the buy back election occurs in the
    first thirty-six months after the equipment delivery
    date, the re-sale price shall be the Owner’s original
    purchase price of $5,000.00, minus a “restocking fee”
    of (10%) ten percent of the purchase price; 2) If the
    buy-back election is made more than (36) thirty-six
    months after the equipment delivery date, the sale
    price shall be the Owner’s original purchase price of
    $5,000.00, and there shall be no “restocking fee” for
    Purchaser’s election to re-sell the equipment purchased
    back to Seller. This “Buy Back Election” shall expire
    on the (84th) eighty-fourth month anniversary of
    Owner’s equipment delivery date. 3) Seller, or its
    designee, reserves the right of first refusal as to the
    telephone equipment. If Owner enters into an agreement
    to sell the telephone equipment to any third party,
    Seller, or its designee, shall have thirty (30) days to
    match any legitimate offer to purchase said equipment
    received by Owner.
    Exhibit E further stated:
    4.0 Maintenance Requirements For Buy Back Provision:
    If Purchaser elects to require Seller to re-purchase
    the Pay Telephone Equipment, Purchaser must establish
    to Seller’s satisfaction that all repairs and
    maintenance, as set forth in Exhibit “B”, have been
    performed as required. This means that the regular
    maintenance “recommended” in Exhibit “B” is mandatory.
    Purchaser will establish that regular maintenance and
    repairs have been performed on the Equipment by
    maintaining a logbook. The logbook must set forth the
    dates and times maintenance and repairs were made to
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    the Equipment, who performed the repairs and
    maintenance, and by retaining receipts and cancelled
    checks for all parts, service, and repairs made to the
    Equipment. Purchaser will be required to surrender, to
    Seller, the logbook and all other proof establishing
    that required maintenance and repairs were performed.
    Purchaser must also establish to Seller’s satisfaction
    the person(s) who performed the repairs and maintenance
    were qualified to do so.
    Exhibit B to the ATC pay phone agreement set forth a
    recommended schedule of weekly maintenance work to be performed
    on the pay phones by petitioner.    Exhibit C to the ATC pay phone
    agreement included a list of service providers available to
    maintain the pay phones should petitioner not want to service the
    phones himself.   Petitioner also had the option to enter into a
    service agreement with Alpha Telcom (Alpha Telcom service
    agreement) if he did not want to be involved in the day-to-day
    maintenance of the pay phones.
    Under the terms of the Alpha Telcom service agreement, Alpha
    Telcom agreed to service and maintain the pay phones for an
    initial term of 3 years in exchange for 70 percent of the pay
    phones’ monthly adjusted gross revenue and all “dial around fees”
    generated by the pay phones.   In the event that a pay phone’s
    adjusted gross revenue was less than $194.50 for the month, Alpha
    Telcom would waive or reduce the 70-percent fee and pay
    petitioner at least $58.34, so long as the equipment generated at
    least that amount.   In the event that a pay phone’s adjusted
    gross revenue was less than $58.34 for the month, petitioner
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    would receive 100 percent of the revenue.   Notwithstanding the
    terms of the Alpha Telcom service agreement, Alpha Telcom made it
    a practice to pay $58.34 per month per pay phone regardless of
    how little income the pay phone produced.   Additionally, under
    the Alpha Telcom service agreement, Alpha Telcom negotiated the
    site agreement with the owner or leaseholder of the premises
    where the pay phones were to be installed, installed the pay
    phones, paid the insurance premiums on the pay phones, collected
    and accounted for the revenues generated by the pay phones, paid
    vendor commissions and fees, obtained all licenses needed to
    operate the pay phones, and took all actions necessary to keep
    the pay phones in working order.   Petitioner signed the Alpha
    Telcom service agreement on June 7, 2001, the same day that he
    signed the ATC pay phone agreement.
    In a letter dated June 11, 2001, petitioner received
    confirmation of his pay phone order and notice that an order had
    been placed for the installation of the pay phones.   Petitioner
    had no say as to which pay phones were assigned to him, and he
    was not informed as to the location of these pay phones.
    Thell G. Prueitt (Prueitt), an agent and sales
    representative for ATC, informed petitioner that the income from
    the pay phones was taxable but that the pay phones were
    depreciable property and, thus, petitioner could claim a
    depreciation deduction with respect to the pay phones.
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    Petitioner claimed a $714 depreciation deduction with respect to
    the pay phones on the Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business,
    that was attached to his income tax return for 2001.   Petitioner
    reported no other items of income or expense on this Schedule C.
    Prueitt also informed petitioner that all of the amounts
    that petitioner spent in connection with the pay phones qualified
    for the tax credit granted under section 44 for compliance with
    the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), Pub. L. 101-
    336, 
    104 Stat. 327
    .   Additionally, petitioner received a copy of
    a letter dated March 4, 1999, in which George Mariscal, president
    of Tax Audit Protection, Inc., informed Paul Rubera (Rubera),
    president of Alpha Telcom, that “Persons or companies that own
    pay telephones that have been modified for use by the disabled
    individual are eligible for the tax credit as per the Internal
    Revenue Code section outlined in this letter [i.e., section 44]”.
    Petitioner also received a copy of a letter dated June 7, 1999,
    in which Fred H. Williams of Perkins & Co., P.C., opined to
    Rubera that “The purchase of these payphones is an expenditure
    which qualifies for the Disabled Access Credit”.
    A salesperson for Alpha Telcom informed petitioner that the
    pay phones were modified by (1) lengthening the cords and/or
    reducing the height to make the pay phones accessible to the
    wheelchair bound and/or (2) installing volume controls to make
    them more useful to the hearing impaired.   Alpha Telcom
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    represented to investors that these modifications made the pay
    phones compliant with the ADA.    The ATC pay phone agreement also
    stated:   “Phones have approved installation under the
    * * * [ADA]”.   Petitioner was not provided with a list of the
    modifications that were made to the pay phones that were assigned
    to him, and he did not know the cost of these modifications.
    Petitioner claimed a $1,894 tax credit with respect to the pay
    phones on Form 8826, Disabled Access Credit, that was attached to
    his income tax return for 2001.    For purposes of claiming this
    credit, petitioner reported that he had $10,000 of “eligible
    access expenditures” during 2001.
    Alpha Telcom grew rapidly but was poorly managed and
    ultimately operated at a loss.    On August 24, 2001, Alpha Telcom
    filed for bankruptcy under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in
    the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida.
    The case was later transferred to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for
    the District of Oregon on September 17, 2001.    On March 15, 2002,
    petitioner filed a proof of claim in the bankruptcy court in the
    amount of $11,166.80, representing the $10,000 that he had
    invested plus approximately 9 or 10 months of payments that he
    had not received from ATC as of the claim date.    The bankruptcy
    case was dismissed on September 10, 2003, by motion of Alpha
    Telcom.   The bankruptcy court held that it was “in the best
    interest of creditors and the estate to dismiss so that
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    proceedings could continue in federal district court, where there
    was a pending receivership involving debtors.”
    The receivership was the result of a civil enforcement
    action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
    against Alpha Telcom in 2001 in the U.S. District Court for the
    District of Oregon.    The District Court appointed a receiver in
    September 2001 to take over the operations of Alpha Telcom and to
    investigate its financial condition.     On February 7, 2002, the
    District Court held that the pay phone scheme was actually a
    security investment and that Federal law had been violated by
    Alpha Telcom because the program had not been registered with the
    SEC.    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed
    this decision on December 5, 2003.
    Petitioner’s Unreported Income
    During 2001, petitioner received proceeds of $146,912.28
    from the sale of stocks from his USB PaineWebber brokerage
    account.    Petitioner also received dividends of $5,982.05 during
    2001.    Petitioner did not report the stock sales or dividends on
    his income tax return for 2001.    Respondent has conceded that the
    stock sales did not result in taxable gains.
    Internal Revenue Service Determinations
    The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) disallowed the
    depreciation deduction claimed by petitioner because “the
    telephone is located in a place that * * * [petitioner did] not
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    own or operate as a trade or business and * * * [petitioner] did
    not have depreciable interest in the pay phone”.   The IRS also
    disallowed the disabled access credit claimed by petitioner
    because “no business reason has been given or verified to comply
    with ADA of 1990”.
    Procedural Matters
    The petition in this case was prepared by the office of Tom
    Buck, C.P.A. (Buck), and was filed with the Court on July 26,
    2004.   Buck’s letterhead asserts:   “Understanding how to play the
    game is half the battle.”   On September 8, 2004, Buck sent a
    letter to petitioner that stated that “my purpose was to work
    within the IRS system to buy you as much time as possible, before
    the IRS has a legal right to enforce collection action against
    you.”   By notice served October 5, 2004, this case was set for
    trial on March 7, 2005.   Petitioner failed and refused to appear
    for trial and attempted to withdraw his petition through a letter
    received by the Court on the day of trial.
    Discussion
    Burden of Proof
    As a preliminary matter, we note that section 7491 is
    applicable to this case because the examination in connection
    with this action was commenced after July 22, 1998, the effective
    date of that section.   See Internal Revenue Service Restructuring
    and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. 105-206, sec. 3001(c)(1), 112
    - 11 -
    Stat. 727.   Under section 7491, the burden of proof shifts from
    the taxpayer to the Commissioner if the taxpayer produces
    credible evidence with respect to any factual issue relevant to
    ascertaining the taxpayer’s tax liability.    Sec. 7491(a)(1).
    However, section 7491(a)(1) applies with respect to an issue only
    if the taxpayer has complied with the requirements under the Code
    to substantiate any item, has maintained all records required
    under the Code, and has cooperated with reasonable requests by
    the Commissioner for witnesses, information, documents, meetings,
    and interviews.   See sec. 7491(a)(2)(A) and (B).
    Petitioner failed to appear at trial or to produce any
    credible evidence.   Petitioner has no records or information as
    to where the pay phones are located or as to the amount of
    revenue that they produced.    Therefore, the burden of proof has
    not shifted to respondent.    Nonetheless, our findings in this
    case are based on a preponderance of the evidence.
    Depreciation Deduction
    Section 167(a) allows as a depreciation deduction a
    reasonable allowance for the “exhaustion, wear and tear” of
    property (1) used in a trade or business or (2) held for the
    production of income.    Sec. 167(a)(1) and (2).   Depreciation
    deductions are based on an investment in and actual ownership of
    property rather than the possession of bare legal title.     See
    Grant Creek Water Works, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 
    91 T.C. 322
    , 326
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    (1988); see also Narver v. Commissioner, 
    75 T.C. 53
    , 98 (1980),
    affd. 
    670 F.2d 855
     (9th Cir. 1982).     “In a number of cases, the
    Court has refused to permit the transfer of formal legal title to
    shift the incidence of taxation attributable to ownership of
    property where the transferor continues to retain significant
    control over the property transferred.”      Frank Lyon Co. v. United
    States, 
    435 U.S. 561
    , 572-573 (1978).     “‘[T]axation is not so
    much concerned with the refinements of title as it is with actual
    command over the property taxed’”.      Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v.
    Commissioner, 
    77 T.C. 1221
    , 1236 (1981) (quoting Corliss v.
    Bowers, 
    281 U.S. 376
    , 378 (1930)); see also United States v. W.H.
    Cocke, 
    399 F.2d 433
    , 445 (5th Cir. 1968).     Therefore, when a
    taxpayer never actually owns the property in question, the
    taxpayer is not allowed to claim deductions for depreciation.
    See Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra at 1236-
    1238; see also Schwartz v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1994-320
    ,
    affd. without published opinion 
    80 F.3d 558
     (D.C. Cir. 1996).
    A taxpayer has received an interest in property that
    entitles the taxpayer to depreciation deductions only if the
    benefits and burdens of ownership with respect to the property
    have passed to the taxpayer.   See Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v.
    Commissioner, supra at 1237-1238; see also Grant Creek Water
    Works, Ltd. v. Commissioner, supra at 326.     Whether the benefits
    and burdens of ownership with respect to property have passed to
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    the taxpayer is a question of fact that must be ascertained from
    the intention of the parties as established by the written
    agreements read in light of the attending facts and
    circumstances.    Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra
    at 1237.   Thus, the Court will look to the substance of the
    agreement between the taxpayer and the seller and not just to the
    labels used in those agreements.    Sprint Corp. v. Commissioner,
    
    108 T.C. 384
    , 397 (1997); cf. Gregory v. Helvering, 
    293 U.S. 465
    ,
    468-470 (1935).   Some of the factors that have been considered by
    courts include:   (1) Whether legal title passes; (2) how the
    parties treat the transaction; (3) whether an equity was acquired
    in the property; (4) whether the contract creates a present
    obligation on the seller to execute and deliver a deed and a
    present obligation on the purchaser to make payments; (5) whether
    the right of possession is vested in the purchaser; (6) which
    party pays the property taxes; (7) which party bears the risk of
    loss or damage to the property; and (8) which party receives the
    profits from the operation and sale of the property.    Grodt &
    McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra at 1237-1238.
    Petitioner contends that he “purchased” the pay phones from
    ATC and, therefore, held the benefits and burdens of ownership
    with respect to the pay phones.    After considering the relevant
    factors and weighing the facts and circumstances surrounding the
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    transactions among petitioner, ATC, and Alpha Telcom, we reject
    petitioner’s contention for the reasons discussed below.
    First, petitioner had no control over the pay phones, never
    had possession of the pay phones, and does not know what the pay
    phones look like or where they are located.   Petitioner signed an
    agreement containing blank spaces where the pay phones were to be
    identified.
    Second, petitioner never had the power to select the
    location of the pay phones or enter into site agreements with the
    owners or leaseholders of the premises where the pay phones were
    to be located; that power was held by Alpha Telcom through the
    Alpha Telcom service agreement.
    Third, no evidence indicates that petitioner paid any
    property taxes, insurance premiums, or license fees with respect
    to the pay phones.
    Fourth, there was minimal risk of loss for petitioner
    because the ATC pay phone agreement, in combination with the
    Alpha Telcom service agreement, allowed petitioner to sell legal
    title to the pay phones back to ATC for 10 percent less than the
    amount that he invested in them in the first 36 months and for
    the full amount that he invested in them after 36 months.
    Fifth, under the terms of the Alpha Telcom service
    agreement, Alpha Telcom was entitled to receive most of the
    profits from the pay phones.
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    Sixth, at the time that Alpha Telcom declared bankruptcy,
    petitioner filed a claim in bankruptcy court for the “price” of
    the pay phones and the monthly payments that he had not received
    from ATC, rather than taking possession of the pay phones or
    hiring an alternative service provider to maintain the pay
    phones.   This action supports the conclusion that petitioner was
    not the actual owner of the pay phones.
    Seventh, although petitioner received legal title to the pay
    phones under the terms of the ATC pay phone agreement, the Alpha
    Telcom service agreement passed all of the responsibilities for
    maintaining the pay phones and the risks associated with the pay
    phones’ producing insufficient revenues to Alpha Telcom.
    Therefore, when the ATC pay phone agreement and the Alpha Telcom
    service agreement are construed together, it becomes clear that
    petitioner received nothing more than bare legal title with
    respect to the pay phones.
    Eighth, the transaction into which petitioner entered with
    ATC was more akin to a security investment than a sale.    In
    essence, petitioner made a one-time payment of $10,000 to ATC for
    the opportunity to receive (1) a minimum annual return of
    14 percent on that investment, i.e., a minimum monthly payment of
    $58.34 per pay phone, and (2) the tax benefits that he believed
    would result from his nominal “ownership” of the pay phones.
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    Therefore, based upon our analysis of the facts and
    circumstances surrounding the transactions among petitioner, ATC,
    and Alpha Telcom, we conclude that petitioner did not receive the
    benefits and burdens of ownership with respect to the pay phones.
    Because petitioner never received a depreciable interest in the
    pay phones, he is not entitled to claim a depreciation deduction
    under section 167 with respect to them.
    ADA Tax Credit
    For purposes of the general business credit under section
    38, section 44(a) provides a disabled access credit for certain
    small businesses.    The amount of this credit is equal to
    50 percent of the “eligible access expenditures” of an “eligible
    small business” that exceed $250 but that do not exceed $10,250
    for the year.    Sec. 44(a).   Therefore, in order to claim the
    disabled access credit, a taxpayer must demonstrate that (1) the
    taxpayer is an “eligible small business” for the year in which
    the credit is claimed and (2) the taxpayer has made “eligible
    access expenditures” during that year.     If the taxpayer cannot
    fulfill both of these requirements, the taxpayer is not eligible
    to claim the credit for that year.
    For purposes of section 44, the term “eligible small
    business” is defined as any person that (1) had gross receipts of
    no more than $1 million for the preceding year or not more than
    30 full-time employees during the preceding year and (2) elects
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    the application of section 44 for the year.     Sec. 44(b).   The
    term “eligible access expenditure” is defined as an amount paid
    or incurred by an eligible small business for the purpose of
    enabling the eligible small business to comply with the
    applicable requirements under the ADA.     Sec. 44(c)(1).   Such
    expenditures include amounts paid or incurred (1) for the purpose
    of removing architectural, communication, physical, or
    transportation barriers that prevent a business from being
    accessible to, or usable by, individuals with disabilities;
    (2) to provide qualified interpreters or other effective methods
    of making aurally delivered materials available to individuals
    with hearing impairments; (3) to acquire or modify equipment or
    devices for individuals with disabilities; or (4) to provide
    other similar services, modifications, materials, or equipment.
    See sec. 44(c)(2).   However, eligible access expenditures do not
    include expenditures that are unnecessary to accomplish such
    purposes.   See sec. 44(c)(3).    Additionally, eligible access
    expenditures do not include amounts that are paid or incurred for
    the purpose of removing architectural, communication, physical,
    or transportation barriers that prevent a business from being
    accessible to, or usable by, individuals with disabilities with
    respect to any facility first placed in service after November 5,
    1990.   See sec. 44(c)(4).
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    Petitioner contends that he is eligible to claim the
    disabled access credit under section 44(a) because (1) his pay
    phone “business” was an eligible small business during 2001 and
    (2) his $10,000 investment in the pay phones was an eligible
    access expenditure.   In the notice of deficiency that respondent
    sent to petitioner, respondent disallowed petitioner’s claim for
    the disabled access credit because no “business reason” had been
    given for petitioner to comply with the ADA.   In respondent’s
    trial memorandum, respondent contends that petitioner’s $10,000
    investment in the pay phones is not an eligible access
    expenditure because it “is not at all clear that Petitioner was
    required to be compliant with the ADA”.   In addition, respondent
    contends that petitioner’s pay phone activities do not qualify as
    an eligible small business because petitioner “was not in a
    business”.   Because we conclude that petitioner’s $10,000
    investment in the pay phones does not constitute an eligible
    access expenditure, it is unnecessary for us to consider whether
    petitioner’s pay phone activities constituted an eligible small
    business during 2001.
    In order for an expenditure to qualify as an eligible access
    expenditure within the meaning given that term by section 44(c),
    it must have been made to enable an eligible small business to
    comply with the applicable requirements under the ADA.   See
    Fan v. Commissioner, 
    117 T.C. 32
    , 38-39 (2001).   Consequently, a
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    person who does not have an obligation to become compliant with
    the requirements set forth in the ADA could never make an
    eligible access expenditure.   As relevant here, the requirements
    set forth in the ADA apply to (1) persons who own, lease, lease
    to, or operate certain “public accommodations” and (2) “common
    carriers” of telephone voice transmission services.   See 42
    U.S.C. sec. 12182(a) (2000); see also 47 U.S.C. sec. 225(c)
    (2000).   As discussed below, petitioner neither owned, leased,
    leased to, or operated a public accommodation during 2001, nor
    was he a “common carrier” of telephone voice transmission
    services during 2001.   Accordingly, petitioner was under no
    obligation to become compliant with the requirements set forth in
    the ADA during that year.
    The general rule of ADA title III is that no individual
    shall be discriminated against on the basis of disability in the
    full and equal enjoyment of goods, services, facilities,
    privileges, advantages, or accommodations of any place of public
    accommodation by any person who owns, leases, leases to, or
    operates a place of public accommodation.   42 U.S.C. sec.
    12182(a).   Thus, the ADA requires persons who own, lease, lease
    to, or operate places of public accommodation to make reasonable
    modifications in policies, practices, or procedures when such
    modifications are necessary to afford such goods, services,
    facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations to
    - 20 -
    individuals with disabilities, unless the entity can demonstrate
    that making such modifications would fundamentally alter the
    nature of such goods, services, facilities, privileges,
    advantages, or accommodations.   42 U.S.C. sec.
    12182(b)(2)(A)(ii).   Additionally, the ADA requires persons who
    own, lease, lease to, or operate places of public accommodation
    to take such steps as may be necessary to ensure that no
    individual with a disability is excluded, denied services,
    segregated, or otherwise treated differently from other
    individuals because of the absence of auxiliary aids and
    services, unless the entity can demonstrate that making such
    modifications would fundamentally alter the nature of such goods,
    services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations.
    42 U.S.C. sec. 12182(b)(2)(A)(iii).
    To summarize, any person who owns, leases, leases to, or
    operates a public accommodation is required to make modifications
    for disabled individuals in order to comply with the requirements
    set forth in ADA title III.   While ADA title III does not define
    the terms “own”, “lease”, “lease to”, or “operate”, we must
    construe those terms in accord with their ordinary and natural
    meaning.   See, e.g., Smith v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 223
    , 228
    (1993); Neff v. Am. Dairy Queen Corp., 
    58 F.3d 1063
    , 1066 (5th
    Cir. 1995) (construing the term “operate”, as used in ADA title
    III, as follows:   “To ‘operate,’ in the context of a business
    - 21 -
    operation, means ‘to put or keep in operation,’ ‘to control or
    direct the functioning of,’ ‘to conduct the affairs of; manage,’”
    (citations omitted)).   For the reasons discussed above, we
    concluded that petitioner did not own the pay phones in which he
    invested and had no involvement in their operation.   Thus,
    petitioner did not own, lease, lease to, or operate anything as a
    result of his investment in the pay phones and was never under
    any obligation to comply with the requirements of ADA title III
    during 2001.   We reach this conclusion without deciding whether
    pay phones constitute public accommodations within the meaning
    given that term by the ADA.
    ADA title IV requires common carriers providing telephone
    voice transmission services to provide “telecommunications relay
    services” throughout the area in which they offer service.    47
    U.S.C. sec. 225(c).   Telecommunications relay services are
    defined as telephone transmission services that provide the
    ability for an individual who has a hearing impairment or speech
    impairment to engage in communication by wire or radio with a
    hearing individual in a manner that is functionally equivalent to
    the ability of an individual who does not have a hearing
    impairment or speech impairment to communicate using voice
    communication services by wire or radio.   47 U.S.C. sec.
    225(a)(3).   For purposes of ADA title IV, a common carrier is any
    person engaged as a common carrier for hire, in intrastate or
    - 22 -
    interstate communication by wire or radio.    See 47 U.S.C. sec.
    225(a)(1); see also 47 U.S.C. sec. 153(10).
    It has long been held that “‘a common carrier is such by
    virtue of his occupation,’ that is by the actual activities he
    carries on”.   Natl. Association of Regulatory Util. Commrs. v.
    FCC, 
    533 F.2d 601
    , 608 (D.C. Cir. 1976) (quoting Washington ex
    rel. Stimson Lumber Co. v. Kuykendall, 
    275 U.S. 207
    , 211-212
    (1927)); see also United States v. California, 
    297 U.S. 175
    , 181
    (1936).   Furthermore, under common law principles, the “primary
    sine qua non of common carrier status is a quasi-public
    character, which arises out of the undertaking ‘to carry for all
    people indifferently’”.   Natl. Association of Regulatory Util.
    Commrs. v. FCC, supra at 608 (quoting Semon v. Royal Indem. Co.,
    
    279 F.2d 737
    , 739 (5th Cir. 1960)).    Accordingly, a person is not
    a common carrier unless the person is actively engaged in the
    provision of services to others.   Because petitioner did not own
    the pay phones in which he invested and had no involvement in
    their operation, petitioner was not actively engaged in the
    provision of services to anyone as a result of his investment in
    the pay phones.   Therefore, petitioner was under no obligation to
    comply with the requirements set forth in ADA title IV during
    2001.
    Because petitioner’s pay phone activities did not obligate
    him to comply with the requirements set forth in either ADA
    - 23 -
    title III or title IV, his $10,000 investment in the pay phones
    is not an eligible access expenditure.    Therefore, petitioner is
    not entitled to claim the disabled access credit under section 44
    for his investment in the pay phones in 2001.
    Section 6673
    Whenever it appears to the Court that proceedings before it
    have been instituted or maintained primarily for delay, the
    Court, in its decision, may require the taxpayer to pay to the
    United States a penalty not in excess of $25,000.      Sec.
    6673(a)(1)(A).   In this case, petitioner was advised that the
    purpose of filing the petition was to delay the collection
    process.   Petitioner engaged in the required stipulation process
    but did not appear for trial.    We have decided not to impose a
    section 6673 penalty in this case, but taxpayers are warned that
    sanctions may be appropriate if the Court concludes that a
    petition was filed with no intention to prosecute the case and
    merely to delay the collection process.
    To reflect the foregoing and the concessions of the parties,
    Decision will be entered
    under Rule 155.