Adrian D. Smith and Nancy W. Smith, et al. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2026-50 (June 16, 2026)
During the 2008, 2009, and 2010 tax years, Adrian Smith, Carlisle Gill, and Robert Forest were the sole partners of Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, LLP (AS+GG), an Illinois limited liability partnership. AS+GG is a highly regarded architecture firm that specializes in designing large-scale, highly innovative, and sustainable "supertall" buildings, including the world's tallest structures. The firm's design process is notoriously complex, utilizing a holistic approach that integrates architecture, structure, and mechanical engineering from the project's inception, requiring significant research into thermodynamics, geotechnics, fluid dynamics, and microclimates.
AS+GG claimed substantial research credits under I.R.C. § 41 for activities related to multiple international architectural projects. These credits flowed through to the partners, who claimed them on their joint personal income tax returns. Additionally, for the 2008 tax year, AS+GG claimed wage-related qualified research expenditures (QREs) for the partners and deducted significant guaranteed payments and gross salaries.
Taxpayers' Request for Relief
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audited the partners' returns and disallowed the section 41 research credits for the tax years at issue, subsequently issuing Statutory Notices of Deficiency. The taxpayers petitioned the United States Tax Court for relief. Prior to trial, the parties agreed to limit the scope of the disputed credits to a sample of six massive international projects (including the Atrium City Tower and Kingdom Tower).
Following several pretrial concessions by the IRS—including an agreement that AS+GG's activities generally satisfied the four-part test for qualified research under section 41(d)—only two primary issues remained for the Court to decide: (1) whether the architectural research performed under the six sample contracts constituted excluded "funded research" within the meaning of section 41(d)(4)(H), and (2) whether the 2008 compensation paid to the partners was reasonable under section 174(e).
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