Exxon Mobil v. United States ( 2022 )


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  • Case: 21-10373      Document: 00516418032          Page: 1    Date Filed: 08/03/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                                 United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    August 3, 2022
    No. 21-10373
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Exxon Mobil Corporation,
    Plaintiff—Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
    versus
    United States of America,
    Defendant—Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:16-CV-2921
    Before Clement, Graves, and Costa, Circuit Judges.
    Gregg Costa, Circuit Judge:
    In this tax doubleheader, Exxon seeks $1.5 billion from the IRS. The
    source of this whopping sum is two retroactive changes Exxon made to its
    returns. The first change involves a tax issue almost as old as the oil industry
    itself: whether a transaction is a mineral lease or mineral sale. See, e.g.,
    Goldfield Consol. Mines Co. v. Scott, 
    247 U.S. 126
     (1918); Stratton’s Indep.,
    Ltd. v. Howbert, 
    231 U.S. 399
     (1913). The second concerns a more recent
    development in the tax code: how an incentive for producing renewable fuels
    affects a company’s excise tax, and in turn, its income tax. The district court
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    rejected both changes but gave Exxon back a penalty the IRS imposed for
    requesting an excessive refund. We affirm.
    I
    The first issue—worth a billion dollars—involves agreements Exxon
    entered into with Qatar and Malaysia to commodify those countries’
    abundant offshore oil-and-gas deposits. The question is whether these
    agreements are mineral leases or mineral sales.
    A
    1
    The Qatari agreements grant Exxon rights to explore the North Field,
    a large offshore gas field within Qatar’s territorial waters. The agreements
    last for fixed terms, typically twenty years. In exchange for mineral rights,
    Exxon must extract gas and pay Qatar royalties based on the petroleum
    products it produces. These royalties include a percentage of the proceeds
    from the sale of petroleum products as well as a minimum amount based on
    how much gas Exxon brings through its facilities.
    Exxon also must build and operate facilities to transport, store,
    process, and market its products. According to Exxon, it has invested $20
    billion in such infrastructure, which includes a pipeline network to bring the
    offshore gas onshore, liquification facilities to turn the gas into liquid
    products for transportation, and technologically advanced ships that
    transport gas to foreign countries. By some measures, this infrastructure
    produces petroleum products that are twenty times as valuable as gas in
    place. When the agreements end, Qatar keeps this infrastructure. The
    agreements aim to develop an international market for Qatari gas.
    2
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    Malaysia sought to create a domestic market for oil and gas. So its
    state-owned oil company 1 entered into similar fixed-term agreements with
    Exxon. The Malaysian agreements give Exxon rights to extract offshore
    minerals in the Malay Basin. In exchange, Malaysia is entitled to in-kind
    royalties—that is, set percentages of the oil extracted from the Malay
    Basin—and additional payments that turn on how much oil is produced. In
    addition, Exxon must make annual “abandonment cess” payments that do
    not depend on mineral production. These payments fund the costs of
    plugging wells at the end of their useful lives. As in Qatar, Exxon has
    developed considerable extraction, transportation, storage, and processing
    infrastructure in Malaysia, which reverts to the state after the contracts
    expire.
    2
    Transfers of mineral interests are typically categorized as leases or
    sales. In a mineral lease, the transferor provides minerals in place and grants
    the transferee the right to explore those minerals in exchange for a share of
    the income from mineral production. See 5 Mertens Law of Federal
    Income Taxation § 24:21 (2022). An example would be allowing
    someone to drill for oil on one’s land in exchange for a 1/4 interest in the oil
    produced. See Murphy Oil Co. v. Burnet, 
    287 U.S. 299
    , 300 (1932). In a
    mineral sale, the transferor “makes an outright transfer” of mineral interests
    for fixed consideration that does not depend on mineral production.
    5 Mertens, supra, at § 24:16. An example would be selling a fixed amount
    of minerals under one’s land for $200,000. See Whitehead v. United States,
    
    555 F.2d 1290
    , 1292 (5th Cir. 1977).
    1
    That company is Petronas. This opinion refers to Petronas as Malaysia.
    3
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    Mineral leases and mineral sales receive different income-tax
    treatment. With mineral leases, the transferor’s income from minerals is
    treated as ordinary taxable income. 5 Mertens, supra, at § 24:66. That is,
    a portion of the overall income from minerals is included only in the
    transferor’s taxable income and excluded from the transferee’s taxable
    income. Id. The transferor and transferee are each entitled to depletion
    deductions to the extent of their interest in the minerals. See 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.611-1
    .
    For mineral sales, the transferor realizes income only at the time of
    the sale. 5 Mertens, supra, at § 24:19. Income derived from the extraction
    of minerals is included in the transferee’s taxable income, and only the
    transferee is entitled to depletion deductions. Id. Income that the transferor
    receives from the transaction—the sales price—is taxed as capital gains. Id.
    3
    When it filed its tax returns for years 2006 to 2009, Exxon treated its
    mineral transactions with Qatar and Malaysia as leases. Exxon, as the
    transferee, thus did not include in its taxable income the portion of mineral-
    based income that it paid to Qatar and Malaysia as royalties.
    A few years later, Exxon amended its returns and filed a refund claim.
    In the amended returns, Exxon instead treated the mineral transactions as
    sales. Exxon’s taxable income increased because it now included all the
    income derived from minerals, including the royalties paid to Qatar and
    Malaysia. The income that would have been taxable to Qatar and Malaysia
    in the mineral-lease context was now taxable to Exxon. In turn, Exxon offset
    a portion of the increase in its taxable income by deducting some of the
    royalty payments it made to Qatar and Malaysia.
    Despite the increase in its taxable income, Exxon nevertheless
    requested a massive refund of $1 billion. How so? Exxon’s new math had
    4
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    the downstream effect of clearing the way for it to claim foreign-tax credits.
    Because Exxon had paid foreign tax on the money that it now included in its
    U.S. taxable income, Exxon was able to claim credit intended to prevent the
    double taxation of income. The foreign-tax credits generated its mammoth
    refund request.
    The IRS rejected Exxon’s refund claim. It also imposed a $200
    million penalty for Exxon’s claiming an excessive refund without a
    reasonable basis. Exxon paid the penalty and filed a refund action in district
    court.
    After a bench trial, the district court ruled in the government’s favor
    on the lease-versus-sale issue. On the penalty issue, however, the court held
    for Exxon and ordered a refund. Exxon appealed the lease-versus-sale issue,
    and the government cross-appealed the rejection of the penalty.
    B
    The lease-or-sale classification turns on the concept of “economic
    interest.” 2 If Qatar and Malaysia retain an economic interest in the mineral
    deposits that Exxon extracts, the agreements are leases; if not, the
    agreements are sales. Whitehead, 
    555 F.2d at 1292
    ; see also 5 Mertens,
    supra, at § 24:16. 3
    2
    The district court looked to the “predominant or primary purpose” of the
    agreements to conclude that they are leases. We agree with Exxon and the government
    that our cases do not support that “predominant purpose” analysis. The correct
    benchmark is the economic-interest test.
    3
    The economic-interest test became a feature of oil-and-gas law after enactment
    of the Tariff Act of 1913. Pub. L. No. 63-16, § 2, 
    38 Stat. 114
    , 172. That law recognized the
    exhaustible nature of mineral deposits and introduced a “reasonable allowance for
    depletion” of such assets in calculating taxable income. 
    Id. at 172
    ; see Joseph T. Sneed, The
    Economic Interest—An Expanding Concept, 35 Texas L. Rev. 307, 309 (1957). Courts
    5
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    An “economic interest” is a right to share in the profits and losses of
    a business. One example is owning stock. The stock goes up when the
    company succeeds and down when it struggles. Similarly, it seems apparent
    that a party entitled to a percentage of the profits from any oil extracted has
    an economic interest in the oil. The more oil that is drilled, the more money
    the royalty holder makes. See Anderson v. Helvering, 
    310 U.S. 404
    , 409 (1940)
    (“The holder of a royalty interest . . . is deemed to have ‘an economic
    interest’ . . . .”).
    The law crystallizes this lay understanding. To have an economic
    interest in minerals in place, a person must have (1) an investment in the
    minerals and (2) income derived solely from extraction of the minerals. 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.611-1
    (b)(1) (adopting the two-part test from Palmer v. Bender, 
    287 U.S. 551
    , 557 (1933)).
    Qatar and Malaysia have an economic interest. In exchange for giving
    Exxon valuable rights to drill in the North Field and Malay Basin, Qatar and
    were soon confronted with the question of which party was entitled to lucrative depletion
    deductions in multiparty transactions. Thus emerged the economic-interest test—
    taxpayers involved in complex oil-and-gas contracts could only claim a depletion deduction
    to the extent of their “economic interest” in the minerals in place. See J. Paul Jackson,
    Federal Income Tax Problems Involved in Typical Oil and Gas Transactions in Texas, 25
    Texas L. Rev. 343, 344 n.4 (1947).
    The typical economic-interest case thus involves taxpayers’ claiming an economic
    interest in a mineral deposit because they want a depletion deduction that will reduce their
    income tax. See, e.g., Comm’r v. Sw. Expl. Co., 
    350 U.S. 308
    , 313 (1956). And as alluded to
    above, in some cases taxpayers disclaim an economic interest because doing so means that
    their income from a transaction is taxed favorably as capital gains rather than ordinary
    income. See, e.g., Wood v. United States, 
    377 F.2d 300
    , 301 (5th Cir. 1967); 5 Mertens,
    supra, at § 24:15.
    This case distorts those ordinary postures. Here, the focus is not on the taxpayer’s
    (meaning Exxon’s) economic interest, but on that of the counterparty. And Exxon’s
    ultimate goal is not depletion deductions or capital-gains treatment, but downstream
    foreign-tax credit.
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    Malaysia “retain[] a right to share in the [minerals] produced.” Palmer, 
    287 U.S. at 557
    . Qatar receives a percentage of the proceeds from the sale of
    petroleum products and an additional amount that depends on how much gas
    Exxon delivers to its Qatari facilities. Malaysia is entitled to a set percentage
    of oil extracted from the Malay Basin, plus additional payments that turn on
    how much oil and gas is produced.
    These uncapped royalties, which last for the entire duration of the
    agreements, are similar to royalties that case after case deems an economic
    interest. See Palmer, 
    287 U.S. at
    553–59 (holding that a royalty of one-eighth
    of oil produced was sufficient for an economic interest); Rutledge v. United
    States, 
    428 F.2d 347
    , 350 (5th Cir. 1970) (holding that royalty payments
    pegged to the amount of material extracted constituted an economic
    interest); Wood, 
    377 F.2d at 307
     (holding that a minimum guaranteed royalty
    payment created an economic interest); Gray v. Comm’r, 
    183 F.2d 329
    , 330–
    31 (5th Cir. 1950) (holding that an “overriding royalty of one-fifth of all oil
    produced” and an interest in net profits provided an economic interest).
    Such a durable stream of royalties is the quintessential and indeed
    textbook example of an economic interest. A leading oil-and-gas treatise
    recognizes that a landowner who “leases his land to an oil company in a
    standard oil and gas transaction is considered to have an economic interest
    because of the retained royalty interest.” Owen L. Anderson, John
    S. Dzienkowski, John S. Lowe, Robert J. Peroni, David E.
    Pierce, & Ernest E. Smith, Oil and Gas Law and Taxation
    (A Revision of Hemingway) 464–65 (2017); 4 see also Sneed, supra, at
    4
    Unsurprisingly, five of the six authors of this treatise teach at law schools in
    Texas, four of them at the University of Texas School of Law. And Joseph Sneed, the
    author of a leading article on economic interest who would eventually become a judge on
    7
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    355 (describing an interest “lasting for the productive life of the property”
    and entitling its holder to “beneficial enjoyment of income” as “plainly” an
    economic interest); Leonard Sargeant III, Economic Interest and Depletion
    Allowance for Mining Contractors, 
    20 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 322
    , 330
    (1963) (observing that long-term royalty owners have an economic interest).
    That the retained royalties reflect not only the value of oil and gas at
    the wellhead, but also the significant value that Exxon adds through
    transportation and processing, does not dissolve Qatar’s and Malaysia’s
    economic interest. See Estate of Weinert v. Comm’r, 
    294 F.2d 750
    , 764–65
    (5th Cir. 1961) (holding that income from postextraction operations did not
    destroy an economic interest because those operations were “indispensable”
    to the eventual sale of petroleum products). What matters is whether the
    payments depend on minerals. That is why arrangements like minimum
    guaranteed payments, net-profit payments, and advance bonuses also result
    in an economic interest. See Wood, 
    377 F.2d at 307
     (stating that “minimum
    guaranteed royalty provisions” do not “render payment dependent upon a
    factor other than extraction or production”); Kirby Petrol. Co. v. Comm’r, 
    326 U.S. 599
    , 604 (1946) (explaining that an “economic interest in the oil is no
    less when [the] right is to share a net profit” because the “only source of
    payment” is the oil); Burnet v. Harmel, 
    287 U.S. 103
    , 111 (1932) (holding that
    bonuses and royalties are not treated differently in the economic-interest
    analysis). Although none of these configurations involve the long-term
    royalty streams that typify an economic interest, in each the sole source of
    return is minerals. Qatar’s and Malaysia’s running royalties, which likewise
    the Ninth Circuit, also had deep ties to Texas’s flagship university, first as a law student
    and later as a member of the law faculty. See Sneed, supra, at 307 n.a1.
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    rely on mineral production, are closer to the classic mineral lease than these
    other examples. 5
    Exxon acknowledges that it has found no case (nor have we) holding
    that a party with an unlimited royalty stream lacks an economic interest in
    the minerals it will still profit from. It instead points to a subset of lease/sale
    cases in which the transferor receives not a running royalty but instead a fixed
    sum called a production payment.
    Production payments are not traditional royalties. Unlike running
    royalties, which “extend to the entire oil and gas resource content of the
    land,” production payments provide a “right to income for a limited time or
    amount.” Caldwell v. Campbell, 
    218 F.2d 567
    , 569 n.5 (5th Cir. 1955); see also
    Herbel v. Comm’r, 
    129 F.3d 788
    , 790 (5th Cir. 1997) (noting that production
    payments last “shorter than the expected life of the property” (quoting Carr
    Staley, Inc. v. United States, 
    496 F.2d 1366
    , 1367 (5th Cir. 1974)));
    Anderson et al., supra, at 641 (noting that production payments are
    twists on traditional royalties and describing them as “limited by a specific
    dollar amount, quantity of mineral extracted, or period of time”). Production
    payments thus do not provide the economic upside of traditional royalties. A
    $5,000 production payment is worth $5,000, no matter whether the drilling
    takes place on a gusher or a dry well. Indeed, the fixed-sum nature of
    5
    To be sure, not everyone who benefits financially from the extraction of minerals
    has an economic interest. Take for example an operator of a gas processing plant who is
    contractually “entitled to a delivery of the gas” produced at certain wells. Helvering v.
    Bankline Oil Co., 
    303 U.S. 362
    , 367 (1938). The operator certainly “obtain[s] an economic
    advantage from the production of the gas” through its contracts. 
    Id. at 368
    . But this
    operator cannot satisfy the first Palmer requirement because it has no capital investment in
    the gas wells. See 287 U.S. at 557. It thus has “no interest in the gas in place.” Bankline,
    
    303 U.S. at 368
    . It is a mere contractual beneficiary of the extraction of gas. See also Scofield
    v. La Gloria Oil & Gas Co., 
    268 F.2d 699
    , 709 (5th Cir. 1959) (relying on Bankline to arrive
    at a similar holding).
    9
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    production payments is the hallmark of a mineral sale—the transfer of
    mineral interests for a set price. See Whitehead, 
    555 F.2d at
    1292–94; Rhodes
    v. United States, 
    464 F.2d 1307
    , 1311 (5th Cir. 1972); 5 Mertens, supra, at
    § 24:17 (exploring the effect of fixed prices). In simple terms, the production
    payment is the sales price. See, e.g., Anderson, 
    310 U.S. at 413
    ; Christie v.
    United States, 
    436 F.2d 1216
    , 1221 (5th Cir. 1971).
    The wrinkle is that production payments, like traditional royalties, can
    reflect income from minerals. See Thomas v. Perkins, 
    301 U.S. 655
    , 657–663
    (1937); Herbel, 
    129 F.3d at 790
     (defining a production payment as the “right
    to a specified share or production from a mineral property” (quoting Carr
    Staley, 
    496 F.2d at 1367
    )).      Whether production payments leave the
    transferor with an economic interest in the minerals thus requires closer
    scrutiny than the set prices suggest.
    Consider Anderson, 
    310 U.S. 404
    . It involved a company’s selling its
    mineral interests for $160,000. 
    Id. at 405
    . Of that price, $110,000 was
    structured as a production payment.          
    Id. at 406
    .   At first blush, this
    transaction resembles a sale because of the fixed sales price. See Helvering v.
    Elbe Oil Land Dev. Co., 
    303 U.S. 372
    , 375 (1938). But the production
    payment could have been satisfied with income “derived from oil and gas
    produced.” Anderson, 
    310 U.S. at
    405–06. The potential connection to oil
    and gas made it a closer call whether the transaction depended on mineral
    production. See 
    id. at 410
     (noting that an oil payment right “resembles the
    right to cash payments more closely than the right to royalty payments,” but
    recognizing that the payment “depend[s] upon the production of oil”).
    A bright-line rule answers the tricky question of whether production
    payments—which carry set prices but allow mineral extraction to help pay
    them—support an economic interest. When a payment can be satisfied by
    10
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    an alternative, nonmineral source of income, the recipient lacks an economic
    interest because minerals are not the sole source of recovery. See 
    id.
    An alternative source of recovery is why Anderson deemed the
    transaction at issue a sale despite a production payment that could also have
    been satisfied by oil. 
    Id. at 413
    . The production payment could come from a
    sale of the land itself—a source other than minerals—so the payment did not
    depend on mineral production. 
    Id.
     at 405–06, 412–13 (explaining that the
    production payment could have alternatively been satisfied “from the sale of
    fee title” to the property). The “reservation of this additional type of
    security” for the production payment dissolved the economic interest. Id.;
    see also Christie, 
    436 F.2d at 1217, 1221
     (holding that a production payment of
    $5,235.24 that could be satisfied by salvage value of equipment precluded
    economic interest); Comm’r v. Estate of Donnell, 
    417 F.2d 106
    , 115 (5th Cir.
    1969) (holding that a production payment of $35,275 that was backed by a
    personal guaranty did not create an economic interest); see also 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.636-3
     (“A right to mineral in place which can be required to be satisfied
    by other      than the    production of      mineral    from the burdened
    mineral property is not an economic interest in mineral in place.”).
    Only when production payments can be satisfied solely by income
    from minerals do they support an economic interest. Thus, a production
    payment of $395,000 payable solely out of oil resulted in a transferor’s
    retaining an economic interest. Perkins, 
    301 U.S. at
    657–663. The language
    in the cases that a taxpayer has an economic interest only if he looks “solely
    to the extraction of oil or gas for a return of his capital,” Sw. Expl. Co., 
    350 U.S. at 314
     (emphasis added), reflects this divide between production
    payments backed by alternative sources and those that rely solely on
    minerals.
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    But this discussion of production-payment cases is a detour. See
    Anderson et al., supra, at 465–66 (treating production payments as
    deviations from royalties). This is not a production-payment case because
    Qatar and Malaysia receive no guaranteed price based on Exxon’s mineral
    extraction.
    Exxon nonetheless latches on to the “solely” requirement as applied
    in the production-payment nook of oil-and-gas law and refashions it as a
    magic bullet for the entire edifice. Exxon’s preferred rule is that landowners
    who lease property in exchange for oil royalties have no economic interest if
    they secure other contractual benefits in the same bargain. That would mean
    Qatar and Malaysia lack an economic interest in minerals because they
    receive additional sources of income besides mineral royalties—
    infrastructure, access to markets, and in Malaysia’s case, abandonment cess
    payments.
    Exxon’s view that an economic interest depends on whether a party is
    entitled to oil payments and nothing else misses the mark. The correct
    question is whether a party has a right to any income that depends solely on
    the extraction and sale of minerals. See Kirby, 
    326 U.S. at 604
    .
    The “sales” cases that Exxon relies on prove this point. Each found
    no economic interest because the production payment could have been
    satisfied by minerals or nonmineral sources. See Anderson, 
    310 U.S. at 413
    ;
    Christie, 
    436 F.2d at 1221
    ; Donnell, 
    417 F.2d at 115
    . Those who held the right
    to income had limited downside. They could expect to get paid with or
    without extraction. In contrast, Qatar’s and Malaysia’s right to income
    through royalties depends solely on minerals. Again, without oil and gas,
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    Qatar and Malaysia receive no royalties. That the countries are entitled to
    supplemental income is irrelevant. 6
    Were the rule as Exxon sees it, parties could manipulate the line
    between leases and sales. A lessee who seeks additional depletion deductions
    and a lessor who wants favorable capital-gains treatment could transform
    their lease into a sale by adding unrelated nonmineral payments to their
    agreement. Tax treatment would depend on how many transactions are
    cobbled into one contract. Focusing on the source of individual payment
    obligations like royalties prevents such gamesmanship.                      Supplemental
    sources of income in multifaceted transactions—for example, the
    infrastructure and abandonment cess payments here—receive their own tax
    treatment.
    Exxon argues that Anderson bars our “unworkable” approach of “dis-
    aggregating” its agreements and examining only the source of the royalties.
    This prohibition, in Exxon’s view, comes from Anderson’s directive that
    courts should treat payments “as a whole” rather than “distributively []
    6
    Of course, the “solely” requirement applies in cases not involving production
    payments. See, e.g., Sw. Expl. Co., 
    350 U.S. at 314
    . This case would be different if the
    royalties themselves could be satisfied by another source besides petroleum. In that
    scenario, Qatar and Malaysia would have no right to income dependent solely on minerals.
    See Anderson, 
    310 U.S. at 413
     (suggesting that the “reservation in a lease of oil payment
    rights together with a personal guarantee by the lessee that such payments shall at all events
    equal the specified sum[s]” does not constitute an economic interest).
    Exxon argues that the countries’ entitlement to damages for breach of contract fits
    the mold of an alternative source of income. But damages, which by their nature are too
    indefinite and unpredictable to constitute an alternative source, are the standard remedy
    for any breach of contract. If the availability of damages dissolves an economic interest,
    mineral leases would be extinct. See Wood, 
    377 F.2d at
    307 n.19 (explaining that, at least in
    Texas, mineral leases create “an implied covenant to produce”).
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    depending upon the source from which each dollar is derived.” See 
    310 U.S. at 413
    .
    Exxon misreads Anderson. The rule it quotes means only that tax
    treatment does not depend on whether a production payment is actually paid
    from minerals or an alternative source. If a production payment can be
    satisfied by an alternative source, the transferor has no economic interest. In
    such a case of uncertainty about where the production payment will come
    from, the recipient does not own a stake in the minerals. This is the
    “workable rule” to which Anderson referred. Id.; see also Sneed, supra, at 328
    (advising that the Anderson rule is limited and that “a right to look to mineral
    produced and sold should not be deprived of the economic-interest status
    simply because the holder of such a right is given in the same transaction the
    right to sell personal services to the obligor for a fixed fee”).
    Exxon’s position is irreconcilable with decades of cases recognizing
    that royalties support an economic interest. See supra p.7. Indeed, Anderson
    itself recognizes the basic rule that the “holder of a royalty interest—that is,
    a right to receive a specified percentage of all oil and gas produced during the
    term of the lease—is deemed to have ‘an economic interest.’” 
    310 U.S. at 409
     (quoting Palmer, 287 U.S. at 557). That rule resolves this case.
    Exxon also cannot explain cases in which we have recognized an
    economic interest despite the presence of both royalties dependent on oil and
    separate sources of income. Weinert, 
    294 F.2d at
    764–65; Gray, 
    183 F.2d at 330
    . The best example is Gray. There, we did not hesitate to hold that a
    taxpayer’s owning royalties along with an interest in a gas processing and
    cycling plant “manifestly resulted in the reservation of an ‘economic
    interest’ in the oil and gas in place.” Gray, 
    183 F.2d at 331
    . Just as the
    additional source of income did not eliminate the taxpayer’s economic
    interest in Gray, it does not do so here.
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    Qatar and Malaysia thus have an economic interest in the minerals
    being extracted.     That means the agreements are as Exxon originally
    described them: leases.
    C
    That brings us to whether the IRS’s $200 million penalty should
    stand. The IRS can levy a penalty if “a claim for refund . . . is made for an
    excessive amount.” 
    26 U.S.C. § 6676
    (a) (2017) (amended 2018). But claims
    with a “reasonable basis” do not warrant a penalty. 
    Id.
     To satisfy this
    standard, a taxpayer’s position must be “reasonably based on one or more
    of” a number of authorities, 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.6662-3
    (b)(3), including caselaw,
    statutes, regulations, private letter rulings, and technical advice memoranda,
    
    id.
     § 1.6662-4(d)(3). This standard is relatively high but less stringent than
    other IRS standards like the substantial-authority standard, which requires
    that “the weight of the authorities supporting treatment of an item must be
    substantial in relation to the weight of those supporting contrary treatment.”
    Chemtech Royalty Assocs., L.P. v. United States, 
    823 F.3d 282
    , 290 (5th Cir.
    2016). Whether a refund claim has a reasonable basis is reviewed de novo.
    See 
    id. at 287
    .
    The district court emphasized the complex nature of this case and
    “readily” held that Exxon’s position is reasonably based on legal authority.
    It had to hold a bench trial to resolve the case.
    We see some merit in the government’s view that Exxon did not have
    a reasonable basis for its position. As we have said, no case has ever held that
    a traditional royalty does not leave the transferor with an economic interest
    in the oil from which it can still profit.
    Although Exxon’s position is close to the “reasonable basis” line, we
    end up agreeing with the district court’s assessment. The lease/sale issue is
    a notoriously complex area of tax law. One of our opinions quips that it
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    No. 21-10373
    involves “occult mysteries.” See Donnell, 
    417 F.2d at 108
    . And Exxon is not
    the only one to read the “solely” requirement from Anderson and Christie so
    broadly. See Internal Revenue Serv., Tech. Advice Mem.
    199918002, 
    1999 WL 283075
     (Jan. 15, 1999) (loosely reading Anderson and
    Christie as holding that no economic interest exists when “there is a
    possibility of sharing in income not solely derived from extraction”).
    Christie, in which we held that no economic interest existed even though oil
    money ended up satisfying the production payment in whole (because there
    was the possibility the payment could have come from the salvage value of
    the drilling equipment used), is especially susceptible to a broad reading. See
    
    436 F.2d at 1218
    .
    The published cases on which the government relies do not require a
    different result. One uses the higher substantial-authority standard. See NPR
    Invs., L.L.C. ex rel. Roach v. United States, 
    740 F.3d 998
    , 1013 (5th Cir. 2014).
    And the other is about subjective reliance on relevant legal authorities. See
    Wells Fargo & Co. v. United States, 
    957 F.3d 840
    , 854 (8th Cir. 2020).
    Although the penalty question presents a close call, the district court
    correctly granted Exxon a refund on this issue.
    II
    Exxon claims that it made yet another mistake in its original tax
    returns. We turn now to that purported blunder. The issue is which amount
    of excise tax Exxon can deduct from its gross income: (1) the lesser amount
    it actually paid after claiming a renewable-fuel credit or (2) the greater
    amount it would have paid without the credit.
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    No. 21-10373
    A
    1
    Congress levies an excise tax on fuels like gasoline. 
    26 U.S.C. § 4081
    (a)(1)(A). The tax funds the Highway Trust Fund, which pays for
    America’s highways. 
    26 U.S.C. § 9503
    (b)(1).
    Congress tinkers with the excise tax to serve another of its goals—
    encouraging renewable fuels. In years past, Congress has tried to exempt
    renewable gasoline from the excise tax. See Energy Tax Act of 1978, Pub. L.
    No. 95-618, 
    92 Stat. 3174
    , 3185. It has also tried to tax renewable gasoline at
    a lower rate than regular gasoline. Highway Improvement Act of 1982, Pub.
    L. No. 97-424, 
    96 Stat. 2097
    , 2171.        But these experiments had the
    unintended, though predictable, consequence of depleting the Highway
    Trust Fund.
    The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 fixed this problem,
    incentivizing renewable fuels while also ensuring the viability of the Highway
    Trust Fund. Pub. L. No. 108-357, § 301, 
    118 Stat. 1418
    . The Act repealed
    the reduced excise-tax rate for renewable gasoline. See 118 Stat. at 1461.
    Instead, Congress provided that taxpayers who produced renewable gasoline
    could claim a “credit against” their excise tax. Id. at 1459 (codified at 
    26 U.S.C. § 6426
    (a)). Congress also provided an option for this credit to be
    received by the producer in the form of a direct payment, but only to the
    extent that the credit exceeds the amount allowed against excise tax. 
    Id. at 1462
     (codified at 
    26 U.S.C. § 6427
    (e)). And it appropriated money for the
    Highway Trust Fund “without reduction for [the credit.]” 
    Id.
     (codified at
    
    26 U.S.C. § 9503
    (b)(1)). These fixes appropriated the full amount of excise
    taxes to the Highway Trust Fund while also benefitting those who produced
    renewable fuels.
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    2
    Paying excise tax reduces income tax. Excise tax paid on fuel is
    deductible from gross income. See 
    26 U.S.C. § 162
    ; 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.61-3
    .
    In tax years 2008 and 2009, Exxon’s original excise-tax liability was
    roughly $6 billion. But Exxon also produced renewable fuels. It was thus
    eligible for a $960 million credit. Exxon applied the credit against its original
    $6 billion liability and paid a reduced excise tax of around $5 billion. On its
    original tax returns, Exxon deducted that lesser amount from its gross income
    rather than the $6 billion-odd it would have owed in excise taxes had it not
    claimed the credit.
    But just as it did with the lease/sale issue, Exxon had a change of
    heart—this one worth $300 million. Exxon filed amended returns that
    deducted $6 billion in excise tax, unreduced by the credit for renewables. In
    other words, Exxon increased its excise-tax deduction, and thus reduced its
    taxable income, by $960 million. That translated to a $300 million reduction
    in tax owed.
    The IRS was not persuaded. It rejected the refund claim, informing
    Exxon that “[s]ince you already used the Credit to reduce the Excise Tax,
    you are not allowed to use the same Credit[] to . . . decrease taxable income.”
    The district court agreed with the IRS.
    B
    The statute says that there “shall be allowed” a “credit . . . against”
    the fuel excise tax. 
    26 U.S.C. § 6426
    (a)(1). The issue is the meaning of
    “credit.” If the credit reduces excise tax, the taxpayer can deduct only the
    amount of excise tax remaining after subtracting the credit—the amount it
    actually paid. But if, as Exxon contends, the credit satisfies or pays the excise
    tax, it does not alter the amount of tax imposed. And if that is the case, then
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    the taxpayer could deduct the full amount of excise tax imposed without a
    reduction for the credit.
    Exxon is not the only oil company making this argument. Its gambit is
    the latest installment in a series of nearly identical claims that companies have
    filed nationwide. We join the unanimous chorus—judges who comprise two
    courts of appeals and three district courts (9-0 for those keeping score)—to
    hold that Exxon’s credit reduced its excise-tax liability such that it can only
    deduct the excise tax it paid out of pocket. See Delek US Holdings, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    32 F.4th 495
     (6th Cir. 2022); Sunoco, Inc. v. United States, 
    908 F.3d 710
     (Fed. Cir. 2018); Exxon Mobil Corp. v. United States, No. 3:16-CV-
    2921-N, 
    2018 WL 4178776
     (N.D. Tex. Aug. 8, 2018); Delek US Holdings, Inc.
    v. United States, 
    515 F. Supp. 3d 812
     (M.D. Tenn. 2021); Sunoco, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    129 Fed. Cl. 322
     (2016); see also ETC Sunoco Holdings, LLC v.
    United States, 
    36 F.4th 646
     (5th Cir. 2022) (rejecting Sunoco’s attempts to
    relitigate the case it lost before the Federal Circuit).
    Our analysis begins and ends with the ordinary meaning of “credit.”
    To borrow from the private sector, everyone recognizes that coupons lower
    the cost of goods by reducing sticker prices. Credits do the same thing. As
    we have explained, “[a] tax credit is the public sector equivalent of a coupon;
    it reduces the amount that is otherwise owed.” United States v. Hoffman, 
    901 F.3d 523
    , 538 (5th Cir. 2018) (emphasis added). Dictionaries recognize that
    credits reduce liability. Tax Credit, Black’s Law Dictionary 1501
    (8th ed. 2004) (“An amount subtracted directly from one’s total tax liability,
    dollar for dollar, as opposed to a deduction from gross income.”); Credit,
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 294 (11th ed.
    2003) (“[A] deduction from an amount otherwise due.”). Other courts have
    too. See R.H. Donnelley Corp. v. United States, 
    641 F.3d 70
    , 74 (4th Cir. 2011)
    (“[T]he Code allows taxpayers to reduce their tax liability dollar-for-dollar
    by claiming credits.”); Telecom*USA, Inc. v. United States, 
    192 F.3d 1068
    ,
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    No. 21-10373
    1079 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (“[A] tax credit is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in a
    taxpayer’s tax liability.”). Taxpayers who receive the childcare credit would
    no doubt consider the post-credit amount to be their tax liability. It follows
    from this commonly understood meaning of “credit” that when the section
    6426(a) credit is applied against excise tax, it reduces that tax. See Delek, 32
    F.4th at 498 (discerning the ordinary meaning of credit to conclude that the
    credit reduces excise-tax liability); Sunoco, 908 F.3d at 716 (same).
    Exxon and amicus argue that our reading is inconsistent with section
    6427(e), which allows producers to receive the renewable-fuel credit as a tax-
    free direct payment. See 
    26 U.S.C. § 6427
    (e)(1). But fuel producers cannot
    claim direct payments in lieu of excise-tax reductions. They must first apply
    the credit against excise-tax liability. See 
    26 U.S.C. § 6426
    (a)(1) (stating that
    there “shall be allowed” a credit against excise tax) (emphasis added); Delek,
    32 F.4th at 500–01 (emphasizing that the mandatory term “shall” requires
    taxpayers to first apply the credit against their excise tax). Only if their credit
    exceeds their excise tax can they receive the excess as a direct payment. See
    
    26 U.S.C. § 6427
    (e)(3) (“No amount shall be payable . . . with respect to
    which an amount is allowed as a credit under section 6426.”). Indeed, for
    years Exxon applied its credit against its excise tax without first demanding a
    direct payment. Accordingly, our reading does not conflict with section
    6427(e).
    Exxon makes additional arguments, but we agree with the detailed
    reasoning of the Federal and Sixth Circuits rejecting them. See Delek, 32
    F.4th at 499–502; Sunoco, 908 F.3d at 716–17. There is no need to say again
    what has already been said well.
    The text is clear: Exxon’s renewable-fuel credit reduced its excise tax.
    It can deduct only the reduced amount.
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    ***
    Exxon was right the first time it filed its returns. We AFFIRM.
    21