DocketNumber: Docket No. 3146.
Citation Numbers: 5 B.T.A. 1126, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3674
Judges: Green
Filed Date: 1/20/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The sole assignment of error set out in petitioner’s petition is that the deductions allowed by the Commissioner for the two years in question, on account of depletion of the petitioner’s interests in several ore properties, are not reasonable allowances as contemplated by section 234(a) (9) of the Revenue Act of 1918. The determination of the deductions to which the petitioner is entitled, as a matter of statutory right, on account of depletion of its interests in certain ore properties, must be made through the use of three factors: (1) Estimated ore reserves in place in the mines at March 1, 1913; (2) March 1,1913, value of those reserves; and (3) tonnage sold by the several lessees during the years in question. By dividing the second factor by the first, a unit rate of depletion is obtained which, when multiplied by the third factor, will produce a result representing the proper annual depletion allowance. The Commissioner and the petitioner are in agreement as to the figures repre-
In the determination of the value, at any basic date, of ore. properties, in the case of a lessor, the most common and generally accepted method of making such a valuation is what is known as the present-value method. This method contemplates that the total expected income to be derived from the extraction and/or sale of ores by operating lessees will be received by the lessor in equal annual installments over the estimated life of the property. Where the programs of production of the operating lessees contemplate a material variation in the annual production and sale of ores from a uniform scale over the life of the property, then the method must be modified so as to give effect to actual conditions. The March 1, 1913, value of the petitioner’s interests in several ore properties fixed by the Commissioner was determined in principle in accordance with the present-value method, and gives effect to the variations in annual production which must result through the carrying out by the lessees of their programs of production. However, the petitioner contends that in the application of the present-value method the Commissioner has fallen into error in several respects and hence his valuation is erroneous.
We have set out in our findings of fact how the Commissioner reached his determination as to the March 1, 1913, values of the interests of this petitioner in certain ore properties. For the sake of clarity we illustrate below his determination as to the value of a single mine, described in the several exhibits as Tract No. 1, Lot No. 3, NE14 of NW% and Lot No. 4, NWy4 of NW%, Section 6, Township 57, Eange 20:
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The petitioner points out what it believes to be two fundamental errors in the Commissioner’s method of computing the March 1,1913, value of its ore properties, as follows:
(1) The valuation of each mine is based upon a classification of ores according to the process of extraction to be employed by the operating lessees; and
(2) Ores which will be extracted and sold simultaneously have been assigned different values though the lease agreements provide the same royalty payment in respect of every ton of ore extracted.
With respect to the first allegation of error, the petitioner contends that a valuation based upon a classification of ores according to the process of extraction must necessarily be erroneous, since the leases make no distinction in the value of the ore, but, on the other hand, irrespective of the process of extraction employed, it is entitled to receive the same royalty for every ton of ore extracted and sold. With respect to the second allegation of error, the illustration heretofore set out shows precisely the ground upon which it is predicated. It will be noted therefrom that, during the last eleven years of the life of the mine, open pit, milling, and underground operations will
It is apparent from its petition and all the arguments set out in its brief, that the petitioner is laboring under a misapprehension as to just what is the basis of the Commissioner’s valuation. The petitioner has assumed that the Commissioner has valued each class of ore separately according to the process of extraction employed. But this is not a correct assumption. The Commissioner has made reference in his valuation schedules to the three classes of ore simply as a matter of convenience and for the purpose of readily identifying certain items in those schedules relating to production with the same items as they appear in the operating lessee’s programs of production. For instance, reverting again to the illustration, the classification of the ore reserves into three classes is of no importance whatever and the Commissioner’s valuation is not in the least affected by it. The important thing in this respect is that, according to the operating lessee’s program of production, 12,705,110 tons of ore will be extracted during twenty-eight years by the open pit process, an annual production by this process during the life of the mine, of 453,753-26/28 tons, and that during the last eleven years 3,670,750 tons of ore will be extracted by the milling and underground processes, an annual production by the latter process during the last eleven years of 333,704-6/11 tons. But all of this simply indicates that, irrespective of the processes of extraction involved, during the first seventeen years of the life of this mine the annual production by the operating lessee will be 453,753-26/28 tons, while the production for the last eleven years of the life of the mine will be 787,458 tons.
The March 1,1913, value of the petitioner’s interests in certain ore properties may, in the absence of evidence of a more satisfactory basis, be computed upon the present worth at that date of the expected future royalties. To determine the present worth of those royalties at the basic date, March 1, 1913, necessitates a determination of the rate at which those royalties will be received by the petitioner, and this, in the last analysis, must depend upon the estimated rate of extraction according to the operating lessee’s program of production. Having determined the rate at which the ores will be extracted and the royalties received, appropriate discount factors must be applied to those expected royalties to reduce them to their present worth at
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*1134 Estimated expense 3% of gross royalties:
Present worth at March 1, 1913, of net minimum royalties, 6% and 4%. ($3,176,271.00 — $96,288.13) X.446356_$1,375,215.19
Present worth at March 1, 1913, of additional royalties 3rd to 28th yr. 6% and 4%— ($6.50 — $0.20) X.465820X.88999644_ 2.61
Present worth at March 1, 1913, of additional royalties 18th to 28th yr. 6% and 4%= ($917,687.50 — $27,530.63) X.677672X .37136442_ 224, 019.75
Present worth at March 1, 1913, of lessor’s equity in the mine_ 1, 599,237. 55
Present worth at March 1,1913, of petitioner’s one-third interest- 533, 079.18
The method adopted by the Commissioner is but a short cut which arrives at the same result. Under the method outlined above, as well as the Commissioner’s method, each ton of ore in the mine, irrespective of the process of extraction to be employed, has the same valué at March 1, 1918, ascertained by dividing the value of the lessor’s equity by the total ore reserves.
All that has previously been said with respect to the one mine used in the illustration applies with equal force to all the ore properties we have under consideration.
The petitioner contends that the only proper method of valuing its interests in these ore properties at March 1, 1913, is to assume that the ores contained in each mine will be extracted by the operating-lessees in equal amounts over the maximum life of the mine, and that the royalties will be received in equal installments. The petitioner considers the maximum life of the mine as the number of years of active operations necessary to exhaust all the ores plus the number of years of deferment of operations. With this contention we are forced to disagree. With respect to all the mines, except those covered by leases Nos. 4, 7, and 8, the operating lessees had, at March 1, 1913, laid down programs of operation and production. With respect to several of the mines these programs called for a deferment of all operations for a period in some instances running as long as eight years. In the case of some mines the programs provided for a considerable production in the early years with a much lessened output in later years, while the converse was provided for in the case of still other mines. In the valuation of these ore properties as of March 1, 1913, we see no good, reason to disregard the operating lessees’ programs of production which later developments have shown to have been reasonably correct.
The petitioner contends that in computing the values of the ores in the mines covered by leases Nos. 4, 7, and 8, the Commissioner should have used a risk rate of 6 per cent in lieu of 8 per cent for the purpose of ascertaining the present worth at March 1, 1913, of expected future royalties in excess of the minimum royalty payments provided for in the lease agreements. As pointed out in our
Judgment will be entered for the Commissioner.