DocketNumber: No. 7,237.
Citation Numbers: 32 P.2d 1, 96 Mont. 544, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 48
Judges: Anderson, Angstman, Callaway, Matthews, Stewart
Filed Date: 4/18/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
I agree with the result reached in the foregoing opinion, but not with the reasoning by which that result was reached.
The complaint, I think, is sufficient to tender the question which plaintiff sought to present. That question is whether plaintiff is liable for a net proceeds tax on the proceeds yielded to it as royalty on its royalty interest in a mine, when such royalty is no part of the net proceeds from the operation of the mine by the operator. Under section 3, Article XII, of our Constitution, "the annual net proceeds of all mines and mining claims shall be taxed as provided by law." Chapter 133, Laws of 1931, provides that the product yielded to a royalty interest "shall be deemed a part of the net proceeds of a mine or mines and shall be taxed on the same basis as net proceeds of mines are taxed." It is plain that under this statute it matters not whether the mine is operated at a profit or at a loss by the operator, so far as the royalty holder is concerned. He must pay on the royalty yielded to him whether the operator of the mine operated it at a profit or loss.
I do not agree that net proceeds is a definite legal status or condition, as stated in the majority opinion. The legislature has discretion in determining what deductions are allowable from the gross proceeds in arriving at the net. (Anaconda Copper Min.Co. v. Junod,
The complaint, I think, is sufficient to present the question of the meaning, effect, and validity of Chapter 133, Laws of 1931. On the merits, as above pointed out, plaintiff is not entitled to prevail, because it is liable for the tax, regardless of whether the proceeds yielded to it as royalty were a part of the net proceeds viewed from the standpoint of the operator. Hence the demurrer to the complaint was properly sustained.