DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 3059-65, 3060-65
Citation Numbers: 49 T.C. 541, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170, 29 Oil & Gas Rep. 343
Filed Date: 2/28/1968
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*170
1. Moneys advanced to a corporation by its principal stockholder to finance the development of a real estate subdivision,
2. Cost to a real estate developer of constructing a shelter in a city-owned park which the city required as a condition to its approval of the developer's subdivision plat,
3. Petitioner purchased an undivided 45-percent working interest in an oil lease for $ 20,000 with the seller reserving an oil production payment of $ 30,600. A proportional interest in the leasehold equipment was also reserved as security for the oil payment. Shortly thereafter petitioner purchased the reserved oil production payment for $ 30,600.
*542 Deficiencies have been determined in petitioners' income tax as follows:
Docket | Petitioner | Year | Deficiency |
No. | |||
3059-65 | Lots, Inc | Ended Aug. 31, 1961 | $ 1,647.83 |
Ended Aug. 31, 1962 | 4,306.31 | ||
3060-65 | C. B., Jr. and Martha Jean Christie | 1962 | 16,291.36 |
The questions involved are (1) whether the moneys advanced to a corporation engaged in a real estate development by its principal stockholder were bona fide loans or capital contributions; (2) whether the cost of erecting a shelter in a city-owned park required by the city as a condition to its approval of the developer's subdivision plat was an ordinary and necessary business expense, and (3) whether the cost of an oil production payment reserved out of taxpayer's recently acquired working interest is recoverable from the first oil payments received or through depletion deductions.
GENERAL FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioner Lots, Inc., is a Texas corporation with its principal place of business located at Wichita Falls, Tex. Petitioners C. B. Christie, Jr., and Martha Jean Christie, are husband and wife*172 and filed a joint return for 1962. Petitioners' returns for the years involved were filed with the district director at Dallas, Tex.The Christies were residents of Wichita Falls at the time the petitions herein were filed. C. B. Christie, Jr., hereinafter called petitioner, has for many years been engaged in the production of oil and the operation of oil and gas leases. He maintains his books and makes his income tax returns on an accrual basis of accounting.
FINDINGS OF FACT
For some time prior to the taxable years involved, petitioner was the owner of a tract of land adjacent to the city of Wichita Falls comprising approximately 127 acres. In 1959, he entered into an agreement with three other residents of Wichita Falls, T. E. Hill, Larry Moore, and Gene Stephens, looking to the development of the property as a *543 residential real estate subdivision. Hill, Moore, and Stephens were all actively engaged in the land development and building business.
The original plan was for petitioner to furnish the land, including the 127-acre tract mentioned and possibly other acreage, and to finance the development of the property. The other three parties were to do *173 all the work, including the subdividing and improving the property and constructing and selling the houses. The moneys to be advanced by petitioner were to be repaid to him out of the proceeds from the sale of the land, with interest at 6 percent, and thereafter each of the other parties was to be entitled to a one-sixteenth interest in the project. A formal agreement to that effect was executed by the parties August 14, 1959.
Before proceeding with the development of the property and sale of the lots, petitioner and his associates organized a corporation, Lots, Inc. (docket No. 3059-65) for that purpose. The corporation was organized October 9, 1959, with authorized capital stock of 50,000 shares, par value $ 1 each. Only 1,000 of such shares were immediately issued, of which petitioner received 520 and each of the other parties 160 shares. They each paid par value for their shares in cash.
On April 5, 1960, 9,000 additional common shares of Lots, Inc., were issued at par value for cash. Of this issue petitioner received 4,680 shares and each of the others received 1,440 shares. Hill, Moore, and Stephens each borrowed the subscription price of his shares from petitioner and*174 gave petitioner a promissory note for the amount with interest at 6 percent.
Neither petitioner nor his wife was related by blood or marriage to any of the other stockholders of Lots, Inc.
On January 11, 1960, petitioner deeded to Lots, Inc., 30.9 acres of the above-mentioned 127-acre tract of land for a cash consideration of $ 71,070. The deed was recorded February 4, 1960. The funds for payment of the land were obtained from the First-Wichita National Bank, of which petitioner was a director, on Lots, Inc.'s promissory note for that amount, which note was personally endorsed by petitioner. The note was executed April 5, 1960, and the cash paid to petitioner on that date. On October 1, 1960, petitioner transferred 36.54 additional acres in the same tract to Lots, Inc., for which he received as partial payment Lots, Inc.'s promissory note dated November 1, 1960, in the amount of $ 84,042. *175 of August 14, 1959, as having been superseded by the incorporation of the business and no longer operative.
Lots, Inc., began selling lots in the subdivision, called Colonial Park, on contract in November 1959. At March 21, 1960, it had sales, or contracts for the sale, of lots in the aggregate amount of $ 223,767.50. *544 All sales of lots were handled by Hill, Moore, and Stephens. Petitioner had no part in the sale of the lots or in the day-to-day operation of the development.
During its taxable year ended August 31, 1960, the financial position of Lots, Inc., was as follows:
Date | Deposits | CBC Jr. | Bank | Lot sales | Capital | Miscellaneous |
loans | loans | stock | unidentified | |||
1959: | ||||||
November | $ 2,000.00 | $ 1,000 | $ 1,000 | |||
December | 80.00 | 80 | ||||
1960: | ||||||
January | ||||||
February | ||||||
March | 14,485.80 | $ 14,485.80 | ||||
April | 104,881.06 | 33,811.06 | $ 71,070 | |||
May | 39,646.25 | $ 39,646.25 | ||||
June | 14,378.38 | 2,500.00 | 11,878.38 | |||
July | 33,188.11 | 24,188.11 | 9,000 | |||
August | 39,984.17 | 19,500 | 20,484.17 | |||
248,643.77 | 50,796.86 | 90,570 | 96,196.91 | 10,000 | 1,080 |
Source of funds | |
Capital stock issued | $ 10,000.00 |
Loans -- notes payable, CBC Jr | 50,796.86 |
Loans -- notes payable, bank | 90,570.00 |
Cash lot sales (identified) | 96,196.91 |
Unidentified cash deposits | 1,080.00 |
Total deposits, per ledger to Aug. 31, 1960 | 248,643.77 |
Accounts payable, Aug. 31, 1960 (on developing land) 79,948.15 | |
Deficit balance, bank account at Aug. 31, 1960 | 4,104.95 |
Funds available | 332,696.87 |
Application of funds | |
Development, sec. A | 163,125.41 |
Development, sec. B | 26,753.36 |
Paid CBC Jr. for land -- sec. A | 71,070.00 |
Repay bank on $ 71,070 note made to acquire sec. A | 68,500.00 |
Expenses (interest, etc., deductible currently) | |
approximately | 3,248.10 |
332,696.87 |
From time to time during 1960, Lots, Inc., obtained loans from the First-Wichita National Bank on interest-bearing notes personally endorsed by petitioner. Following is a list of such notes:
Date of loan | Principal | Interest | Due date | Date paid |
1. Apr. 5, 1960 | $ 71,070 | $ 863.83 | Mar. 5, 1961 | Oct. 13, 1960 |
2. Aug. 23, 1960 | 19,500 | 226.80 | Dec. 21, 1961 | Dec. 12, 1960 |
3. Sept. 20, 1960 | 21,000 | 407.15 | Mar. 20, 1961 | Mar. 9, 1961 |
4. Oct. 20, 1960 | 13,000 | 278.06 | Apr. 20, 1961 | Mar. 9, 1961 |
5. Oct. 25, 1960 | 25,500 | 668.64 | Apr. 25, 1961 | Apr. 25, 1961 |
Total | 150,070 | 2,444.48 |
*545 Also during 1960, 1961, 1962, and 1963 petitioner advanced funds to Lots, Inc., on its unsecured promissory notes as follows:
Date | Principal | Interest | Due on or before (months) | |
1. Mar. 21, 1960 | $ 2,500.00 | $ 118.75 | 11. | |
2. Mar. 21, 1960 | 11,785.80 | 559.57 | 11. | |
3. Mar. 30, 1960 | 200.00 | 9.20 | 11. | |
4. Apr. 11, 1960 | 12,811.06 | 562.73 | 11. | |
5. Apr. 27, 1960 | 21,000.00 | 868.00 | 11. | |
6. June 23, 1960 | 2,500.00 | 79.58 | 11. | |
7. Oct. 31, 1960 | 10,563.00 | 107.39 | 11. | |
8. Nov. 9, 1960 | 2,600.00 | 22.53 | 11. | |
9. Nov. 1, 1960 | 84,042.00 | 840.42 | 11. | |
10. Nov. 22, 1960 | 8,100.00 | 52.65 | 11. | |
156,101.86 | ||||
3,220.82 | ||||
3,220.82 | ||||
11. | 74,440.26 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
12. | 84,882.42 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
13. Jan. 16, 1961 | 9,000.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
14. Jan. 19, 1961 | 22,500.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
15. Feb. 14, 1961 | 7,800.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
16. Feb. 16, 1961 | 6,135.90 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
17. Mar. 9, 1961 | 1,570.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
18. Mar. 14, 1961 | 10,691.67 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
19. Apr. 25, 1961 | 16,000.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
20. May 22, 1961 | 3,600.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
21. July 24, 1961 | 12,400.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
22. Aug. 22, 1961 | 4,700.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
23. Sept. 13, 1961 | 8,768.92 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
24. Sept. 25, 1961 | 12,000.00 | Dec. 31, 1961. | ||
25. Dec. 20, 1961 | 2,000.00 | 30 days. | ||
Jan. 24, 1962 | Paid Dec. 20, 1961, note. | |||
26. May 14, 1962 | 950.00 | 60 days. | ||
May 17, 1962 | (950.00) | Paid May 14, 1962, note. | ||
27. Feb. 19, 1963 | 6,825.00 | Dec. 31, 1963. | ||
Oct. 7, 1963 | (6,825.00) | Paid Feb. 19, 1963, note. | ||
Total | Due Dec. 31, 1962. |
The lots in the Colonial Park subdivision were sold for $ 4,500 to $ 5,000 each. There were 88 lots unsold, and not under contract of sale, at August 31, 1960, 70 at August 31, 1961, and 58 at August 31, 1962. Lots, Inc., had accounts receivable at the end of its fiscal years ended August 31, 1960, 1961, and 1962, in the respective amounts of $ 131,904.71, $ 70,679.94, and $ 63,137.31. On June 26, 1964, Lots, Inc., transferred to petitioner the 47 remaining unsold lots in the subdivision in *178 full payment of the balance due him of $ 211,612.76. This action was taken in response to petitioner's demand on Lots, Inc., for payment of the balance due on its indebtedness to him.
The 1950's and early 1960's were boom years for the real estate business in Wichita Falls area. About the latter part of 1962, the boom subsided and Lots, Inc., found it difficult to sell its lots. It tried unsuccessfully to sell the remaining 47 unsold lots, which were finally transferred to petitioner, for an amount in excess of its indebtedness to petitioner. In its return for its fiscal year ended August 31, 1962, Lots, Inc., reported an operating loss of $ 160.07.
*546 Lots, Inc., still retains its corporate form and owns approximately 9 acres of land with a cost of $ 30,819.51 and an undetermined present value. It does not have and has never had any office equipment or any employees. None of its three minority stockholders has ever received any compensation or distribution of any nature from the corporation.
In addition to his oil investments, petitioner engaged to some extent in making interest-bearing loans. During 1960, 1961, and 1962, he had the following amounts of money on loan*179 and liquid assets available for loans:
Liquid assets | ||
Date | Money loaned | available for |
loans | ||
Apr. 30, 1960 | $ 236,243.65 | $ 981,461.03 |
May 31, 1961 | 316,183.82 | 759,028.91 |
June 30, 1962 | 366,525.14 | 930,528.16 |
In his individual income tax return for 1960, petitioner reported a short-term capital gain of $ 16,163.01 and a long-term capital gain of $ 24,571.84 from the sale of his two parcels of real estate to Lots, Inc., computed as follows:
SALE OF CAPITAL ASSETS | |||||
Sale of | Date | Date sold | Sales | Cost | Gain |
real estate | acquired | price | |||
Norwood land | Aug. 17, 1959 | Jan. 12, 1960 | $ 71,070 | $ 54,906.99 | $ 16,163.01 |
Norwood land | Aug. 17, 1959 | Oct. 20, 1960 | 95,137 | 70,565.13 | 24,571.87 |
Respondent has made no adjustment of these items in his audit of the returns. However, he disallowed the deduction of the interest paid and claimed by Lots, Inc., in its returns for the taxable years 1961 and 1962 on its indebtedness to petitioner in the amounts of $ 3,220.82 and $ 14,231.10, respectively, and has treated $ 44,292.75 *180 the balance was interest) as dividends.
OPINION
The question in this issue is whether the funds advanced to Lots, Inc., by petitioner for development of the Colonial Park subdivision were in reality loans, as petitioner contends, so that the interest paid thereon is deductible by Lots, Inc., or whether, as respondent contends, they were capital contributions and the distributions to petitioner were in the nature of dividends.
*547 Several principal tests have been laid down by the courts for determining this question. One of these is the true intention of the parties; that is, whether the advances to the corporation were intended to establish an actual debtor-creditor relationship or whether they were intended as capital contributions. In
This question is one of fact.
In form and in the bookkeeping entries, petitioner's advances to Lots, Inc., were all treated as loans. Notes were given by Lots, Inc., which had definite due dates and bore interest at the usual interest rate. They were all paid. There was no discernible intention on the part of the parties to treat the advances other than as loans.
Respondent argues that this is an instance where substance should prevail*182 over form. We recognize the generally accepted rule that as to tax consequences substance rather than form must prevail. See
We do not think the substance-over-form rule is applicable to the facts here, however. We agree with respondent that the ultimate objectives of the parties -- the substance -- was for the petitioner to finance the development of the subdivision and for the other participants to do the actual work. However, it does not appear that it was intended for petitioner to finance the development with capital contributions rather than loans. Financing through loans, rather than additional capital contributions, without disturbing the capital interests of the stockholders was, it seems to us, the more practical procedure, and no less objective than capital contributions. That seems to have been the intention of the*183 parties, at least after the incorporation.
Respondent argues that it is apparent from the preliminary agreement of August 14, 1959, that the advances were intended as "risk" capital. There is some indication that this may have been what the parties first had in mind but whatever may be said of this agreement, the evidence is that it was not followed but was considered abandoned after the parties organized Lots, Inc., to develop and operate the subdivision. The incorporation was not mentioned in the agreement. *548 It obviously was not contemplated in the original plan. Some of the procedures under corporate form were contrary to, or incompatible with, the conditions of the agreement.
Respondent also argues that the only source from which Lots, Inc., could repay petitioner's loans was from its earnings and profits and property inflated in value. This argument is not sound. The loans were made to finance either the purchase of land or the cost of developing the land, the recovery of which on the sale of the lots would not have increased Lots, Inc.'s earnings and profits but would have made available funds with which to repay the loans. There is evidence, too, that at the*184 time of petitioner's loans, Lots, Inc., could have obtained the necessary funds from commercial banks on its own security. See
Respondent cites
As we view the creditable evidence presently before us, the transfer of the Burr Oaks property to petitioner is so lacking in the essential characteristics of a sale and is replete with so many of the elements normally found in an equity contribution (cf.
What guided our ruling in the
The facts in the instant case are more like those in
Petitioner's transfers of the land to the Lots, Inc., were reported in his return as sales and were so treated by the Commissioner. No contention is made that the sales price did not reflect the actual value of the land. The notes held by the bank were all paid off with interest within the year of issuance.
Respondent takes the position in his argument here, for the first time, that the loans which Lots, Inc., obtained from the bank were in reality loans to petitioner, and thus capital contributions by petitioner. *187 Respondent has made no such adjustments in his determination of Lots, Inc.'s tax liability.
Lots, Inc., was thinly capitalized, as respondent asserts, in that its paid-in capital of $ 10,000 was insufficient to finance the development and it was contemplated that the necessary operating funds would be provided by petitioner. However, it had assets equal to or in excess of its indebtedness to petitioner and had sales sufficient to insure its solvency and the payment of its notes. Its indebtedness to petitioner was never subordinated to the claims of general creditors. The evidence is, too, that at the time of petitioner's loans, Lots, Inc., could have obtained the funds from commercial banks on its own security. In these circumstances the thin capitalization did not give the notes the character of preferred shares or any other form of contributed capital, as in the
FINDINGS OF FACT
During the taxable year 1962, Lots, Inc., expended $ 13,054.98 in building a recreation shelter in Weeks Park, a municipal park owned and operated by the City of Wichita Falls. The shelter*188 was located some 400 feet southeast and across a creek from the subdivision being developed by Lots, Inc. Upon its completion, the shelter became the property of the City of Wichita Falls. Lots, Inc., was required to build the shelter for the City in order to get the city's approval of the plat for its subdivision. At that time there was in effect a resolution of the City's board of aldermen requiring the setting aside of a portion of *550 each subdivision as a park area. In lieu of that requirement, Lots, Inc., agreed to construct the shelter on the park land already owned by the City, as was permissible under the resolution. The shelter added nothing to the value of Lots, Inc.'s property.
In its return for 1962, Lots, Inc., claimed the deduction of the cost of the shelter, $ 13,054.98, as a business expense. Respondent determined that it is not an allowable business expenses but must be capitalized as a part of the cost of developing the subdivision lots.
OPINION
In this issue, Lots, Inc., argues that the cost of constructing the shelter was not a capital expenditure, since it did not result in the acquisition of a capital asset, but was an expenditure made to protect*189 and promote its business and is therefore a deductible expense. It likens the payments to those allowed as expense deductions in
Here the expenditure was made in organizing and setting up a business, not in operating it. See
We think that, whether the transfers were voluntarily or involuntarily made and irrespective of the underlying motivations, they represented a business expenditure of a capital nature and that petitioners have already received the maximum benefit through being allowed to add the cost basis of the transferred lands to the cost basis of the remaining property.
Another case with closely related facts, which seems at first blush to support the petitioner here is
The cost of acquiring the city's approval of the subdivision plat here was like the cost of obtaining a liquor license from the City of Jersey City, N.J.,
In
It is not always easy to find a verbal formula which readily supplies an unerring guide in drawing the boundary line between current expenses and capital outlays. But it may be said in general terms that an expenditure should be treated as one in the nature of a capital outlay if it brings about the acquisition of an asset having a period of useful life in excess of one year or if it secures a like advantage to the taxpayer which has a life of more than one year. * * *
The obvious and, we think, the correct answer to the question here is that the payment which Lots, Inc., was required to make to the city by constructing the park shelter was capital outlay to be identified*193 with the other costs of the subdivision project; it secured a "like advantage" to petitioner which had a life of more than 1 year. At any rate the evidence fails to show that respondent has erred in so determining.
FINDINGS OF FACT
By written agreement described as "Assignment of Oil and Gas Leases With Reservations," dated July 10, 1962, Felix G. Payne, Jr. (hereinafter referred to as Payne), sold and assigned to petitioner subject to the reservations and conditions therein set forth, all of his interest in the Trindle leasehold (located in Colorado) and the personal *552 property used upon or obtained in connection therewith, effective July 1, 1962. This was a 45-percent interest in the leasehold, which Payne had acquired from Lakota Petroleum Corp. for $ 50,000 by assignment dated June 30, 1962, effective June 1, 1962. In connection with this assignment petitioner paid Payne $ 20,000 on July 10, 1962; and in the agreement Payne reserved 17 percent of the oil produced and sold from the lease until the market value of that oil aggregated $ 30,600, plus interest at 5 1/2 percent on the unrecovered balance of the principal amount. A condition of the assignment *194 was stated as follows:
Assignee or his heirs, successors or assigns, shall promptly pay to Assignor, his heirs, successors or assigns, the then fair market value of all equipment removed from the leases and such amount shall be credited first to the interest accrued on the said Production Payment reserved herein and, secondly, to the unrecovered balance of the said principal amount.
By written agreement designated "Assignment of Production Reservation," dated August 2, 1962, but effective August 1, 1962, Payne sold and assigned the aforesaid "production reservation" to petitioner, for which petitioner paid Payne $ 30,600 by check dated August 1, 1962.
At the time Payne sold his interest in the Trindle lease to petitioner there was only one oil well on the property, known as Trindle No. 1, and the following is a statement of the gross barrels of oil production from the well for the months stated:
Date | Barrels |
June 1962 | 285.72 |
July 1962 | 141.45 |
Two additional wells were later drilled on the Trindle lease.
For the month of June 1962, Trindle lease oil sales attributable to the entire working interest amounted to $ 614.96, of which Payne's share was 45 percent. During the*195 months of August through December of 1962 petitioner received oil payments of $ 1,123, of which petitioner allocated $ 722.11 to interest and $ 400.89 to principal. *553 interest on his income tax returns but he did not report any part of the $ 30,600*196 principal amount received on the theory that it represented a return of his investment in the production payment, or was offset by cost depletion. For the year 1962, which is here involved, respondent has added the $ 400.89, which petitioner received and allocated to principal as noted above, to petitioner's income from the 45-percent working interest.
Payne was a former employee of petitioner's and at the time of his purchase of the working interest in the Trindle lease he occupied office space in petitioner's offices. He and petitioner had no business association at this time. Payne had been engaged in the oil business for a number of years, as had petitioner. He and petitioner discussed the purchase of the interest in the Trindle lease and consulted with petitioner's tax attorney about it. Petitioner advised Payne to make the purchase, with the understanding that he (petitioner) would purchase the 45-percent working interest from Payne for $ 20,000, with Payne reserving an oil payment of $ 30,600.
OPINION
Petitioner contends that he is entitled to recover his $ 30,600 cost of the oil payments before reporting any income therefrom. Respondent's position is stated in his brief*197 as follows:
It is respondent's position on this issue that petitioners acquired an undivided 45 percent working interest in the Trindle lease for $ 50,600 in a two-step transaction. Respondent's first position is that the purported $ 30,600 production payment purportedly reserved by Payne and then sold to Mr. Christie was guaranteed by Christie's interest in the equipment on the lease and, therefore, does not represent a bona fide oil payment subject to depletion. [This contention is based on
The second position of the respondent, in the alternative, is that substance v. form governs in this case and Mr. Christie did not pay $ 20,000 for a 45 percent working interest in the Trindle lease subject to a reserve oil payment of $ 30,600, but in reality paid $ 50,600 for a 45 percent interest in the Trindle lease.
The parties have stipulated that, for depletion purposes, if this Court determines that petitioner's cost for his interest in the lease was $ 50,600, then $ 28,800.63 should be allocated to the leasehold, $ 17,257.92 to the equipment, and $ 4,758.45 to other acreage and that if a cost of $ 20,000 is determined, *198 $ 11,297.88 is applicable to the leasehold, $ 6,821.31 to the equipment, and $ 1,880.81 to other acreage. They are in dispute however as to the actual value of petitioner's 45-percent interest in the equipment. According to the opinion of respondent's expert witness it had a 1962 value, after the addition of wells No. 2 and 3, of over $ 28,000, while petitioner's witness valued it at $ 8,369.
The Supreme Court held in
In the interests of a workable rule,
The main thrust of the argument of both parties here is directed to the question of whether the reservation to Payne, in the assignment of July 10, 1962, of the right to have applied to the production payment the fair market value of all equipment removed from the leases, gave Payne such additional security for payment*200 of the $ 30,600 production payment as to make the payments received part of the sales price of the 45-percent working interest sold to petitioner under the rationale of the
When petitioner took an assignment of the production payment from Payne he then was the *202 sole owner of the 45-percent working interest in the lease with all the rights and privileges pertaining thereto and was entitled to all the income allocable thereto. He was the sole owner of a depletable interest in all the oil in place and a depreciable interest in all the equipment, attributable to the 45-percent working interest, for which he had paid $ 50,600. We need not determine whether there was a merger of the working interest and the production payment (see
We find no sound reason from the evidence why Payne*204 would have been willing to sell his 45-percent working interest in the lease for $ 20,000 cash and a nonguaranteed $ 30,600 production payment from only 17 percent of the oil produced. He had paid $ 50,000 for the entire 45-percent working interest only 10 days before. Arrangements had been made for him to purchase the working interest after he and petitioner had talked to petitioner's tax counsel. If Payne was interested in making a quick profit of $ 600 we cannot help but believe that this was discussed at that time. On the other hand if Payne was primarily interested in the 5 1/2-percent interest payable on the unrecovered balance of the production payment, he would have held it longer.
Nor can we find from the evidence any but tax-benefit reasons why petitioner would buy the entire 45-percent working interest in two transactions just 30 days apart rather than in one transaction. Petitioner testified that he had not agreed to buy the production payment from Payne in advance but gave as his reason for buying it 20 days later, when Payne offered to sell it to him for $ 30,600, that he had some spare cash that was invested at 4 percent and he wanted to make or save the additional*205 1 1/2-percent interest payable on the production payment. However, the evidence is pretty clear, and we have taken it into consideration in deciding the first issue herein, that petitioner had ample liquid assets to pay for the entire 45-percent working interest both at the time Payne bought it and when he bought the working interest from Payne, ostensibly for $ 20,000. Payne was not called as a witness to give his explanation of why the transactions took this form.
We conclude that the substance of the transactions between petitioner and Payne was that Payne assigned a 45-percent working interest in the Trindle lease to petitioner for $ 50,600 and that the income received by petitioner from the lease must be treated for tax purposes as hereinabove indicated.
1. The full sales price appears to have been $ 95,137.↩
1. Only $ 31.24 payable to CBC Jr.↩
1. These notes of $ 159,322.68 were consolidated into two notes of (11) $ 74,440.26 and (12) $ 84,822.42, each of which was payable on Dec. 31, 1961.↩
2. These notes of $ 274,489.17 were consolidated into a single note due on Dec. 31, 1962, which was reduced by a series of payments totaling $ 74,489.17 from Feb. 2, 1962, to Aug. 31, 1962. Lots, Inc., paid interest to C. B. Christie, Jr., in the amount of $ 14,231 on Jan. 12, 1962, and $ 5,472.76 on Oct. 7, 1963. After the principal payments of $ 74,489.17, there was a balance due on the note of $ 200,000 principal and $ 14,315 interest. There was a further payment Oct. 7, 1963, of $ 2,702.24, leaving a balance due of $ 211,612.76.↩
2. Apparently limited to Lots, Inc.'s accumulated earnings and profits as computed by respondent.↩
3. There is no evidence of the value of the oil payments produced in July 1962 attributable to the 45-percent working interest or to whom any payments therefor were made.↩
4. Petitioner argues that the quoted condition in the agreement gave Payne the right to only 17 percent of the value of any equipment removed from the lease, that the salvage value of such equipment was negligible, and that the equipment necessary to remove the oil was an integral part of the production payment and did not constitute additional security for payment of the purchase price or production payment. Respondent argues that the quoted condition gave Payne the right to have the entire 45 percent of the value of any equipment removed from the lease applied to the production payment, that the value of such equipment was considerable, and that it was security for payment of the deferred purchase price for the 45-percent working interest within the rationale of
It would appear from the language used by the Supreme Court in the
Thus, while we lean toward respondent's theory on this question, we find it unnecessary and we choose not to decide the issue on that ground, because we cannot determine with any certainty from the evidence and the briefs just what the legal and/or customary rights of a holder of a production payment are in the equipment used to produce the oil to make the payment.↩
5. In this case, however, the question was whether taxpayer's fee interest in an undivided one-half interest in a lease merged with taxpayer's oil production payment reserved out of the other undivided one-half interest in the lease, which was owned by someone else. Here, at the critical time, petitioner owned both the production payment and the working interest out of which the production payment was reserved.↩
6. In a letter dated July 6, 1962, from E. M. Schlaikjer, president of Lakota Petroleum Corp., to petitioner, which made reference to an operating agreement dated June 30, 1962, Lakota gave
Anderson v. Helvering , 60 S. Ct. 952 ( 1940 )
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co. , 65 S. Ct. 707 ( 1945 )
emanuel-n-manny-kolkey-and-pauline-kolkey-v-commissioner-of-internal , 254 F.2d 51 ( 1958 )
Bruce v. Knox , 180 F. Supp. 907 ( 1960 )
Sevier Terrace Realty Company v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 327 F.2d 999 ( 1964 )
Thomas v. Perkins , 57 S. Ct. 911 ( 1937 )