DocketNumber: Docket No. 5169-79
Judges: Featherston,Nims,Goffe,Fay
Filed Date: 6/8/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*117
In 1975, petitioners received bonuses in the total amount of $ 139,940 upon the execution of several oil and gas leases. Producing oil or gas wells were completed during 1975 on all except one of the properties covered by the leases. The bonus received with respect to the lease on which no well was completed was $ 19,200. In addition to the bonuses, petitioners received royalties of $ 24,811 from the producing leases.
*949 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in the amount of $ 15,472.20 in petitioners' Federal income tax for 1975. The only issue for decision is whether petitioners are entitled to deduct percentage depletion under
All of the facts have been stipulated.
Petitioners, who are husband and wife, filed a joint Federal income tax return for 1975 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, Tex. At the time the petition herein was filed, they were legal residents of Sterling City, Tex.
During 1975, petitioners executed certain oil and gas leases covering mineral interests in properties owned by one or both of them in fee simple. Upon the execution of each lease, petitioners received a bonus as consideration primarily for the right to explore for oil and gas on the leased properties and the right to produce, market, and retain the profits from such oil and gas, subject to the payment of a royalty to petitioners. The bonuses were received without reference to the actual production of oil or gas, and any royalties that might later accrue*124 to petitioners could not be reduced because the bonuses had been received.
There was no production of oil or gas during 1975 from one of *950 the properties covered by a lease executed in consideration of a bonus of $ 19,200. On the other properties covered by the leases, one or more wells were drilled and completed as producing oil or gas wells during 1975. With respect to these properties, petitioners received bonuses in the total amount of $ 120,740. They also received $ 24,811 in royalties on the production from these properties in 1975.
On their 1975 Federal income tax return, petitioners claimed deductions for percentage depletion with respect to the royalties they received on the production of oil and gas during that year and with respect to the bonuses they received upon the execution of the leases from which production was obtained. No deduction for depletion was claimed with respect to the bonus they received for the lease from which there was no production of oil or gas during 1975. In their petition, however, petitioners claimed an overpayment of taxes in the amount of $ 2,407 on the ground that they are entitled to a percentage depletion deduction in connection*125 with the bonus received for the nonproducing lease.
Prior to 1975, it was well-established law that the recipient of a lease bonus under an oil and gas lease could compute depletion on the basis of either the cost or the percentage method. See, e.g.,
(a) General Rule. -- Except as otherwise provided in this section, the allowance for depletion under
In contending that all of the oil and gas lease bonuses they received in 1975 are eligible for percentage depletion, petitioners appear to rely primarily upon
*952 Consistent with our conclusion in
We are thus left only with the language employed by Congress in the Tax Reduction Act of 1975 as a guide to the congressional*133 purpose in enacting the provisions concerning percentage depletion for oil and gas. The words by which "the legislature undertook to give expression to its wishes" are, however, usually the most "persuasive evidence" of the purpose and meaning of a statute.
As we read
Lease bonuses, such as those received by petitioners, are not paid "with respect to" the production of oil or gas as that term *135 is used in
In
[Bonus] payments made by the lessee are consideration for the right which he *956 acquires to enter upon and use the land for the purpose of exploiting it, as well as for the ownership of the oil and gas; * * * the bonus payments are paid and retained, regardless of whether oil or gas is found and despite the fact that all which is not abstracted will remain the property of the lessor upon termination of the lease.
*136 Here, petitioners received royalties on production in 1975 from all except one of their leases,
*137 It is true, as previously noted, that prior law permitted percentage depletion deductions with respect to oil and gas lease bonuses. But the statute as it then stood (
Although this same rationale continues to support the deduction of cost depletion with respect to lease bonuses,
Petitioners contend, in the alternative, that the
*959 We conclude that none of petitioners' lease bonuses qualify for the percentage depletion deduction. We understand
To reflect the foregoing,
Goffe,
The dissent perceives in the majority opinion an implication that percentage depletion would not be allowed with respect to both past and future production. I, of course, agree that future possible production cannot support a present percentage depletion deduction. Because there was no actual past production in the case before us, the majority was not compelled to, and did not, make a holding concerning the legal effect of such a situation. The majority opinion, read as a whole, certainly supports the conclusion I have*144 reached that both past and present actual production will support a present-year percentage depletion deduction. I have elaborated this theory at length elsewhere, *960 majority opinion that lease bonuses are not payments for oil or gas, and that such an implication is contrary to established case law. The majority implies no such thing. No one denies that lease bonuses are payments for oil or gas. However, it is equally undeniable that, as the majority states at page 955 of its opinion, lease bonuses are not paid with respect to production. In fact, bonus payments are paid and retained regardless of whether oil or gas is found or produced. Finally, I would reemphasize one of the major practical problems with the dissent's proposed interpretation, i.e., how to convert bonuses into units of production for purposes of determining a taxpayer's average daily production under
Fay,
*961 It seems that the majority opinion denies percentage depletion deductions based on the lease bonuses in this case because those lease bonuses were not income directly traceable to extraction occurring in the same taxable year as the lease bonuses were received. In other words, the majority opinion seems to require both extraction*147 and
The majority opinion discounts the above line of authority as, in effect, having been overruled by
I emphasize that I am not maintaining that "production" does not mean extraction. Upon that point, the majority and I agree. *150 I do maintain that "production" is not limited to current extraction but includes past or future extraction as well. In my view, "production during the taxable year" means the extraction (past, current, or future) properly attributable to that year. The number of barrels of extraction properly attributable to a year is easily measured by income. Indeed, such always has been the case under
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as in effect during the tax year in issue, unless otherwise noted.↩
2. This Court has jurisdiction under sec. 6512(b) to determine any overpayment that might have resulted from petitioners' failure to claim a depletion deduction on their 1975 income tax return with respect to the bonus received for the nonproducing lease. The same taxable year as the one covered by the notice of deficiency is involved (sec. 6512(b)(1)), and a timely refund claim could have been filed at the time the notice of deficiency was mailed. See sec. 6512(b)(2)(B).↩
3. See sec. 612;
4. See
5.
(d) Denial of Percentage Depletion in Case of Oil and Gas Wells. -- Except as provided in
6. See
7. The class of persons eligible for the exemption for "independent producers and royalty owners" generally includes taxpayers who are neither "retailers" nor "refiners" within the meaning of
8. This conclusion is consistent with the views of text writers. See F. Burke & R. Bowhay, Income Taxation of Natural Resources, sec. 8.32 (1980), which states: "since the percentage depletion allowed by the independent producer and royalty owner exemption requires actual production during the taxable year, * * * lease bonuses no longer qualify for percentage depletion in the year of receipt. [Fn. ref. omitted.]"
Miller's Oil & Gas Federal Income Taxation, sec. 31-3, p. 580 (J. Houghton ed. 1980), states: "Since percentage depletion is allowed only with respect to production [under
9.
(c) Exemption for Independent Producers and Royalty Owners. -- (1) In General. -- Except as provided in subsection (d), the allowance for depletion under (A) so much of the taxpayer's average daily production of domestic crude oil as does not exceed the taxpayer's depletable oil quantity; and (B) so much of the taxpayer's average daily production of domestic natural gas as does not exceed the taxpayer's depletable natural gas quantity; and the applicable percentage (determined in accordance with the table contained in paragraph (5)) shall be deemed to be specified in subsection (b) of (2) Average daily production. -- For purposes of paragraph (1) -- (A) the taxpayer's average daily production of domestic crude oil or natural gas for any taxable year, shall be determined by dividing his aggregate production of domestic crude oil or natural gas, as the case may be, during the taxable year by the number of days in such taxable year, and (B) in the case of a taxpayer holding a partial interest in the production from any property (including an interest held in a partnership) such taxpayer's production shall be considered to be that amount of such production determined by multiplying the total production of such property by the taxpayer's percentage participation in the revenues from such property. In applying this paragraph, there shall not be taken into account any production of crude oil or natural gas resulting from secondary or tertiary processes (as defined in regulations prescribed by the Secretary or his delegate). (3) Depletable oil quantity. -- (A) In general. -- For purposes of paragraph (1), the taxpayer's depletable oil quantity shall be equal to -- (i) the tentative quantity determined under the table contained in subparagraph (B), reduced (but not below zero) by (ii) the taxpayer's average daily secondary or tertiary production for the taxable year. (B) Phase-out table. -- For purposes of subparagraph (A) --
In the case of production | The tentative quantity |
during the calendar year: | in barrels is: |
1975 | 2,000 |
1976 | 1,800 |
1977 | 1,600 |
1978 | 1,400 |
1979 | 1,200 |
1980 and thereafter | 1,000 |
(4) Daily depletable natural gas quantity. -- For purposes of paragraph (1), the depletable natural gas quantity of any taxpayer for any taxable year shall be equal to 6,000 cubic feet multiplied by the number of barrels of the taxpayer's depletable oil quantity to which the taxpayer elects to have this paragraph apply. The taxpayer's depletable oil quantity for any calendar year shall be reduced by the number of barrels with respect to which an election under this paragraph applies. Such election shall be made at such time and in such manner as the Secretary or his delegate shall by regulations prescribe.
(5) Applicable percentage. -- For purposes of paragraph (1) --
In the case of production | The applicable |
during the calendar year: | percentage is: |
1975 | 22 |
1976 | 22 |
1977 | 22 |
1978 | 22 |
1979 | 22 |
1980 | 22 |
1981 | 20 |
1982 | 18 |
1983 | 16 |
1984 and thereafter | 15 |
10. Under
Separate provisions are made for the allowance of percentage depletion on secondary or tertiary production of domestic crude oil and natural gas. See
11. In H. Williams & C. Meyers, Manual of Oil and Gas Terms 565 (1976), the term "cubic feet" is defined as follows:
"The volume of gas contained in one cubic foot of space at a standard pressure base of 14.65 pounds per square inch absolute and at a standard temperature base of 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Whenever the conditions of pressure and temperature differ from the above standard, conversion of the volume from these conditions to the standard conditions is made in accordance with the Ideal Gas Laws, corrected for deviation."↩
12. In fact, the parties have stipulated that the "bonuses were paid without respect to production."↩
13. Although
14. Petitioners do not claim cost depletion with respect to the bonuses received on the execution of any of the leases here in issue.↩
15.
(e) Definitions. -- For purposes of this section -- (1) Crude oil. -- The term "crude oil" includes a natural gas liquid recovered from a gas well in lease separators or field facilities. (2) Natural gas. -- The term "natural gas" means any product (other than crude oil) of an oil or gas well if a deduction for depletion is allowable under (3) Domestic. -- The term "domestic" refers to production from an oil or gas well located in the United States or in a possession of the United States. (4) Barrel. -- The term "barrel" means 42 United States gallons.↩
16. It may be argued that, if the bonuses were theoretically payments in advance for oil or gas to be produced, a proportionate part thereof may be treated as payment for the production received in 1975 and, thus, subject to percentage depletion. However, petitioners have not shown what part (if any) of the bonuses would be allocable to the production in 1975. In any event, for the reasons stated in the text, we think the language of
1.
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended.↩
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the year in issue.↩
2. However, the majority,
3. The majority opinion states that its conclusion "is consistent with the views of text writers" (majority,
The majority opinion completely omits any mention of those writers reaching a result opposite its own. See Linden, "Oil and Gas Depletion Regulations: Complexity Compounded," 24 Oil & Gas Tax Q. 351, 380 (1976) (excluding future extraction from "production" for purposes of
4. I note that in defining "production" to mean extraction, the majority cites Texas cases in which "production" was held to mean current extraction. However, none of those cases dealt with either depletion or Federal taxation. Rather, they were contract cases involving construction of oil and gas leases with the courts' inquiry being what the parties to the various contracts meant by "production." Accordingly, those cases should have no bearing on the interpretation of "production" as that term is used in
5. Additionally, a number of the points made by the majority opinion in this case have been fully addressed in my dissenting opinion in
Anderson v. Helvering ( 1940 )
United States v. American Trucking Associations ( 1940 )
Murphy Oil Co. v. Burnet ( 1932 )
Herring v. Commissioner ( 1934 )
Curtis T. Busse and Myrtle Busse v. Commissioner of ... ( 1973 )
Monsanto Co. v. Tyrrell ( 1976 )