DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 16339-82, 20768-82
Citation Numbers: 86 T.C. 340, 1986 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 144, 86 T.C. No. 22, 62 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5927, 88 Oil & Gas Rep. 640
Judges: Goffe,Sterrett,Simpson,Chabot,Whitaker,Hamblen,Cohen,Clapp,Swift,Wright,Wilbur,Korner,Shields,Gerber,Nims,Jacobs,Parr,Williams,Parr,Nims,Williams,Nims,Jacobs,Parr
Filed Date: 3/11/1986
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*144
Petitioners, as owners of fractions of the working interests in an oil and gas lease, were subject to contracts for the sale of natural gas to OG & E for 20 years. The contracts obligated OG & E to take or pay for a minimum of 80 percent of the deliverable gas from the leases. If the amounts paid exceeded the value of the gas actually delivered, OG & E was entitled to gas actually produced in the later years equal to the excess without additional payment. In 1979, the payments by OG & E exceeded the value of gas actually delivered. The projected reserves were adequate to supply OG & E with gas which was paid for but not received in 1979.
*340 OPINION
The Commissioner determined the following *341 deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes for the taxable years 1978 and 1979:
Petitioner | Taxable year | Deficiency |
H. J. and Josephine W. Freede | 1978 | $ 105,758.53 |
1979 | 551,348.33 | |
Roger S. and Mary M. Folsom | 1978 | 8,056.00 |
1979 | 97,444.00 |
The two cases, docket Nos. 16339-82 and 20768-82, were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion. The parties have settled numerous adjustments determined by the Commissioner in the statutory notices of deficiency. The sole issue for decision is whether petitioners are required to include in taxable income for the taxable year 1979 amounts received from Oklahoma Gas & Electric (hereinafter referred to as OG & E) pursuant to a "take or pay" Gas Purchase Contract.
All of the facts have been stipulated and the consolidated case was submitted to this Court without trial pursuant to Rule 122. *148 At the time of filing the petitions in this case, H.J. and Josephine W. Freede, husband and wife, and Roger S. and Mary M. Folsom, husband and wife, resided in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Petitioners H.J. and Josephine W. Freede filed timely joint Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1978 and 1979 with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Austin, Texas. Petitioners Roger S. and Mary M. Folsom filed timely joint Federal tax returns for the taxable years 1978 and 1979 with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Austin, Texas. Josephine W. Freede and Mary M. Folsom are parties in this case solely because they filed joint returns with their husbands. H.J. Freede (Freede) and Roger S. Folsom (Folsom) will be referred to jointly as petitioners.
During the taxable years at issue, petitioners were each, in addition to their other income producing activities, in the business of producing oil and gas. They carried out their *342 business by purchasing fractional working interests in various mineral leases, which were then developed and operated by others. They each had adopted and used the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting.
During the taxable years at*149 issue, Freede and Folsom held working interests in Endicott No. 1 lease in Blaine County, Oklahoma, of .04362 percent and .013672 percent, respectively. The production from the lease consisted principally of natural gas.
On or about October 28, 1975, a gas purchase contract for the production of natural gas from the Endicott No. 1 lease was entered into between OG & E as purchaser and An-Son Corp. as seller. On or about January 14, 1976, a gas purchase contract for the production of natural gas from the Endicott No. 1 lease was entered into between OG & E as purchaser and A. Ben Chadwell and Julie Racz as seller. Although neither Folsom nor Freede appeared on either contract as parties, both petitioners were bound by, performed, and received performance as sellers under the terms of the contracts. The terms of both contracts are virtually identical, with the exception of slight differences such as the local base prices. All references to the contracts, purchaser, or seller for the remainder of this opinion refer to both contracts and the parties to both contracts, collectively.
The primary terms of the contracts were for 20 years. All of the gas produced and saved from the lease, *150 with minor reservations, was sold to the purchaser. *151 of each well covered by the lease available to the purchaser. The contracts also included a "take or pay" provision which required the purchaser to pay for 80 percent of the deliverability of each well covered by the lease, regardless of whether the purchaser took physical *343 delivery of any gas at all. Under the contracts, if the amounts paid in any taxable year exceeded the amounts attributable to the gas actually taken, OG & E was entitled to an offset for the excess payments in subsequent years to the extent that the gas taken in later years exceeded the minimum contract quantity. Thus the purchaser was not obligated to pay for the gas taken in future years until the value of the gas taken exceeded both the minimum contract quantity payments for that year and the excess payments made in earlier years. So long as the purchaser continued to make minimum payments, the contracts did not require that the purchaser take even a minimum of gas in any particular year. If the payments exceeded the value of the gas taken, however, the purchaser's only right of recoupment was from the production of gas in excess of the minimum contract quantities in*152 future years. The purchaser's right of recoupment or recovery was protected, however, by the fact that OG & E could require that the seller produce gas in an amount equal to 100 percent of the deliverability of each well covered by the lease, or 25 percent in excess of the minimum contractual amounts. Pursuant to the contracts, the purchaser made the minimum payments to the seller in the taxable year 1979 calculated with reference to 80 percent of the deliverability of each well covered by the lease, as set forth by the contracts. A portion of the payment was for gas actually taken under the contracts. As the amount of gas taken was not equal to or more than the minimum contract quantity, a portion of the minimum contract amount paid under the terms of the contracts was for the difference between the gas taken and the minimum contract quantity of gas. Under the terms of the contracts, OG & E was, therefore, not obligated to pay for gas taken in subsequent years in excess *344 of the minimum contract rate until the amounts paid in 1979 were offset by the additional gas taken. In 1979, the lease had sufficient projected reserves to repay OG & E in gas, prior to the expiration*153 of the contracts, for the contractual minimum payments paid for gas not taken. As owners of portions of the working interest, Freede and Folsom received payments from OG & E in the taxable year 1979 in the respective amounts of $ 462,881.30 and $ 205,963.44. The amounts received represented both payments for gas actually taken by OG & E and payments for the difference between the amount OG & E was contractually obligated to pay for and the volume of gas actually taken. The respective amounts are as follows:Type of payment Freede Folsom Payments for gas taken $ 119,626.14 $ 64,802.26 Payment for the difference 343,255.16 141,161.18 between minimum contractual payment and payment made for gas taken Total payments to petitioners 462,881.30 205,963.44
The amounts representing payments for gas actually taken by OG & E were included as income by petitioners on their respective Federal income tax returns for the taxable year 1979. The payments made pursuant to the contractual minimum that represented advance payments for gas not taken were not included by either petitioner as income for the taxable year 1979. Both petitioners decided to include in income for later*154 taxable years payments for gas taken by OG & E during those years in excess of the minimum contract quantity.
Petitioners contend that the advance payments received under the "take or pay" contracts with OG & E create an economic interest entitling OG & E to production payments under
*155 A production payment, in general terms, is a right to minerals in place that entitles its owner to a specified share of production for a limited time from a specified mineral property when production occurs.
It is important to the discussion which follows to point out that
(a)
(2) A right which is in substance economically equivalent to a production payment shall be treated as a production payment for purposes of
The production payment, is then, under the terms of
The payer of a production payment treated as a loan pursuant to this section shall include the proceeds from (or, if paid in kind, *158 the value of) the mineral produced and applied to the satisfaction of the production payment in his gross income and "gross income from the property" (see section 613(a)) for the taxable year so applied. The payee shall include in his gross income (but not "gross income from property") amounts received with respect to such production payment to the extent that such amounts would be includible in gross income if such production payment were a loan. The payer and payee shall determine their allowable deduction as if such production payment were a loan. * * *
The treatment of the advance payments and the resultant tax consequences depend upon whether or not such payments are an investment in future production that create a production payment constituting an economic interest under sections 631 and 636. Applying the Code and regulations to this case, the question is whether the advance payments from OG & E to petitioners which create a right in OG & E to share in the future production of gas are, under
*347 The criteria that must be satisfied under the terms of the statutes and regulations set forth above are: (1) the purchaser must have a right to a specified share of production or the proceeds from such production; (2) the interest must have an expected economic life (at the time of its creation) of shorter duration than the economic life of the mineral property upon which it is a burden; (3) the right must be an economic interest in the mineral in place; (4) the interest must not be able to be satisfied by other than the production of mineral from the burdened mineral property; and (5) the production payment must be limited by either a dollar amount, a quantum of mineral, or a period of time. In this case, each of the criteria has been met.
The contracts provide that the purchaser is entitled to the entire production of the lease, and is required to take or pay for 80 percent of the deliverability of each well covered by the lease. The sellers agreed to maintain deliverability and production of each well at 100 percent, which is 125 percent of the minimum contract quantity. OG & E clearly has the right *160 to a specified share of the production from the lease, thus satisfying the first criterion.
The second criterion has also been met in that OG & E can recoup the amounts paid for gas not received from the projected reserves prior to the termination of the contracts. The economic life of the interest created by the advance payments is thus limited to the terms of the contracts, which are shorter than the economic life of the property.
The third criterion, however, is the principal point upon which the parties disagree. In order for the advance payments to be treated as an investment in future production by OG & E rather than as income to petitioners, payments made pursuant to the contracts must create a depletable economic interest as defined in
An economic interest is possessed in every case in which the taxpayer has acquired by investment any interest in mineral in place or standing timber and secures, by any form of legal relationship, income derived from the extraction of the mineral or severance of the timber, to which he must look for the return of his capital. For an exception in the case of certain mineral production payments, see*161
Petitioners contend that OG & E acquired an economic interest in the gas in place by virtue of the rights and obligations under the "take or pay" contracts. Respondent argues the converse, proposing that OG & E had merely a contractual right to receive the gas, not a property interest in the gas itself; OG & E had at best an "economic advantage," not an "economic interest."
Although
The purchaser need not have legal title to the property to have an economic interest:
It is enough if, by virtue of the leasing transaction, he has retained a right to share in the oil produced. If so he has an economic interest in the oil, in place, which is depleted by production. * * * [
A taxpayer has an "economic interest" in minerals regardless of the legal form of the interest if he has acquired the interest by investment in the minerals in place, and looks to the extraction of the minerals for the return of his investment.
For an interest to be an economic interest within the terms of
Although the cases cited above repeatedly conclude that title is not required as a prerequisite to an economic interest, no taxpayer was found to possess an "economic interest" who did not also hold either a fee interest or a leasehold interest in the mineral property until
It is true that the exclusive right to drill was granted to Southwest, and it is also true that the agreements expressly create no interest in the oil in the upland owners. But the tax law deals in economic realities, not legal abstractions, and upon closer*165 analysis it becomes clear that these factors do not preclude an economic interest in the upland owners. [
Respondent contends that the facts of this case are indistinguishable from
Petitioners argue that OG & E's interest in the production of gas from the lease rises to the level of an economic interest, due to the contractual rights and obligations *166 of OG & E. We agree with petitioners.
Under the contracts, OG & E has the obligation to take or pay for 80 percent of the deliverability of each well covered by the lease. OG & E, however, also has the right to require the producers to maintain production equal to 100 percent of the deliverability of each well, or an amount equal to 125 percent of the minimum contract quantity. If OG & E pays an amount in excess of the value of gas actually taken, it has the right to offset the payments against any amounts produced in subsequent years in excess of the applicable minimum contract quantity. OG & E, in essence, has both rights to the minerals in place and a means of controlling production. Although OG & E did not have legal title to the minerals, title is not the controlling factor.
The fourth factor that must be satisfied under
The final criterion is that the production payment must be a specified share of production limited by either a dollar amount, a quantum of mineral, or a period of time. In this case, the contracts provide that the advance payments are the equivalent of advance payment for gas to be received later. In each year, OG & E must take or pay for 80 percent of the deliverability of the wells. In years when OG & E takes gas that it has previously*168 paid for, that deliverability must come from the remaining 20 percent of production. Only the excess production above that amount can be used for recoupment of the advance payments. OG & E can, however, compel production of that final 20 percent of production, otherwise defined as 125 percent of the minimum contract quantity. The amount of gas delivered is limited by the maximum amount of deliverability that can be imposed by OG & E, and is further limited by the fact that the contracts have a 20-year term within which OG & E must, if at all, recoup the advance payments from production. The fifth criterion is also satisfied under the facts of this case, and the requirements for a production payment as set forth in the statute and regulations thereunder have been met.
Respondent's final argument, however, is that
An agreement between the owner of an economic interest and another entitling the latter to purchase the product upon production does not convey a depletable economic interest in mineral in place.
*352 The taxpayer, in this case, entered into an agreement with Y under the terms of which Y must purchase each month, for the life of the contract, a specified amount of gas. However, Y need not take the gas. Under the provisions of
[
A revenue ruling is no more than a statement of the Commissioner's position, and is "not entitled to any particular weight."
A ruling is merely the opinion of a lawyer in the agency and must be accepted as such. It may be helpful in interpreting a statute, but it is not binding on the Secretary or the courts. It does not have the effect of a regulation or a Treasury Decision. [
The support offered for the conclusion drawn in the revenue ruling is
*353 We hold*172 that a production payment as defined by
Nims,
A paradigm form of production payment is illustrated by the facts in
Lake is a corporation engaged in the business of producing oil and gas. It has a seven-eighths working interest in two commercial oil and gas leases. In 1950 it was indebted to its president in the sum of $ 600,000 and in consideration of his cancellation of the debt assigned him an oil payment right in the amount of $ 600,000, plus an amount equal to interest at 3 percent a year on the*173 unpaid balance remaining from month to month, payable out of 25 percent of the oil attributable to the taxpayer's working interest in the two leases. At the time of the assignment it could have been estimated with reasonable accuracy that the assigned oil payment right would pay out in three or more years. It did in fact pay out in a little over three years. [
The legislative history of
The congressional response, *174 as reflected in
The Supreme Court pointed out in
The Court went on to say that "The controlling fact is that [purchaser] had no interest in the gas in place. [Purchaser] had no capital investment in the mineral deposit which suffered depletion and is not entitled to the statutory allowance."
I believe that OG & E is in exactly the same posture here as was the purchaser-taxpayer in
Section 61(a) provides that "gross income means all income from whatever source derived." Section 451 provides that "The amount of any item of gross income shall be included in the gross income for the taxable year in which received by the taxpayer, unless, under the method of accounting used in computing taxable income, such amount is to be properly accounted for as of a different period." Under the facts of this case, the $ 484,416.34 received by petitioners in the years before the Court, and which the majority permits petitioners to defer for up to 20 years, should be included in petitioners' gross income in the years received, and I would so hold.
Parr,
The majority's opinion has the result of elevating a prepaid contractual right to a supply of a mineral to the level of an investment in the mineral in place, an economic interest. In this case, the majority's finding of an economic interest leads to the finding that a production payment exists, which is treated not as a depletable economic interest but as a loan, pursuant to
Williams,
In
The language of the statute is broad enough to provide, at least, for every case in which the taxpayer has acquired,
This language means that (a) the taxpayer must have a legal right to the mineral in the ground, (b) that right must be acquired by investment, and (c) a return of the taxpayer's *358 investment must be realized out of income to be derived from*182 extracting the mineral. See also
In this case, OG & E has no legal right to the mineral in the ground; the contract provides that OG & E's legal ownership commences at the point of delivery (i.e., "the wellhead or the outlet of the well separator, if any"). OG & E has prepaid for a quantity of extracted gas that must be delivered to it in accordance with certain quality specifications and at a given pressure. Under the contract if the gas fails to meet quality specifications (e.g., maximum sulfur content), the parties will adjust the price or, failing adequate adjustment, OG & E can exclude such gas from the contract. If the gas fails to meet the pressure specification, section 5.4 of the contract provides that unless either OG & E or the petitioners elect to install the equipment necessary to compress the gas to the acceptable pressure, "the Buyer [OG & E] shall, on request of Seller [petitioners] release the production from any such well, together with the acreage attributable thereto, from the provisions of this agreement." It seems to me that in either circumstance (failure of quality or pressure), OG & E has no interest in the gas in place*183 and no right to any income from the sale of such gas. Further, if production from the well is released, it is unclear whether OG & E can recover any prepayment for the gas or whether the sellers must make up deficient deliveries from other wells. *184 Furthermore, the price that OG & E pays for the gas is itself a strong indicator that OG & E has not invested in the gas well and does not look to its extraction to recover any *359 "investment." The contract price for the gas is determined by reference to the market price paid by OG & E to other contract suppliers of gas of similar quality and pressure from similar formations and locations in identified counties. In general terms, this formula price can be said to reflect the local market price at the wellhead of a particular quality of gas at a given pressure. If the formula works as contemplated it should produce a price that is, within tolerable limits of deviation, the fair market value of such gas after extraction. OG & E is not, therefore, in a position to profit from any resale of this gas at the wellhead. Consequently, OG & E is not seeking a return from extracting the gas; rather, it is a consumer buying a supply of the commodity it consumes.
Finally, section 3.1 of the contract provides that the quantity of the gas to be delivered under the contract is the
In summary, this agreement is nothing more than a long-term supply contract that gives OG & E some assurance that a relatively stable source of natural gas can be delivered to its pipeline according to its specifications when its needs dictate.
*. By order of the Chief Judge, this case was reassigned from Judge Charles E. Clapp II, to Judge William A. Goffe.↩
1. All Rule references are to this Court's Rules of Practice and Procedure. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the taxable years in issue.↩
2. The price paid was set with reference to a local base price, escalating 1 cent per thousand cubic feet each year thereafter, subject to adjustments upwards or cancellation of the contract under certain circumstances.↩
3. "Deliverability" is defined in the contracts as the volume of gas attributable to Seller's gas reserves actually delivered to Buyer at the point of delivery against the required delivery pressure during the 24-hour period following delivery of gas at the maximum rate of flow from Seller's wells against the required delivery pressure for a period of 3 days. For convenience, that term will be used in this opinion although, in general terms, it could describe "production" from the wells.↩
4. The "take or pay" obligation was reduced in the event that the seller was unable to maintain normal deliverability. In that case, the purchaser was required only to take or pay for 80 percent of the production actually made available to the purchaser.↩
5. Sec. 61(a) provides that gross income includes all income from whatever source derived. Sec. 451(a) provides that:
The amount of gross income shall be included in the gross income for the taxable year in which received by the taxpayer, unless under the method of accounting used in computing taxable income, such amount is to be properly accounted for as of a different period.↩
6. This revenue ruling has been discussed and in some cases criticized in oil and gas taxation texts and periodicals. See 2 L. Fiske, Federal Taxation of Oil & Gas Transactions, sec. 8.12 (1983); 1 Energy Resources Tax Reports (CCH) pars. 651-653 (1983); C. Russell & R. Bowhay, Income Taxation of Natural Resources (P-H), par. 15.15, at 1519-1520 (1986); A. Bruen & W. Taylor, Federal Income Taxation of Oil & Gas Investments, par. 8.07[6][a] (1983 & Supp. 1985); Emery, "Current Developments in Oil and Gas Taxation," 32d Ann. Inst. on Oil & Gas L. & Taxation 335, 352-353 (1981); Hasche, Crump & Huggins, "Mineral Production Payments; Gas 'Take or Pay' Purchase Contract," 28 Oil & Gas Tax Quarterly 564 (1981); Burke & Karpen, "New
1.
2.
1. The record is silent with regard to OG & E's actual treatment of the payments. However, the majority opinion would preclude OG & E from deducting the payments to petitioners, and would require OG & E to report imputed interest on the amount treated as a loan. See
1. The contract is silent. Bearing the risk of such loss (assuming that deficient deliveries are not made up as a business practice), however, can make economic sense. The economic advantage of a stable long-term supply may be worth losing the prepayment, e.g., where the cost of securing the supply on the spot market is higher than the price of long-term supply under the contract (including any forfeited prepayments). The record is apparently barren on this point, and I offer the observation only to counter any speculation that the prepayment must necessarily be an "investment" simply because OG & E in fact paid for gas in 1979 that was not delivered to it.↩
Commissioner v. P. G. Lake, Inc. , 78 S. Ct. 691 ( 1958 )
Commissioner v. Southwest Exploration Co. , 76 S. Ct. 395 ( 1956 )
Kirby Petroleum Co. v. Commissioner , 66 S. Ct. 409 ( 1946 )
Gibson Products Co. Kell Blvd. v. United States , 637 F.2d 1041 ( 1981 )
Thomas v. Perkins , 57 S. Ct. 911 ( 1937 )
Helvering v. Bankline Oil Co. , 58 S. Ct. 616 ( 1938 )
Ronald P. Anselmo and Kay W. Anselmo v. Commissioner, ... , 757 F.2d 1208 ( 1985 )
Stubbs, Overbeck & Associates, Inc. v. United States , 445 F.2d 1142 ( 1971 )