DocketNumber: V-555
Judges: Price Daniel
Filed Date: 7/2/1948
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/18/2017
PRICE DASIEL AmORNEY GE)IERAL Hon. George H. Sheppard Comptroller of Public Account6 ..,” Austin, Texas Opinion No, V-555 Re: Gas production tax liabilv ity on royalty interest owned by Dunn Estate under submitted facts. Dear Mr. 6heppard: It appears from your letter request that you have made a gas productien tax audit on the royalty interest of the Dunn Es- tate, covering the period from July, 1935, to January 1. 1948. The copy of your audit discloses that you have found additional taxes due from the Dunn Estate as follows: (1) For the period through the month of October 1936, the sum of $704.19, accruing under the 1931 gas production tax act. (2) For the period through the month of April, 1941, the sum of $2.395.52 accruing under the 1936 amendment of said act. (3) For the period through the month of May, 1945, the sum of $3,044.79 accruing under the 1941 amendment of said act. (4) For the period through the month of Decem- ber, 1947, the sum of $1,275.73 accruing under the 1945 amendment of said act. It further appears that during all the time covered by the audit, the Dunn Estate paid production taxes based on one-eighth of the gross receipts of the lessee who sold the full production from the Dunn lease. The gas in question was produced under an oil and gas lease wherein the lessee agreed to purchase from the lessor all its Wpply of natural gas used in Nueces Ceunty and to pay lessor for Ohe gas produced under the lease, one-eighth of the amounts received by lesree from the sale of gas to parties using the same in Nueces County whether produced from lands covered by the . .~:’ : ; f.‘,l,,~,I Hon. George H. Sheppard, Page 2 (V-555) lease or from wells situated on lands not included in the lease. In 1930, this lease was by written contract amended, and, as amended, provided that, in lieu of the above-stated method of payment for the one-eighth royalty, the lessor was to pay les- see for one year on the basis of a minimum of 4,000,OOO cubic feet of gas per day and for the next twenty-one year6 on the basis of a minimum of 5,000,OOO cubic feet of gas per day. Such contract provided that the lessee would pay to lessor on the basis of the minimum stated whether that amount was pro- duced from the leased premises or not. The only condition was that the total production from all leases held by lessee be sufficient to supply the minimum. There was a further proviso to the effect that if more than the minimum was pro- duced from the leased premises, the lessee would pay lessor one-eighth of the additional proceeds received for such addi- tional production. This contract aleo provided that lessor would be paid on the basis of the sale price per thousand cu- bic feet as set forth in a contract between lessee and the City of Corpus Christi, and that if such city contract terminated, then on the basis of the highest price received by lessee, but in PO event less than 5 cents per thousand cubic feet. Your summary of the gas audit discloses that the minimum amount of gas was never produced from the leased premises, and that during the months of May, June, and August through December, 1939, and January through April, 1940, and May 1941 through December 1941, no gas was produced from the Dunn lease. The Dunn Estate contends that it does not owe the ad- ditional tax which is set up in the audit on the basis of the a- mount actually received for its one-eighth royalty for the fol- lowing reasons: (1) That the 1931 act does not make a royalty owner a producer. (2) That the term “market value” a6 used in the 1931 act is to be given its ordinary meaning. (3) That the term “market value” as used in the 1936 amendment is to be given its ordinary meaning. (4) That under the 1945 amendment the defi- nition given the term “market value” does not warrant basing the production tax on the actual amount received by a royalty owner producer. (5) That the amount received by the Dunns, under the amended contract, in addition to the .. Hon. George H. Sheppard, Page 3 (V-559) amount actually received by the lessee for the one- eighth royalty, was in consideration of the cancella- tlon of a previous contract, and was not received by the Dunn6 for the sale to lessee of its one-eighth royalty. This last contention covers ~11 four taxing periods as set out in your audit. The rpplicablo provisions of.the 1931 Act, H. B. No, 547, Ch. 73, p. 111. Acts 42nd Leg., read, in part, as follows: Y . . . every person engaging or continuing with- in this State, in the business of producing and saving in paying quantities. for sale or for profit, any natural gas, including caoinghead gas, frem the .soil or waters of this State l . . . ‘Are hereby declared to be ‘producers’ and engag- ed in the business of producing natural gas within this state. . . . “A tax shall be paid quarterly by each such produc- er on the amount of gas produced and saved within this State. . . upon the fiist sale thereof in intrastate com- merce upon the following basis: A tax equivalent’to two (,2%) per cent of the market value of the total amount of gas produced and saved within this State. , .* The applicable provisions of the 1936 amendment, H. B. No. 8, Ch. 495, Acts 44th Leg., 3rd Called Session, read, in part, as follows: ‘A tax shall be paid by each such producer on the amount of gas produced and saved within this State, s . . upon the following basis: A tax equivalent to three per cent (3%) of the market value of the total amount of gas produced and saved within this State, , I . at the actual market value thereof, as and when produced. . . “The purchaser of gas shall pay the tax on all gas purchased and deduct tax so paid from payment due producer or other interest holder. o . making such pay- ments so deducted to the Comptroller of Public Accounts by legal tender or cashier ‘a check payable to the State Treasury. (Emphasis added). This 1936 amendment doer not define the term *market value.* The 1941 amendment, H. B. No. 8, ch. 184, p; 269, Acts 47th Leg., reads, in part, as fellows: I . .’ . Hon. George H. Sheppard, Page 4 (V-555) ‘A tax shall be paid by each producer en the amount of gas produced within this State. . , eguiva- lent te five and @vo tenUta~5.2) per cent of the market value of all gas including casinghead gas produced and saved within this State. , . “The market value of gas produced in this State shall be the value thereof plus any bonus, or premium, or anything of value paid therefor, or any sum of meney that such gas will reasonably bring if produced and sold in accordance with the laws, rules and regulations of this state. . . ‘In case gas is sold for cash the tax shall be cem- puted on the producers’ gross receipts of such sale; . . . “For the purpose of this Act ‘producer’ shall mean any person ownin controlling, managing, or leasing any gas well and P’or any person who produces in any manner any gas by taking it from the earth or waters in this State, and shall include any person owning any royalty l r other interest in any g a s l r its value wheth- er produced by him, or by some other person or. his behalf, either by lease, contract, or otherwise, , . ‘Royalty owners shall mean and include all per EONS owning any mineral rights under any producing leasehold within this State, ether than the working interest, which working interest is that of the person having the manrge- ment and operation of the well.” The 1945 Amendment, H. B. No. 62g, Ch. 269, p. 423, Acts 49th Leg., reads, in part, as follows: “There is hereby levied an occupation tax on the business l r occupation of producing gas within this State, computed as fallows: “‘A tax shall be paid by each producer on the ameunt of pas produced and saved within this Stare equivalent to five and two-tenths (5.2) per cent of the market value thereof .as and when produced. . . .’ “The market value of gas produced in this State shall be the value thereof at the mouth of the well; however, in case gas is sold for cash only, the tax shall be computed on the producer’s grass cash re- . ceipts. ~ . .” Hrr. George H. Sheppard, Page 5 (V-555) The definition of ‘producer* as contained in the 1941 un&ndment was not changed by the 1945 amendment. This gas production tax act, with amendments is codified aa Article 7047b, V.C.S. Your audit also discloses that you found additional tare8 due by virtue of the amourtr paid lessor under the amended con- tract during those months in which there was no production, A determination of brrror% Bve ColltenMowa aa above aamrrmrimed will determine %c bu liabfllty of lossn fou tie ad- ditlonal tax as showm in your audit. We will discuss them ip the order stated. FIRST CONTENTION W.e have carefully read the 1931 act in its entirety and do not find any language therein which in our opinion makes a royalty ow8er a “producer.’ The Supreme Court of Texas in Canadfan River Gas Co. v. Bivirs. 153 S.W. (Zd) 432, in answering a certi- fied question aa to the status of gas royalty holder under the act as amended in 1936, stated that *the gas royalty holder is an ‘in- terest holder’ within the meaning of this statute.” The 1931 Act did not contain the words “or other interest holder,” It is. there- fore, our opinion that the Dunn Estate is not liable for the addi- tional gas production tax in the amount of $704.19 for the period from July, 1935. through October, 1936. SECOND CONTENTION Our holding on the proposition prosentad by your first contention makes it unnecessary to diecuss this contention. THIRD CONTENTION We have read the 1936 Amendment in conjunction with the 1931 Act; and, in light of the opinion of the Supreme Court in W. R. Davis, Inc. v. State, 180 S.W. (td) 429 (which construed the term -market value” as defined in the 1941 amendment), have ar- rived at the conclusion that the term “market value” as used in the 1936 Amendment should be given its ordinary meaning. It is, therefore, our opinion that the Dunn Estate is not liable for the additional gas production tax in the amount of $2.395.52 for the period from November, 1936. through April, 1941. FOURTH CONTENTION The following excerpts from the 1945 Amendment, pre- viously quoted in part, are relevant portions of the statutory def- inition of “market value “: . ., . Hon. George H. Sheppard, Page 6 (V-555) “The market value of gas produced in this State shall be the value thereof at the mouth of the well; however, in case gas is sold for cash only, the tax shall be computed on the producer’s gross cash receipts. . . ,” The 1941 amendment, which was construed in the Davis case (supra), among others, gave the following definition: “In case pas is sold for cash the tax shall be computed on ahe producer’s gross receipts of such sale: . . .” Although the Supreme Court in the Davis case was primar- ily concerned with that part of the definition of “market value.~ which relates to cases in which the gas was processed for its liquid hydror carbon content, the following significant language appears: “When we view this Act as a whole, and especially when we consider the defi- nition of ‘market value’ therein contained, we are convinced that it demonstrates a clear legislative intent to make the pood faith sale rice by the producer to the initial purchaser the standard of value on w ich the purchaser’s liability to the State for taxes must be com- 5-c puted.” (Underscoring ours) The one-eighth royalty gas was sold to the lessee under the amended contract for cash only. It is, therefore, our opir:ion that the additional taxes demanded of the Dunn Estate covering *be pe- riods after the 1941 and 1945 amendments, as set up in your audit are due and owing, unless the amount paid in cash, or a: least a part thereof, was not paid for the gas but for the coosidera:ior of the cancellation of a prior contract. This brings us to a cor.;idera- tiqn of the fifth contention. FIFTH CONTENTION We do not agree with this contention. Lessor did not at any time sell or agree to sell anything to the lessee except its one- eighth of the gas produced, either under the first contract or the amended contract. Although the first agreement turned out to be “onerous” to the lessee, it was an agreement providing for a “good faith sale price” for the one-eighth royalty. When lessor azd lessee in their contract, provided that lessee was to pay to lessor fer his one-eighth royalty, in addition to the amount received therefer by lessee, one-eighth of the amount received by lessee from the sale of gas to parties using same in Nueces County from wells situated on lands not covered by the lease, they were contracting for the “sale price” of the Dunn’s one-eighth royalty. Likewise they con- tract for a “sale price” in the amended contract. The amended contract merely provided for a different method of computing the “sale price.” I . Hon. George H. Sheppard, Page 7 (V-555) As stated above, there was no actual production of gas from the leased premises from May, 1941, through December, 1941. The leroee paid the Dunn Estate during this period on the minimum basis according to the amended contract, It is true that before there can be a gas production tax, there must be gas produced; but these payments were made to lessor as additional considera- tion for gas that had been and was to be produced thereafter under the contract. This same question was considered in Attorney Gen- eral’s Opinion O-6355, and we are enclosing a copy thereof. It is, therefore, our opinion that the Dunn Estate is lia- ble for an additional gas production tax as set up in the Comptrol- ler’s audit in the amount of $3,044.79 accruing under the 1941 amendment to Article 7047b. V.C.S.. and is liable for the addi- tional gas production tax as set up fn said audit in the amount of $1,275.73 accruing under the 1945 amendment to Article 7047b. V.C.S. SUMMARY Under the facts stated the Dunn Estate is not liable for the additional gas production taxes set up in the Comptroller’s Audit for the period of time from the beginning of the audit to the effec- tive date of the 1941 amendment of Art. 7047b, V.C.S., but is liable for the additional gas production taxes as disclosed by such audit for the period of time since the effective date of said 1941 amendment. Yours very truly ATTORNEYGENERALOFTEXAS W. V. Geppert Assistant W VG/egt/lh/JCP APPROVED