Chicago Mines Co. v. Commissioner

7 T.C. 1103, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 41
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1946
DocketDocket Nos. 5469, 5470, 5471
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 T.C. 1103 (Chicago Mines Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Mines Co. v. Commissioner, 7 T.C. 1103, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 41 (tax 1946).

Opinion

OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

The above named cases, duly consolidated, involve income and excess profits taxes, as follows:

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Docket No. 5470 involves transferee liability of the London Extension Mining Co. as transferee of Chicago Mines Co. The questions presented are whether the two petitioners are entitled to percentage depletion, and, if so, the amounts thereof.

All facts were stipulated. We adopt by reference the two stipulations filed, and find the facts therein set forth, but as there is some duplication, we set forth such facts as follows :

1. Chicago Mines Co., petitioner in Docket No. 5469 and sometimes hereinafter referred to as Chicago Co., was a corporation organized in 1937 under the laws of the State of Colorado. Petitioner London Extension Mining Co. is a corporation organized in 1925 under the laws of the State of Colorado. Chicago Co. was a wholly owned subsidiary of the London Extension Mining Co., petitioner in Docket No. 5470 and Docket No. 5471 and sometimes hereinafter referred to as London Co.

2. Petitioner London Co. owns an undivided one-half interest in the American, Fraction, Huron, and Ibex lode mining claims in Park County, Colorado. The remaining one-half interest in the American claim is owned by a group of individuals sometimes called the Ellis heirs. The remaining undivided one-half interests in the Fraction, Huron, and Ibex claims are owned by the London Mines & Milling Co., a corporation having no interrelationship with petitioner. Petitioner London Co. acquired its undivided one-half interest in the American claim on October 11, 1929, and its undivided one-half interests in the Huron, Fraction, and Ibex claims in 1926 and 1927. These claims collectively are known as the American Mine.

3. Amer Mining Co., a Colorado corporation, obtained a lease from the Ellis heirs, petitioner London Co., and the London Mines & Milling Co. to prospect and mine certain blocks of the American, Fraction, and Ibex claims and to extract ore therefrom. Said lease was successively assigned to W. A. Ellis, Inc., and thence to the petitioner London Co. on or about June 7,1940. During the period 1930 to May 1940 the Amer Mining Co., in connection with its operation of the American Mine under said lease, shipped the high grade ore and placed the resulting waste material and low grade ore upon the surface of the ground, thus creating the American dump. The greater portion of this dump was placed upon the surface of the Fraction claim, smaller portions being on the surface of the American and Huron claims, all these claims being contiguous.

4. Petitioner Chicago Co. entered into a lease from London Co. on June 10, 1940, under which Chicago Co. immediately thereafter proceeded to mill that part of the American dump which could be sorted and milled at a profit, until October 8, 1940, when Chicago Co. was dissolved. The lease provided, inter alia, tnat the London Co., referred to as a Colorado corporation, owner of the American Waste Dump, leased it to Chicago Co., referred to as a Colorado corporation, in consideration of royalties of 20 per cent of net smelter and mint returns, and that Chicago Co. could use the buildings and equipment on the claim to house and board men and could remove, during or at the end of the lease, any equipment and supplies belonging to it. The party signing as president of Chicago Co. also signed as secretary of London Co., and the vice president of London Co. signed as secretary of Chicago Mines. No other officers signed the lease. From October 8, 1940, to the end of that year, London Co. itself carried on the working and milling of the American dump. From June 7, 1940, London Co. also carried on underground mining operations under its said leases until August 20, 1940, when its lease from the Ellis heirs expired, and for the remainder of 1940 it continued to operate under the Colorado Co-Owner Statute (Colo. Stat. Ann., vol. 3, ch. 92, secs. 8 to 16).

5. Chicago Co., in its income tax return filed for the year June 1, 1940, to May 31, 1941, deducted percentage depletion of $10,150.34, which sum represents 15 per cent of its gross income, after deduction of royalties, from its operation and milling of the American dump. Said $10,150.34 did not exceed 50 per centum of the net income of Chicago Co. from the American dump.

6. The corporate life of Chicago Co. expired October 8, 1942, and all its assets previously were transferred to its parent company, the London Co., and the capital stock held by said parent company and the qualifying shares held by its directors were at that time canceled and surrendered.

7. Petitioner London Extension Mining Co. is liable as a transferee for any deficiency in income tax for the taxable year June 1, 1940, to May 31,1941, and any deficiency in excess profits tax for the taxable period June 1 to October 8, 1940, that may be determined against petitioner Chicago Mines Co., transferor, together with interest thereon as provided by law. The only issue remaining in Docket Nos. 5469 and 5470 is the question of percentage depletion for the taxable periods herein involved and mentioned in this paragraph.

8. As a result of London Co.’s working of the American dump, it realized during 1940 the sum of $57,014.58 as its net smelter returns after deducting marketing and transportation costs. It also received $16,917.23 as royalty from Chicago Mines Co. under its lease to Chicago Mines Co. on the said dump. It also received the sum of $22,-638.45 as its net smelter returns on its underground mining operations of the American Mine. London Co. claimed depletion in its return; and it is agreed that if the Tax Court decides that London Co. is entitled to depletion on the operation of the American dump and that the operations of the dump and the American Mine constitute one mining property, then London Co. would be entitled to $14,485.54 disallowed depletion (i. e., American Mine $3,395.77, American dump $8,552.19, American dump royalties $2,537.58).

9. It is further agreed that the Commissioner did not err in disallowing the claim of Chicago Co. for relief under section 722 of the Internal Revenue Code and that there are no overpayments in excess profits taxes due to either petitioner herein for the excess profits taxable period June 1 to October 8, 1940, of Chicago Co. attributable to any allowance under said section 722.

10. It is further agreed that in Docket No. 5469 the only question involved is the right of Chicago Co. to the deduction of $10,150.34 depletion.

We first consider the question whether Chicago Co. is entitled to the deduction of $10,150.34 for depletion from its working of the American dump from about June 10, 1940, the date of its lease from its parent, London Co., to October 8,1940, when Chicago Co. was dissolved. Chicago Co.’s argument is, in brief, that even as nominal lessee from London Co. it is entitled to the deduction under sections 23 (m) and 114 (b) (1), (4) (A) and (B) of the Internal Revenue Code;1 also that Chicago Co., though nominally a lessee from London Co., was in essence and effect only an alias or operating department of that company, its sole owner, and both were operated by the same corporate officers; therefore, London Co. being the owner of the ore, Chicago Co.

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Chicago Mines Co. v. Commissioner
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Bluebook (online)
7 T.C. 1103, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-mines-co-v-commissioner-tax-1946.