Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Rowan Drilling Co.

130 F.2d 62, 29 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1050, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 1942
Docket10187, 10236
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 130 F.2d 62 (Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Rowan Drilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Rowan Drilling Co., 130 F.2d 62, 29 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1050, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034 (5th Cir. 1942).

Opinions

HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

The taxpayer and the Commissioner by separate petitions seek a review of the Board’s decision, which involves income tax liabilities for the calendar year 1932.1 The petition of the taxpayer presents the question whether a corporation, engaged in the business of drilling oil wells for hire, may deduct from its gross income as ordinary and necessary business expenses, all costs incurred by it during said year in the drilling of certain wells pursuant to contracts providing that the considération to the driller should be a stated portion of the oil in place. The Commissioner’s petition presents the question whether an oil driller so engaged who has deducted the entire cost of such drilling as an ordinary and necessary business expense may take percentage-depletion deductions from oil payments accruing to it in subsequent years.

The crucial facts out of which these questions arise are not in dispute. During the years 1931 and 1932 the Rowan Drilling Company, a Texas corporation, was engaged in the business of drilling oil wells for hire, and in each year it drilled approximately fifty wells. Three of the wells were drilled each year in consideration of an agreed interest in the oil in place, and the remainder were drilled for cash on a footage basis. In its income tax return for 1931 the corporation deducted from its gross income, as ordinary and necessary business expenses, all of the drilling costs of all wells drilled during that year without regard to whether the consideration was cash or a part of the oil in place. The Commissioner allowed the deductions, and no issue is before us in regard to the 1931 return.

The taxpayer followed the same procedure in its 1932 tax return for the wells drilled during that year, and it later claimed a percentage-depletion deduction with respect to oil payments received during the year from the three wells drilled in 1931 for an interest in the oil. The Commissioner contended before the Board that the deduction of the drilling costs incurred in connection with the drilling of the three wells for oil payments should be disallowed, on the theory that these costs were not business expenses but were investments made in the purchase of capital assets; and he opposed the percentage-depletion deductions on the ground that, since the taxpayer had deducted the cost of its oil payment interests in 1931, it had thus secured a tax-free return of its entire capital investment, and was not entitled to recoup that investment a second time through deductions for depletion. The Board of Tax Appeals agreed with the Commissioner that the costs incurred in the drilling of the three wells for oil payments were capital investments rather than ordinary business expenses; and it agreed with the taxpayer that percentage-depletion deductions should have been allowed with respect to its income derived from the oil payments.

We think the conclusions reached by the Board, were correct in both instances, and that its order should be affirmed. It is no longer open to doubt that the ownership of oil in place is a capital asset, and that the acquisition price of the asset, whether paid in cash or services, is a capital investment that may not be treated as a business expense for income-tax purposes, but must be recouped by depletion deductions from gross income.2 The Rowan Drilling Company having given its [64]*64■drilling services in consideration of oil payments, the costs incurred by it as a consequence of the drilling constituted the purchase price paid by it to acquire a capital asset. This much seems to be conceded by the taxpayer, for it claimed depletion deductions with respect to its income from such oil payments; and such deductions are .allowable only for the purpose of offsetting injustices resulting from the classification as income only of returns of capital commingled with income;3 but it is contended that, since it was this taxpayer’s business to drill oil wells for others for hire, and since the expenses deducted were incurred in the drilling of oil wells for others for hire, the costs incident to the drilling were ordinary and necessary business expenses irrespective of the form in which the consideration moving to it was paid. In support of this position the taxpayer relies upon Edwards Drilling Company v. Commissioner, 35 B.T.A. 341; Commissioner v. Edwards Drilling Co., 5 Cir., 95 F.2d 719, and Dearing v. Commissioner, 36 B.T.A. 843, Id., 5 Cir., 102 F.2d 91.

The Edwards Drilling Company case involved income taxes for the year 1931, and there, as was done with this taxpayer’s return for 1931, the Commissioner acquiesced in the deduction of drilling costs expended for the purchase of oil payments as business expenses, and made no issue in respect thereto. In the Dearing case, as the court stated, there was no claim of right to deduct anything as a necessary expense of business in the year the expenditure was made. Neither of these cases, therefore, is precisely in point or is authority for the disposition of the question before us, and we have not discovered any other decision that sanctions the position taken by the taxpayer here.

Whether an expenditure may at the same time be an ordinary and necessary business expense and a capital investment is extremely doubtful. It seems plain that Congress never considered the possibility of one expenditure having such a dual nature, for the taxing statutes consistently deal with business expenses and capital investments as mutually exclusive of each other. Moreover, the courts repeatedly have deemed it adequate to dispose of a contention that an outlay was a business expense by simply holding that it was a capital investment.4 In business accounting, too, these terms have different connotations that cannot be disregarded without causing confusion.

The option accorded a taxpayer to treat intangible drilling costs either as business expenses or as capital expenditures is not applicable here, since this case involves tangible as well as intangible drilling costs, and since such option is never available to a drilling contractor;5 but the turnkey-contract decisions evolving under that option are based upon broad principles of tax law that lie at the foundation of the entire tax structure, and the reasoning applied there is equally persuasive here. The sense of the turnkey cases is that, where a lease operator hires a drilling contractor to drill a completed well for him on his property for a stated lump-sum price, that price becomes a portion of the lease operator’s invested capital in the well—a part of the purchase price of a capital asset— and the intangible drilling costs may not be deducted as business expenses but must be capitalized.6 The rationale of those decisions is that such an outlay is a capital investment, and as such, though it bears a striking resemblance to an ordinary business expense, is not recoverable except through deductions for depletion.

The turnkey cases, under the intangible drilling costs option, also serve to illustrate the fallacy in the contention that an option exists in favor of the taxpayer under the circumstances obtaining here, the claim being that the petitioner has consistently followed the practice of deduct[65]

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Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Rowan Drilling Co.
130 F.2d 62 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
130 F.2d 62, 29 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1050, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-int-rev-v-rowan-drilling-co-ca5-1942.