Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. John David Hawn and Bette Hawn

231 F.2d 340
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1956
Docket15658
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 340 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. John David Hawn and Bette Hawn) 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 Internal Revenue v. John David Hawn and Bette Hawn, 231 F.2d 340 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition for review of a decision of the Tax Court holding that an absolute transfer for value of $854,993.-25 in “oil payments” to a transferee until he received $120,000.00 from such payments, with automatic reconveyance to the transferor thereafter, was a sale or exchange of capital assets, and did not, as the Commissioner of Internal Revenue asserted, result in the receipt of ordinary income.

The facts regarding the transfer of the oil payments, all stipulated, may be briefly stated as follows, the husband being referred to as the taxpayer, although joint returns were filed:

On October 1, 1949, taxpayer had owned, for a period of more than six months, an oil payment right in certain oil properties located in Refugio County, Texas. The oil payment right was originally in the amount of $1,000,000. On October 1, 1949, the balance remaining was $854,993.25 and the oil payment right had a zero basis to taxpayer.

Under an assignment dated October 1, 1949, taxpayer assigned and conveyed the oil payment right to A. E. Hinman, a general contractor, as the consideration for the construction of a house on a city lot owned by taxpayer in Corpus *342 Christi. The granting clause of the assignment provided as .follows:

« * *- j0hn David Hawn, do hereby grant, sell, transfer, assign and convey unto the said A. E. Hinman all of my right, title and interest in and to said oil payment above described until the said A. E. Hinman shall have received from the proceeds of the sale of said interest in said oil the sum of One Hundred Twenty Thousand ($120,-000.00) Dollars, whereupon the interest herein conveyed to said A. E. Hinman shall terminate and revert to and revest in said John David Hawn, his heirs, representatives and assigns without the necessity of the execution of any character of release or reconveyance.”

The further agreement between taxpayer and Hinman for the construction of the house in exchange for the oil payment right was set forth in a letter agreement between the parties as follows :

“Mr. A. E. Hinman

Wilson Building

Corpus Christi, Texas

“Dear Sir:

“In consideration of my assignment to you of an oil payment in the amount of $120,000.00 out of an oil payment in the amount of $1,000,000.00 which was given to me by my grandmother, Mrs. Christie Hewit, which assignment to me is of record in Volume 68, page 107 — 111 of the Deed Records of Bee County, Texas, you agree to erect for me a one (1) story, ranch type, combination masonry and frame residence to be located in Hewit Estates in Corpus Christi, Texas, pursuant to a contract executed between yourself and me on the 1st day of October, 1949.

“As a part of this agreement you agree to furnish me all bills for materials, labor, • furnishings, etc., in connection with the above mentioned residence to the extent of $115,000.00.

“It is understood and agreed that you are financing the furnishing of the above mentioned items with one of the local banks. You are to reimburse yourself for any interest paid out of the difference between the $120,000.00 oil payment and the amount you are paying for the oil payment, namely, $115,-000.00 and any excess of any amount above the $115,000.00 with interest at 5% will be returned to me out of the oil payment.

“Should, however, ■ the amount of $115,000.00 plus interest at 5% exceed $120,000.00 I will personally be liable to you for such amount.

“If the above is in accordance with our agreement will you please execute and return to me the original of this letter.

“Yours very truly,

(S) John D. Hawn

“Accepted: October 1, 1949 (s) A. E. Hinman”

Taxpayer did not receive any note or other security for this contractual obligation of Hinman to construct the house.

The lease to which the oil payment right applied was fully developed and producing oil at the time of the assignment of the oil payment. right to Hinman and also when the oil payment right later reverted to taxpayer. The production from the lease was fairly consistent at such time, the allowable production being regulated by the Railroad Commission of the State of Texas, and the field price for the production at the-time of the assignment of oil payment right to Hinman was ascertainable. On the basis of information available at the-time of the assignment of the oil payment right to Hinman, assuming that the production under the lease continued at its then average rate and that the-field price of the production remained substantially the same, it could have-been estimated that $120,000.00 would be received from the oil payment right within a period of approximately, two. years.

On or about May 1, 1951, 19 months after the assignment of the oil payment *343 right to Hinman, Hinman had received a total of $120,000.00 from the oil payment right directly from the companies purchasing the production. On or about the same date the oil payment right automatically reverted to taxpayer in accordance with the terms of the assignment to Hinman.

In the meantime, the construction of the house had been begun on October 17, 1949. From October 1, 1949, the date of the assignment of the oil payment right to Hinman, through December 31, 1949, Hinman received $12,782.-53 from the oil payment right and spent a total of $20,809.79 in the construction of the house.

The sole question is whether on these undisputed facts the proceeds from the sale, i. e., the value of the house to be built for the taxpayer, were to be treated as capital gains to the taxpayer, with the oil payments received by the contractor being reportable by him as gross income, subject to the normal percentage depletion in his hands. The Tax Court, with six judges dissenting, held in favor of the taxpayer. Having determined that the oil payments were a species of property, i. e., an interest in realty, the Tax Court concluded that it would automatically follow that a transfer of such property would qualify it as a “sale or exchange of a capital asset.” This result does not necessarily follow. The relevant sections of the tax laws, as contended by the taxpayer, are Section 117(a) and (b). 1 The Commissioner calls our attention to the general definition of gross income. 2

It is clearly true, as already indicated, that an oil payment, like royalty, is an interest in property, an interest in realty, an interest in the minerals in place.

This court discussed the effect for tax purposes of a transfer of oil payments for periods of from 9 to 13 years in Caldwell v. Campbell. 3 We there held under its facts that such a transfer for cash and notes constituted a sale of a capital asset, and was not an anticipatory assignment of income.

*344 The Court of Claims has also played its part in this field, having held in Rudco Oil & Gas Co. v. United States, 4

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