Crowell Land & Mineral Corp. v. Commissioner

25 T.C. 223, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1955
DocketDocket No. 53476
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 25 T.C. 223 (Crowell Land & Mineral Corp. 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
Crowell Land & Mineral Corp. v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 223, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58 (tax 1955).

Opinions

opinion.

Opper, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency of $1,839.12 in petitioner’s income tax for 1949. The issues for decision are whether payments, received by petitioner during 1949 under a “Contract of Sale” of gravel, represent long-term capital gain, as reported by petitioner, or ordinary income, as determined by respondent, and if they represent ordinary income, whether petitioner is entitled to an allowance for discovery depletion. The parties have filed a stipulation of facts, all of which are hereby found accordingly.

Petitioner is a corporation whose income tax return for 1949 was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Louisiana.

Petitioner entered into a “Contract of Sale” dated January 8, 1947, with Gifford-Hill and Company, Inc., a corporation. The contract, which named petitioner the vendor and Gifford-Hill the vendee, provided that the vendor sold to the vendee, with full warranty of title, “All gravel, sand, mixed sand and gravel, railroad ballast and other similar construction materials situated on and under” the piece of land described in the instrument, consisting of about 23.21 acres. Prior to the consummation of the contract there was found to be a substantial deposit of sand and gravel on this land. Tests were made but it was impossible to determine the exact quantity of sand and gravel thereon.

Under the agreement, “The consideration for this sale and transfer is the payment by the Vendee unto the Vendor, the sum of Fifteen (150) cents per cubic yard” for “each and every cubic yard thus mined and removed” payable $1,200 upon the execution of the instrument and $1,200 “at the beginning of each year thereafter during the term of this Contract of Sale” as advance payments, and 15 cents per cubic yard additional when the amount removed equaled the cumulative advance payments. The agreement provided that upon default the contract would be canceled and the vendee would reconvey all of the remaining property to petitioner. The vendee was given 5 years within which to go upon the property and remove the subject material after which its rights terminated and the property was to revert to the vendor, the vendee to execute a reconveyance of the remaining property. The vendee was given the right to construct, maintain, and take away necessary camps, tracks, and other improvements. Any timber cut in the course of removing the materials was to be delivered to and remain the property of the vendor and any damaged timber was to be paid for by the vendee at stated prices. The vendor was to pay ad valorem taxes on the land and the vendee was to pay severance or other taxes imposed for materials removed by it under the agreement. The vendee was to hold the vendor harmless from all damage to persons or property resulting from its operations. Vendor and vendee agreed that any mineral operations of the vendor and the operations of the vendee would be carried on so that neither would interfere with the other.

Petitioner, in 1949, was the fee owner of more than 100,000 acres of land in Louisiana which had been acquired in 1941, and this is the only instance in its history of a contract of any nature concerning sand and gravel deposits underlying any of its land. The sand and gravel deposit in controversy was not carried or listed in the inventory of petitioner.

The purchaser removed the sand and gravel under the contract and thereafter, as a result, the 23.21-acre tract was mostly covered with water.

Petitioner received $14,147.04 under the contract during 1949 and reported the amount as a long-term capital gain. Respondent determined that the amount represented ordinary income.

While the concept of taxable gain implies that a taxpayer shall be authorized to recover his capital in some manner, a number of methods to accomplish this are available. That provision is made for a return of capital as an offset against taxable income is accordingly of little assistance in determining whether a specific transaction gives rise to ordinary income or capital gain. If capital gain, the investment is to be recovered by means of an allocated basis. Sec. Ill (a), I. R. C. 1939. If ordinary income, an elaborate system has been established by means of depreciation, depletion, and other processes to achieve a similar result. And percentage depletion, section 114 (b) (3) and (4), Internal Revenue Code of 1939, discovery depletion, section 114 (b) (2), Internal Revenue Code of 1939, and unit depletion are all various means of accounting for depletion. Unit depletion, for example, may be available when discovery depletion is not. Cf. Parker Gravel Co., 21 B. T. A. 51, with Robert Roberts, 20 B. T. A. 345.

It is clear, however, that if depletion of any kind is available it must be because the taxpayer has retained an economic interest in the mineral in place. Anderson v. Helvering, 310 U. S. 404; Burton-Sutton Oil Co. v. Commissioner, 328 U. S. 25. The principle is that as the mineral is removed, and not before, the taxpayer is being deprived of a part of his property and simultaneously using up a corresponding portion of his basis. Presumably since the process of removal is not subject to prophetic anticipation the income is to be accounted for from time to time as it is actually earned. Thus, the present agreement, although it purports to pass present title to all minerals involved, calls for payment, except for the guaranteed amounts, only as the sand and gravel is “mined and removed from said premises.”

Not only the time of removal, but the act itself is shrouded in the mists of speculation. At the end of the lease period, even if none is removed, the mineral remaining is not the property of the lessee, but of the lessor. In the usual mineral lease, this results automatically, see, e. g., Burnet v. Harmel, 287 U. S. 103, while here there is an express provision to that effect. The difference cannot be decisive. Payment for deposits only as removed and retention (or retransfer) of title to the balance are typical indicia of the existence of an economic interest.

It is idle to suggest that these transactions do not somewhat resemble sales, just as a lease of real property has aspects of the day-by-day conveyance of the property to the tenant. As each cubic yard of sand or each ton of coal or metal ore is removed and the owner is paid for that much of the mineral, the transfer is indeed in many ways comparable to the salei of a capital asset. This is so whether the arrangement calls for so much a yard or a ton, Bankers’ Pocahontas Coal Co. v. Burnet, 287 U. S. 308, Otis A. Kittle, 21 T. C. 79, or a varying amount depending upon retail price, William Louis Albritton, 24 T. C. 903, net profit, Burton-Sutton Oil Co. v. Commissioner, supra, or the like. The continuous deterioration of other property compensated for by depreciation has also been likened to a series of fractional sales. United States v. Ludey, 274 U. S. 295. That detail of income tax accounting has not sufficed to transform an item accountable for as ordinary income into capital gain.

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Crowell Land & Mineral Corp. v. Commissioner
25 T.C. 223 (U.S. Tax Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
25 T.C. 223, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-land-mineral-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1955.