Delacroix Corp. v. Commissioner

13 T.C. 827, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1949
DocketDocket No. 12002
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 T.C. 827 (Delacroix 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
Delacroix Corp. v. Commissioner, 13 T.C. 827, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32 (tax 1949).

Opinions

OPINION.

Tyson, Judge:

This proceeding involves deficiencies in the amounts of $12,948.41 in income tax and $3,028.16 in declared value excess profits tax determined by respondent against petitioner for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1943.

Questions presented are whether the respondent erred in denying petitioner:

(1) A deduction of $10,589.23 as interest alleged to have accrued during the taxable year on an instrument designated as a promissory note payable to the Hibernia Bank & Trust Co., in Liquidation, and the Interstate Trust & Banking Co., in Liquidation; and

(2) A deduction of $1,432.48 as interest alleged to have accrued during the taxable year on an instrument designated as a promissory note payable to the Canal Bank & Trust Co., in Liquidation;

(3) A deduction of a net operating loss carry-over for each of the fiscal years ended October 31,1941 and 1942, to the taxable year ended October 31, 1943, based on the claim of petitioner that the respective carry-overs were-allowable deductions for each of those two prior years of similar items of interest as those involved in the first and second issues.

As to the third issue, the parties áre agreed that, if this Court decides that the items of alleged interest are deductible in the fiscal years ended October 31, 1941, 1942, and 1943, they will settle the. amount of the operating loss carry-over in the recomputation under Rule 50.

Further, and in the alternative, if this Court should decide that the claimed interest deductions involved in the first and second issues are not allowable for the taxable year ended October 31, 1943, petitioner assigns error in the respondeht’s inclusion in petitioner’s taxable income of that taxable year the amount of $10,860.91 as representing gross oil royalties accrued to petitioner. With respect to this alternative issue, respondent admits error to the extent of $2,716.60 oil royalty income less statutory depletion, or a net overstatement of income by the amount of $1,969.54 in the deficiency notice.

With respect to each of several other assignments of error which were alleged in the petition and the amendments thereto and which need not be set forth herein, the parties are agreed on the proper adjustments, based on concessions made at the hearing, and settlement in accordance with such agreement will be made in the recomputation under Rule 50.

The proceeding has been submitted upon a stipulation of-facts, which is adopted as our findings of fact. The essential facts are summarized herein. The exhibits included in the stipulation embrace numerous written notarized agreements, conveyances, subordinations of mortgages and claims, assignments of royalties, etc., pertaining to certain land owned by petitioner and the mineral rights therein. In addition to certain individuals hereinafter mentioned, those documents involved as parties thereto, inter alia, the Delacroix Corporation, hereinafter referred to as petitioner; the Acm,e Land & Fur Co., a corporation, hereinafter referred to as Acme; the Interstate Trust & Banking Co., in Liquidation, hereinafter referred to as Interstate; the Hibernia Bank & Trust Co., in Liquidation, hereinafter referred to as Hibernia; the Canal Bank & Trust Co., in Liquidation, hereinafter referred to as Canal; and the Whitney National Bank of New Orleans, hereinafter referred to as the Whitney Bank.

The petitioner is a Delaware corporation, doing business and having its principal office in New Orleans, Louisiana, and for the taxable year involved it filed its income tax return with the collector of internal revenue at that city. Petitioner has kept its books and records and filed its returns on the accrual method of accounting and on the basis of a fiscal year ending October 81.

Petitioner owns 109,529.69 acres of property (hereinafter referred to as the property) situated in St. Bernard and Plaquemines Parishes, Louisiana, consisting mostly of marshland crisscrossed by waterways and used primarily for trapping muskrats and other fur-bearing animals. Prior to 1934 petitioner acquired this land from Acme, the principal stockholder of petitioner, which reserved an undivided fifteen-sixteenths of all oil, gas, salt, and other minerals in the property. On December 22, 1934, Acme conveyed these reserved mineral rights to petitioner and in consideration therefor the latter agreed to pay Acme one-half of all royalties payable to petitioner on account of any production of minerals from the property, after first paying off petitioner’s mortgage and vendor’s lien indebtedness and other indebtednesses on the property out of any cash and royalties received by petitioner from its contemplated sale of the mineral rights.

By a written instrument dated December 22, 1934, petitioner transferred all the minerals and mineral rights in the property to George B. Conover, his heirs and assigns, the minerals and rights to be free from all encumbrances, taxes, and claims whatsoever, in consideration of $25,000 paid in cash and the vendee’s agreement to pay petitioner, its successors, or assigns, a royalty of one-eighth of all oil, gas, or other minerals produced from the property.

By a written instrument dated December 27, 1934, A. Giffen Levy, the owner and holder of 18 promissory notes, all dated August 18,1926, totaling a principal amount of $240,000, secured by a vendor’s lien and mortgage on the property, agreed to subordinate the lien and mortgage securing such notes to, but only to, the rights of Conover and his heirs and assigns in the minerals and mineral rights in the property. In consideration for Levy’s act of subordination petitioner and Acme agreed that, as long as any portion of principal, interest, charges, etc., on the 18 notes remained unpaid, 75 per cent of all royalties becoming due and payable to petitioner and Acme under the sale to Conover should be paid to the present or future holder of the notes and, further, Conover was instructed and authorized by petitioner and Acme to pay over and deliver the 75 per cent of the royalties to the Whitney Bank for payment by it to the holder of the notes.

By another written instrument dated December 27,1934, Interstate, the owner and holder of petitioner’s promissory notes in the principal amounts of $30,000 and $250,000, secured by collateral mortgages on the property, and also the owner and holder of tax subrogations in the amount of $19,307.87 on the property, agreed to subordinate such mortgages and tax subrogations securing those notes and claims to, but only to, the rights of Conover and his heirs and assigns in the minerals and mineral rights in the property. In consideration for Interstate’s agreement of subordination, petitioner and Acme agreed, in the same written instrument, that so long as the two notes and tax subrogations, whether principal, interest, charges, etc., remained unpaid, 25 per cent of all royalties payable to petitioner and/or Acme under the sale to Conover should be paid to the present or future holder of the notes and tax subrogations and, further, Conover was instructed, authorized, and empowered by petitioner and Acme to pay over and deliver the 25 per cent royalties to the Whitney Bank for account of the holder of the notes and tax subrogations.

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Related

Donnell v. Commissioner
48 T.C. 552 (U.S. Tax Court, 1967)
Weinert v. Commissioner
31 T.C. 918 (U.S. Tax Court, 1959)
Delacroix Corp. v. Commissioner
13 T.C. 827 (U.S. Tax Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 T.C. 827, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delacroix-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1949.