Deltide Fishing & Rental Tools, Inc. v. United States

279 F. Supp. 661, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 470, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11591
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1968
DocketCiv. A. 14980
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 279 F. Supp. 661 (Deltide Fishing & Rental Tools, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deltide Fishing & Rental Tools, Inc. v. United States, 279 F. Supp. 661, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 470, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11591 (E.D. La. 1968).

Opinion

HEEBE, District Judge.

I.

After paying all of the internal revenue taxes assessed against it, plaintiff-taxpayer filed this action on October 7, 1964, claiming that overpayments were made because of “illegally and erroneously assessed” taxes for its taxable years ending in February of the years 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 and 1960. Although the plaintiff’s original complaint alleged a number of different errors in the assessment and collection of its taxes, it was stipulated between the parties in a document filed in the record on July 19, 1966, that

“The only question remaining in controversy in this action is whether the gain realized by plaintiff on dispositions of its depreciable rental tools, in each of the taxable years here involved, constituted gain eligible (under § 1231 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954) for long-term capital-gain treatment, or whether such gain constituted ordinary income.”

In the same document the parties stipulated that plaintiff had filed timely its income tax returns for the taxable years involved and had paid the taxes assessed by the District Director thereon; that the District Director subsequently examined plaintiff’s income tax returns and timely assessed and collected from the plaintiff additional amounts of tax and interest for the taxable years involved; that with respect to the taxes paid for the taxable years involved, the plaintiff filed timely with the District Director its claims for refund and the District Director properly notified plaintiff of the dis-allowance of its claims; that this suit was then instituted timely.

*662 The plaintiff, in each of the taxable years in question, was engaged in the business of renting special tools to oil well operators and drilling contractors. Under the rental agreements, plaintiff reserved and retained title to all the “fishing” tools which it rented, but the parties did agree that any tools lost or damaged by the lessees would be charged to the lessees at slightly more than the full original cost of the tools. In the taxable years involved, the plaintiff realized, from the charges paid by lessees for lost and irreparably damaged tools, gains in excess of the adjusted basis of the tools in the amounts of $17,915.04, $24,054.81, $65,237.01, $107,309.25, $44,129.04, and $47,730.51, respectively. (Count 6 of the Stipulation of July 19, 1966) The Internal Revenue Service taxed those gains as ordinary income; the plaintiff, however, contends that these gains should be treated as capital gains and taxed at the preferred rate. The parties have stipulated the amounts of the refund of tax as well as assessed interest which will be due plaintiff if the Court finds that the gains involved should have been treated as capital gains rather than ordinary income. The nature of the plaintiff’s business and of its contracts with its lessees is more fully described in the defendant’s brief, pages 3-7:

“Plaintiff is a Louisiana corporation engaged in the business of supplying tools to operators in the oil and gas industry. Plaintiff’s equipment is functionally specialized in nature, and is designed for use in coping with various problems that are encountered in the course of oil and gas drilling operations. In some instances plaintiff supplies tools, pipe, and specially trained workers to operators of wells who have encountered operating difficulties in the drilling process. A typical example of plaintiff’s function involves the careless oil rig worker who drops a wrench or similar tool down the hole being drilled, thereby interrupting operations. Plaintiff is called upon to supply both the tools and the expertise necessary to remove that impediment so that normal operations can be resumed. A trained workman must necessarily be supplied along with the needed equipment because the ordinary worker on an oil or gas rig does not have the training necessary to conduct the recovery or fishing operation or to use the equipment supplied. Where a trained worker is sent out with the equipment, he takes charge of the rig and remains in charge during the course of the fishing operation. In other instances, plaintiff supplies tools alone to operators of wells who need them, but who are not experiencing operating difficulties or are familiar with the operation of the tool and therefore do not need the services of plaintiff’s specially trained workmen. Plaintiff’s business thus has two aspects, fishing tools and rental tools. In both aspects of the business, it is plaintiff’s policy to rent the tools to the operators rather than sell them. This procedure is presumably tolerated by the lessees because plaintiff’s specialized tools are designed to cope with ad hoc operating difficulties which are not always encountered during the course of drilling operations. It would be too expensive for the operator to invest extensively in tools which he might not need.
“The tools are rented out at rates fixed by a rental schedule. The rate of rental on a particular tool is not affected by whether a trained worker is sent out with the tool; compensation to the plaintiff for supplying his services is handled in a different fashion. Plaintiff’s tool rental contracts contain a standard provision that obligates the lessee to pay the repair cost for damage to any tools and to pay the full replacement cost of any tools lost or irreparably damaged while under lease. No amount is fixed in the contract; plaintiff determines the replacement cost of the tool, customarily adds on 10% above cost, 1 and bills that amount to the lessee. A lessee must pay *663 the rental due on the tool even though it is lost or damaged, in addition to paying for its replacement cost. During [the years in question] the total number of invoices issued by plaintiff in billing customers for lost or damaged tools, on which the tool rental had been previously paid, constituted approximately 18% of the total number of invoices issued by plaintiff covering both rental of tools and lost or damaged tools. During those same years, plaintiff’s income attributable to lost and damaged tools was approximately 18.5% of its income attributable to tool rentals. Loss or damage to tools and equipment leased by plaintiff recurred with frequency and regularity, and income received from the disposition of lost or damaged tools constituted a substantial portion of plaintiff’s total income from its business.” (emphasis supplied)

It is clear then, that the plaintiff is in the business of renting, not selling, special oil well tools, and that the plaintiff has never disposed of any of its rental tools except when they have been lost or irreparably damaged by the lessees.

II.

The only question involved, according to the stipulation of the parties and the undisputed facts, is whether or not the gains realized by the taxpayer from the charges assessed against its lessees for lost and irreparably damaged tools should receive capital gains treatment. Moreover, the parties have stipulated that all but one of the requirements for capital-gains treatment have been met by plaintiff with respect to the gains in question; the sole issue remaining revolves about the requirement that the tools involved be “capital assets.” That issue must be decided with reference to §§ 1221 and 1231 of the Internal Revenue Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 F. Supp. 661, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 470, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deltide-fishing-rental-tools-inc-v-united-states-laed-1968.