Estate of Ervin A. Reinke, Deceased Marion Reinke, Personal Representative Marion Reinke v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

46 F.3d 760, 75 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 736, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1458, 1995 WL 27474
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 1995
Docket94-1403
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 46 F.3d 760 (Estate of Ervin A. Reinke, Deceased Marion Reinke, Personal Representative Marion Reinke v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Ervin A. Reinke, Deceased Marion Reinke, Personal Representative Marion Reinke v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 46 F.3d 760, 75 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 736, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1458, 1995 WL 27474 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Senior Circuit Judge.

This case involves the federal income tax treatment of payments received under coal *762 lease agreements pursuant to which coal was removed from the land by strip mining. The dispute relates to payments that reflected only the surface rights the appellants had in the land. The appellants contend that the payments were for damages inflicted on the land by the mining, and therefore constituted a return of capital up to the amount of their basis in the land and capital gains thereafter. The Tax Court held, however, that the payments constituted ordinary income. It further held that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue properly imposed the 25 percent addition to tax that 26 U.S.C. § 6661(a) (1988) provides for substantial understatement of tax. We affirm both rulings.

I

A. The facts were stipulated. In 1961 Mr. Reinke, deceased, and his wife, who filed joint returns, entered into a coal lease agreement covering the southeast quarter of 480 acres in North Dakota. The lease authorized the lessees to remove any and all lignite coal from the land “by strip mining or otherwise.” The lessees agreed to pay the Reinkes

... As royalty for coal, the sum of ten cents (lOc) per ton * * * for all coal removed from said land, and as rental payments and damages for any surface used, occupied or destroyed in the mining and removal of any coal in and underlying lessor’s said lands.

The lease provided that if the Reinkes owned less than 100 percent of the coal under the land, then the “royalties and rents to be paid as herein provided” would be proportionately reduced.

In 1971 the Reinkes entered into a coal lease agreement with the assignee (Baukol-Noonan, Inc.) of the lessee of the first lease, covering two additional quarter sections. In those two sections the Reinkes owned only the surface, but not the mineral rights in the land. The 1971 lease provisions here involved are identical to those in the 1961 lease, except that there was added to the provision relating to less than one hundred percent ownership of the' coal the following statement: “Provided, However, that the royalty paid to the lessor herein shall never be less than 2<t per ton of coal”.

In 1975, North Dakota enacted the Surface Owners Protection Act, which imposed various legal and financial obligations on mineral developers, designed to protect surface owners from “the undesirable effects of development, without their consent, of minerals underlying their surface”. N.D.Cent.Code § 38-18-03 (1987). In 1979 the Reinkes entered into an agreement with their lessee which, to resolve the uncertainty whether the North Dakota statute required the lessee to pay the Reinkes “surface damages for the use of the surface in the course of mining the real property covered by its coal lease,” provided in pertinent part:

1. BN will pay to the surface owner ten cents a ton for every ton of coal actually mined and removed from the property on and after October 1, 1979, with the payments to be made on a monthly basis commencing on November 15, 1979.

2. The surface owner agrees that such payment by BN to him shall constitute all of the payments or damages to which he is entitled by virtue of NDCC 38-18-07(1) and NDCC 38-18-06(5).

B. In their federal income tax returns for 1985, 1986 and 1987, the Reinkes reported the amounts received under the foregoing coal lease agreements as follows:

Capital Gains Rents & Royalties

1985 $254,531 $-0-

1986 296,796 9,021

1987 71,431 780

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed deficiencies for those three years to-talling $112,089.42 and additions to tax under Section 6661(a) totalling $28,022.00. The Commissioner determined that all of the payments made with respect to the property in which the Reinkes owned only surface rights, and one-half of the payments made with respect to the property in which they owned both surface and mineral rights, were ordinary income.

The Reinkes sought redetermination by the Tax Court of these deficiencies in tax and the additions to tax. The Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner that the payments were ordinary income and that the Reinkes were liable for the 25 percent addition to tax.

*763 With respect to the issues before us, the Tax Court held: (1) “At least for the purposes of this case, we are prepared to assume that strip mining necessarily results in” damage to the surface of the land. “The record herein is totally lacking any evidence sufficient to permit us to make an estimate of the measure of such damage.” (2) The Commissioner correctly imposed the 25 percent addition to tax because (a) there was a substantial understatement of tax and (b) the Commissioner did not abuse his discretion in not waiving the addition, “particularly since there is no indication that a waiver was ever requested.”

II

The appellants do not challenge the Commissioner’s determination that 50 percent of the amounts paid for coal removed from the land in which the Reinkes owned the mineral rights constituted capital gains. The issue therefore is whether the Tax Court correctly held that the remaining amount received on that land and the entire amount received for mining on the other two quarters in which the Reinkes had only the surface rights, were ordinary income. The appellants contend that all of these payments — or at least a part of them — were for damage to the land caused by the mining and that payments for damage to a capital asset are entitled to capital gains treatment. We need not consider the latter issue, however, because the underlying predicate for the argument — that the payments were for damages to the land — is not established by the record.

A. Both coal lease agreements stated that the 10c per ton payments were “as royalty for coal ... and as rental payments and damages for any surface used, occupied or destroyed in the mining and removal of any coal.” Since no coal royalties were payable with respect to the two quarters in which the Reinkes owned only the surface rights and the Commissioner gave capital gains treatment for the portion of the payments on the other quarter that did represent royalties for coal, all of the payments here at issue necessarily constituted “rental payments and damages for any surface used, occupied or destroyed” in the mining.

As the Tax Court correctly held, there is no evidence in the record showing what portion of these payments was for rent and what portion was for damages to the land, or evidence that would permit the court to estimate the portion that represented damages. The Reinkes “had the burden of proving facts essential to bring themselves within the section of the statutes providing for capital gains treatment as claimed.” Estate of Carter v. Commissioner, 298 F.2d 192, 195 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 370 U.S. 910, 82 S.Ct. 1257, 8 L.Ed.2d 404 (1962).

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46 F.3d 760, 75 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 736, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1458, 1995 WL 27474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-ervin-a-reinke-deceased-marion-reinke-personal-representative-ca8-1995.