Estate of H. H. Weinert, Deceased, Jane W. Blumberg, and Hilda B. Weinert v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

294 F.2d 750, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 125, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5417, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3663
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 1961
Docket17992
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 294 F.2d 750 (Estate of H. H. Weinert, Deceased, Jane W. Blumberg, and Hilda B. Weinert v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Estate of H. H. Weinert, Deceased, Jane W. Blumberg, and Hilda B. Weinert v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 294 F.2d 750, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 125, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5417, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3663 (5th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This case presents an oil and gas income tax problem concerning an oilman-investor sharing arrangement cast in the outward form of a loan, but one that is in substance a carried interest transaction 1 or a carved out production pay *751 ment 2 for development. The taxpayer’s original brief describes the arrangement as a carried interest transaction. The Commissioner, relying on Lake, 3 describes the arrangement as an oil payment that is nothing more than an assignment of future income. In reply briefs the taxpayer appears willing to accept the change in nomenclature, if the Commissioner will accept all of Lake; the Lake opinion excludes from taxable assignments of income carved out payments pledged for development. The case turns on economic interest, not correct nomenclature.

The taxpayer, the carried party, sold to the investor, the carrying party, for $100,000 cash, (1) a one-half interest in certain unitized, oil and gas leases and a processing plant to be built and (2) a $50,000 production payment payable out of the retained half. There is no tax issue as to this sale. In addition, the carrying party agreed to make “loans and advances”, up to $150,000, to pay the taxpayer’s proportionate share of development costs (drilling, operating, and cycling plant costs) repayable solely out of net profits from the carried party’s retained half interest in the leases and *752 the plant. The taxpayer had no personal liability for these loans and advances. Simultaneously with the execution of these agreements, the carried party assigned to a trustee his retained half interest in the leases and the plant, under a trust agreement requiring the trustee to pay all of the income to the carrying party until he recouped his development costs. The tax issue relates to this transaction. The question for decision is whether the carried party is taxable on the revenues paid to reimburse the carrying party for the advance of development costs.

A majority of the Tax Court, 31 T.C. 928, considered that the form of the transaction was controlling; that limiting the carrying party’s recovery to the taxpayer’s one-half interest in the leases and recycling plant could not “convert what was clearly a loan * * * into a conveyance of the equitable interest in the oil and gas in place, or into an unfettered assignment of the right to future income for a consideration”. Since this was the rationale of its decision, the Tax Court did not reach the question of whether the carrying party acquired the economic interest in the minerals in place. Abercrombie is conspicuous by its absence from the opinion. The Tax Court distinguished its decisions in Manahan 4 Prater, 5 and Wood. 6 Three judges concurred only in the result. They rejected the majority’s reasoning that such transactions were loans, but held for the Commissioner on the ground that the carried party’s right of recovery extended to the net profits from the cycling plant as well as from the mineral production; that, therefore, under Anderson v. Helvering, 7 the carrying party did not possess the economic interest in the minerals in place that would shift to him the tax burden.

Before this Court the Commissioner relies: (1) on Abercrombie and Prater to show that the carrying party’s advances were a loan; (2) on Lake to show that the carried party received ordinary taxable income at the time when the assigned interest produced the income used in repayment of the loan; (3) on Anderson and LaGloria 8 to show that the carrying party had no economic interest in the minerals in place. The taxpayer contends that: (1) the transaction was not a loan, distinguishing Abercrombie and Prater, and analogizing the case to Manahan; (2) the substance of the transaction was the exchange of a carved out mineral interest for cash sums pledged to the development of the property; and, under Lake, such sums come within an exception to the general rule relating to assignments of future income since they are used to develop the property; (3) Anderson and LaGloria are distinguishable, and the interest the carrying party received in exchange for advancing development costs was an economic interest.

The case is close, but we conclude that the taxpayer’s reasoning comes closer than the Commissioner’s to carrying out perhaps the most basic principle in taxation: economic realities determine tax consequences. In no area of the law is the application of this principle more necessary than in taxation of oil and gas. This conclusion is in harmony with the administrative position on the allocation of income and deductions in sharing arrangements, a position that since the publication of GCM 22730, 1941-1 Cum. Bull. 214, has been relatively stable. 9 *753 Whether the subject transaction is in the nature of a carried interest or a carve-out for development, its effect is to shift the economic interest in the mineral deposit thereby causing a shift in the division of the taxable income. It is unrealistic to consider it a loan.

We reverse and remand.

I.

The ease was submitted on a stipulation of agreed facts and documents. A review of these shows that the carrying party’s so-called “loans and advances” were pledged to the development of the minerals and were a vital consideration for the taxpayer’s sale of half the mineral interest and the $50,000 production payment.

The petitioners are the Executrix of the Estate of H. H. Weinert, deceased, and Hilda B. Weinert, widow of the deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Weinert filed joint income tax returns for 1949 and 1950, the taxable years in question. They kept their books and filed their tax returns on the cash basis of accounting.

H. H. Weinert and others (collectively referred to as Weinert or the carried party) owned certain oil and gas leases covering lands in the North Pettus Field in Goliad and Earns counties, Texas. The leases were subject to an operating and unitization agreement pooling the rights in the oil and gas leases in the area as if the unitized substances and land were included within a single lease. Participation in the unit was determined on the basis of acre feet of effective sand put in the unit. The participating parties joined in an agreement with the members of another unit and agreed to construct a cycling plant to process the unitized substances, each of the participants to share in the extracted products in accordance with his interest in the plant. Each participant was personally liable for his pro rata part of all costs and expenses incurred in the development and operation of unit area and in construction annd operation of the processing plant.

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Bluebook (online)
294 F.2d 750, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 125, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5417, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-h-h-weinert-deceased-jane-w-blumberg-and-hilda-b-weinert-ca5-1961.