Ideal Basic Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner

82 T.C. No. 28, 82 T.C. 352, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 101
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1984
DocketDocket No. 11847-78
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 82 T.C. No. 28 (Ideal Basic Industries, Inc. 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
Ideal Basic Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner, 82 T.C. No. 28, 82 T.C. 352, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 101 (tax 1984).

Opinion

Goffe, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in and additions to petitioner’s Federal income tax as follows:

Additions to tax Calendar year Deficiency under sec. 6653(a)1
1971. $414,016 0
1972 . 275,335 0
1973 . 867,424 $43,371
1974 . 579,348 28,967
2,136,123 72,338

The deficiencies result primarily from adjustments to petitioner’s deductions for percentage depletion with respect to its potash mining operations, with the exception of Issue 7 which relates to petitioner’s cement operations.

The issues remaining for decision are as follows: (1) Whether the leaching and crystallization processes by which petitioner produces chemical grade muriate (and some soluble grade muriate in the chemical circuit) are mining processes within the meaning of section 613(c)(4)(D); (2) whether storage of petitioner’s muriate products on its mine sites is a mining process or a process necessary or incidental to mining; (3) whether loading for shipment of petitioner’s muriate products at its mines is a mining process or a process necessary or incidental to mining; (4) whether the standard grade muriate which petitioner sold to customers at Carlsbad, and muriate which petitioner shipped from Carlsbad, N. Mex., to Dumas and Fort Worth, Tex., for conversion into potassium sulphate are minerals of like kind and grade so that petitioner’s actual sales price (f.o.b. Carlsbad) of the former can be used as a representative market or field price for the latter; (5) whether petitioner’s costs of leasing some railcars from an independent leasing company for use by the railroads in transporting muriate for petitioner’s customers is a general overhead expense rather than a direct mining or nonmining cost; (6) whether the freight charges which petitioner prepaid to the common carrier railroads for and on behalf of its customers to transport potash from petitioner’s mines to its customers in leased cars must be disregarded in a depletion calculation because (a) they are not petitioner’s costs, (b) they are incurred after the f.o.b. point of sale, (c) there are other sales that establish a representative market or field price on a first marketable product price, or (d) they qualify as purchased transportation to the customer; and (7) whether petitioner’s interest income may be offset against its interest expense for purposes of calculating the net income limitation with respect to petitioner’s cement depletion allowance.

The findings of fact and opinion are combined under the headings which describe the issues.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

General

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.

Petitioner Ideal Basic Industries, Inc. (Ideal Basic), is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Colorado. Petitioner and members of its affiliated group filed consolidated Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1971 through 1974 with the Internal Revenue Service in Ogden, Utah. These returns were filed using the accrual method of accounting. For the sake of simplicity, we shall refer to petitioner in the singular.

Petitioner’s Potash Co. of America Division (PCA) is the continuation of a predecessor corporation, Potash Co. of America, which petitioner acquired on December 31, 1967. PCA, previously as predecessor and currently as a division of petitioner, has been mining sylvinite ore and concentrating and producing potassium chloride or KC1, commonly called "muriate of potash” or "muriate,” near Carlsbad, N. Mex., since 1935. It has also operated a sylvinite mine and concentration plant at Saskatoon, in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, since 1963.

Issue 1. Treatment Processes

The word "potash” is derived from the residues — pot ashes— originally obtained by evaporating, in iron pots, solutions dissolved out of or "leached” from wood ashes. Today, most potash is recovered through shaft mines from deeply buried salt beds deposited as the result of the evaporation of ancient seas dating back to early periods in the earth’s geological history.

Potash denotes a chemical combination of the element potassium, an alkali metal, with one or more elements. When used in connection with fertilizers, potash refers to various salts of potassium, including chlorides, sulphates, and carbonates. Potash is also the term applied to the oxide of potassium, K20, which is an unstable compound not found independently in nature.

In order to use a common unit of measurement for the potassium content of the various salts of potassium used for agricultural purposes, the value of the potash product is normally expressed commercially in terms of the theoretical relative content of K20 (potassium oxide), or "K20 equivalent,” derived from the potassium content of the particular potash product, thus providing a basis for the comparison of all potash minerals.

In the case of muriate (KC1), the conversion ratio is 100 to 63.171, meaning that the potassium content of 100 pounds of KC1 is the same as the potassium content of 63.171 pounds of K20. Accordingly, chemically pure KC1 is said to contain 63.171-percent equivalent K20. The KC1 content of muriate can, therefore, be determined from the equivalent K20 content by multiplying the equivalent K20 content by 1.583 (the reciprocal of 0.63171).

Potassium chloride occurs in nature as the mineral sylvite. Minerals are chemical elements or compounds occurring naturally in the earth’s crust. When a deposit of minerals is of sufficient abundance to be profitably mined and treated to extract its metallic or nonmetallic components, it is called an ore. The ore petitioner mines in Carlsbad and Saskatoon is sylvinite, interlocked crystals of sylvite (potassium chloride, muriate, or KC1), and halite (sodium chloride, common salt, or NaCl).

During the years 1971-74, the Carlsbad ore contained roughly 31-percent KC1 and 68-percent common salt, as well as clay slime (together with other insolubles) which, because of its nature, highly complicates the treatment of these ores. The worthless material such as clay removed during the extraction is called gangue.

During the years in question, the Canadian ore contained roughly 43-percent KC1, 52-percent common salt, and 5-percent insolubles, and hence required slightly different but substantially similar treatment processes.

The mechanical processes necessary to segregate valuable minerals from gangue are collectively referred to as mineral dressing. Since most ores contain more than one type of mineral, it is necessary to free them from their interlocked state. This is accomplished by various treatment processes which break them down into finer consistencies. The treatment processes fall into two broad categories: the first is crushing and grinding in order to prepare the mineral for "beneficiation”; the second involves breaking down the minerals in order to reject valueless waste and recover the valuable mineral or expose the desired mineral for further treatment.

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Ideal Basic Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner
82 T.C. No. 28 (U.S. Tax Court, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
82 T.C. No. 28, 82 T.C. 352, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ideal-basic-industries-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1984.