Innis v. Commissioner

4 T.C.M. 729, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 129
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 29, 1945
DocketDocket Nos. 2735, 2736.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 4 T.C.M. 729 (Innis 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
Innis v. Commissioner, 4 T.C.M. 729, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 129 (tax 1945).

Opinion

A. B. Innis v. Commissioner. Jean B. Innis v. Commissioner.
Innis v. Commissioner
Docket Nos. 2735, 2736.
United States Tax Court
1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 129; 4 T.C.M. (CCH) 729; T.C.M. (RIA) 45246;
June 29, 1945

*129 1. Petitioner was a member of a partnership which secured a lease for the purpose of mining gold from certain land in California. The lessors reserved reversionary and other rights of ownership. The royalties paid to lessors were in terms of a percentage of net profits.

Held, royalties paid pursuant to the lease agreement were includible in lessors' gross income and excludible from the partnership's gross income.

2. Pursuant to contracts, the partnership paid to an individual for his services in securing the lease, 2 1/2 per cent of its net profits. The partnership also paid 7 1/2 per cent of its net profits to the same individual for the assignment of his option to lease certain other adjacent lands for mining purposes. The partnership is entitled to deduct such amounts from its gross income by way of amortization of the contracts. Associated Patentees, Inc., 4 T.C. 979, followed.

Valentine Brookes, Esq., for the petitioners. T. M. Mather, Esq., for the respondent.

VAN FOSSAN

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

The respondent determined deficiencies of $325.23 and $372.19 in the income taxes of the petitioner A. B. Innis for the years 1938 and 1939, respectively, and deficiencies of $328.23 and $372.08 in the income taxes of the petitioner Jean B. Innis for the same respective years. He also found an overassessment of $59.51 for the year 1940 in favor of each of the petitioners.

The following issues are presented:

1. Are amounts paid by the petitioners as sublessees of mining property to the sublessors, based on a percentage of the net operating profits as defined by the lease, excludible from the sublessees' gross income as royalty payments? If they are not, are such payments deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses?

2. Are amounts paid to an individual by the petitioners for his seices in acquainting them with the property and computed on the operating net profits*131 therefrom, excludible from the petitioners' gross income?

3. Are amounts paid to an individual for the assignment of an option on certain mining property and based on a percentage of the net operating profits therefrom, excludible from the petitioners' gross income?

Findings of Fact

Certain facts were stipulated. The pertinent portions thereof are as follows:

The petitioners are husband and wife and reside in California. They filed their separate income tax returns for the taxable years on a community property basis, with the collector of internal revenue for the northern district of California. The petitioner A. B. Innis will hereinafter be referred to as the petitioner.

During the taxable years the petitioner and his father, W. O. Innis, were partners doing business under the name of Penn Dredging Company. Under the partnership agreement the petitioner was entitled to receive 50 per cent of the net profits, computed after the payment of salaries to the partners. In March 1938, the partners entered into an agreement with Reed H. Richards and A. Y. Taylor. In this agreement Richards and Taylor described themselves as "possessors and lessees" of certain lands in Nevada County, *132 California, which the lessees "hired and took" for the purpose of mining gold, etc. They also designated themselves as lessors and the partners as lessees of the property which the partners were given the right to enter upon and mine for gold and other minerals for a period of five years or until the prior removal of all gold and other minerals, profitably recoverable. The parties might abandon the property if, in their opinion, it should be found unprofitable to continue mining. The partners agreed to start operations by April 1, 1938, weather conditions permitting, and also to furnish the sublessors on request a map or plat of operations and of prospecting. The sublessors were permitted to continue their operation until the partners had moved 25,000 yards of gravel and thereafter could remove their equipment or leave it on the ground, as they chose.

The partners retained title to, and the right to remove any buildings they erected, and agreed to hold the sublessors free and harmless of all liens and liability arising from operations and to permit no liens to attach to the property. The sublessors retained the right to eject the partners from the premises and to terminate the agreement*133 for failure of the partners to abide by the foregoing covenant, in which event the partners agreed not to remove their equipment until all liens should be removed and all claims paid. The rights acquired by the partners under the agreement were not assignable without the sublessors' consent except by death of a partner. The partners agreed to pay Richards and Taylor 33 1/3 per cent of the net profits from all operations producing an average "clean-up period" yield of less than 50 cents per yard and 40 per cent when such yield should be 50 cents or more per yard. Upon due notice of a breach of the agreement by its lessees, and their failure to remedy their delinquency within a given time, their contractual right would be forfeited and the lessors might take immediate possession of the property without notice. In determining net profits, the cost of operations was deemed to be a maximum of $6,000 per month but, if less than that sum, the actual cost was to be the factor in computing net profits. During the taxable years the partners mined gold on the properties involved in the agreement and made payments pursuant thereto to Richards and Taylor amounting to $21,787.45 in the year 1938*134 and $33,573.82 in the year 1939.

The partners first became acquainted with the property of Richards and Taylor through M. G. Parker, who showed them its location and possible value. In consideration of his services the partners agreed to make payments to Parker pursuant to an agreement dated February 28, 1938. It was customary in the mining business in the region involved for the mine operator to compensate in this fashion the individual who acquainted him with the property.

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Bluebook (online)
4 T.C.M. 729, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/innis-v-commissioner-tax-1945.