James A. Lewis Engineering, Inc. v. Commissioner

39 T.C. 482, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 607
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1962
DocketDocket No. 89639
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 T.C. 482 (James A. Lewis Engineering, 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
James A. Lewis Engineering, Inc. v. Commissioner, 39 T.C. 482, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 607 (tax 1962).

Opinion

OPINION.

Black, Judge:

Preliminary Statement.

We should make it plain at the outset that we are not dealing here with the $35,000 which petitioner received for its services in making a preliminary survey of the advisability and practicability of installing a waterflood program on the Seay lease. So far as the record shows that payment was received by petitioner in cash in a prior year and was returned as gross income in that year and it is not in issue here. Petitioner received no assignment of mineral interests in the Seay lease hi connection with that $35,000 payment. What we do have in issue is whether the fair market value of the mineral interests in the Seay lease which petitioner received by way of the assignment made to it on October 16, 1957, represented taxable income paid to it as compensation for services rendered and to be rendered as the Commissioner has determined in his deficiency notice and still contends, or whether, as contended by petitioner, it represents a capital investment in the Seay lease and therefore its fair market value does not represent taxable income. It should also be made clear that the Commissioner is making no contention that when petitioner received its assignment in 1957 of mineral interests in the Seay lease it did not receive a-n interest of oil in place which entitled petitioner to depletion. In fact it is stipulated that if we sustain the Commissioner in his contention, then in that event petitioner is entitled to an additional deduction on account of cost depletion of $15,279.

Issue (a).

The first issue raised by petitioner which we have designated as Issue (a) is to the effect that even though the fair market value of the mineral interests assigned to it for its supervisory services in connection with the waterflood program on the Seay lease represented income to it, it was constructively received in 1953 and petitioner, being a cash basis taxpayer, the income was received in 1953 and would be taxable in that year and not in 1957. In support of its contention of constructive receipt petitioner relies upon the following language which was contained in the letter agreement described in our Findings of Fact:

Upon request, you' will execute, acknowledge and deliver to us a proper, recordable instrument vesting in us the production payment and overriding royalty interest above set forth.

It is respondent’s position that these interests were not received until 1957, the year in which the assignment was actually executed, and that the fair market value of these interests in the Seay lease was taxable income to petitioner in that year. The interests consisted of $65,000 payable out of one-eighth of seven-eighths of all flood production after one-eighth of seven-eighths of the flood production equaled $35,000, and, in addition, an overriding royalty interest of one-sixteenth of seven-eighths of flood oil production after petitioner had received $65,000. It is stipulated that: “The fair market value in 1957 of those mineral interests assigned to Petitioner by said instrument was $50,-500.00.” Respondent contends that petitioner’s right to receive the mineral interests was not vested and absolute in 1953 but was dependent upon a number of conditions which might never be fulfilled.

Petitioner apparently concedes that if petitioner’s right to receive the mineral interests was conditional in 1953, then petitioner did not receive such interests in that year. Petitioner argues that there were no conditions in existence that would deprive petitioner of the right to these interests. The following language is taken from petitioner’s brief:

The crucial question is whether or not there is any contingency remaining which might deprive the taxpayer of the right to have the conveyance made.

While we agree that the formalities of conveyancing are not determinative of depletable interests, Anderson v. Helvering, 310 U.S. 404 (1940), we are convinced from the record presented here that petitioner had no unqualified right in the mineral interests in 1953. In the first place, we note from the stipulation that all owners of interests in the Seay lease other than the two owners who executed the letter agreement of 1953 did not adopt, ratify, and confirm that letter agreement in question until 1956. Whatever rights petitioner was to receive in the Seay lease by the terms of the letter agreement were to be granted by all the owners of the Seay lease. As we have stated, this agreement was not adopted, ratified, and confirmed until 1956 and, therefore, the contract between all interested parties was not even in existence in 1953. Petitioner did not have an unqualified right to receive any interests in the Seay lease until such rights were agreed upon by all the owners.

We also find other conditions that make petitioner’s rights contingent and qualified in 1953. The letter agreement of 1953 itself contains language described more fully in the Findings of Fact to the effect that “if and when'1'1 the operations of the Seay lease “elected” to proceed with a waterflood program, then petitioner would prepare a schedule and that upon approval of the schedule by the operators, “then” petitioner “shall own” a $65,000 oil payment as of the first day of the next month after the total proceeds shall have amounted to $35,000. We conclude from the letter agreement itself that the parties did not intend petitioner to have any mineral rights in the Seay lease unless the above-stated conditions were fulfilled. In addition, at the time the letter of November 10, 1953, was sent by Lewis Engineering to J. B. Stoddard and Continental Oil Company it was known that title to the Seay lease was the subject of a lawsuit commenced on October 19, 1953, and it was stipulated that the pendency of this suit caused the operators to postpone consideration of the waterflood program. Petitioner had no right to the oil payment and the overriding royalty until an affirmative election was made by the operators which election they postponed until final disposition of the suit in December 1956.

Petitioner had no mineral rights in the Seay lease in 1953 while, on the other hand, there is ample evidence to support respondent’s determination that the interests were received by petitioner by virtue of the assignment made to it in 1957. The operators orally agreed at a meeting on December 17, 1956, that petitioner’s right to the oil payment would commence on the first day of the first month next ensuing when the proceeds from the sale of one-eighth of seven-eighths of flood oil production amounted to $35,000. The proceeds going to make up the $35,000 were not to commence until Januaiy 1,1957, and petitioner’s mineral interests in the Seay lease vested subsequent to that time. The mineral interests in the Seay lease were not assigned to Lewis Engineering until October 1957; accordingly, we do not believe petitioner lias shown that respondent’s determination, taking the fair market value of the interests received by petitioner into income in 1957, to be incorrect. We do not think it was constructively received in 1953 as petitioner contends.

Petitioner’s reliance on the doctrine of constructive receipt of income is misplaced.

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James A. Lewis Engineering, Inc. v. Commissioner
39 T.C. 482 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 T.C. 482, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 16, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-a-lewis-engineering-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1962.