Keller Mines, Inc. v. Commissioner
This text of 1962 T.C. Memo. 31 (Keller Mines, 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
TIETJENS, Judge: The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the petitioners' income taxes for 1957 as follows:
| Docket | Income Tax |
| Number | Deficiency |
| 85920 | $10,085.28 |
| 85921 | 3,019.24 |
| 85922 | 3,057.38 |
| 85923 | 295.02 |
| 85924 | 795.33 |
The controlling issue is the extent beyond 30 cents a ton of coal, to which the petitioner corporation is entitled to deduct, as an ordinary and necessary business expense, a royalty of 50 cents a ton of coal, paid by it to a closely related partnership.
Findings of Fact
The stipulated facts are hereby*277 found.
Keller Mines, Inc. is an Ohio corporation engaged in the business of strip mining coal. It is on an accrual, fiscal year ending October 31, method of reporting income. Petitioner John Oreskovich and his now deceased wife Margaret, the latter being here represented by her Estate, lived in Atwater, Ohio in 1957. Petitioners Alfred J. and Evelyn Silbiger, husband and wife, also lived in Atwater, Ohio in 1957, as did petitioners Alexander and Pauline Rach, husband and wife. Petitioners Edwin W. and Elisabeth H. Jones, husband and wife, lived in Ravenna, Ohio. All of the petitioners filed their respective income tax returns with the district director of internal revenue at Cleveland, Ohio, the husbands and wives filing jointly.
During the periods here material, a partnership known as the Atwater Company was owned and controlled, in the same proportionate interests, by the same men who owned and controlled Keller Mines, Inc. The partnership operated a hauling company and it owned several farms. John Oreskovich was the managing partner. Oreskovich and Silbiger, another one of the partners, on October 4, 1955, entered into an option-lease agreement with Richard, Lois, David and*278 Ruth Myers, the fee owners of a 330-acre tract of land in Mahoning County, Ohio. This agreement granted a 180-day option to purchase all the profitable and strippable coal underlying the tract for a royalty of 30 cents per ton for all coal sold over the scales, and also a similar option to purchase all limestone and clay for a royalty of 12 cents per ton for each ton sold over the scales. On the acceptance of the option-lease and until mining operation began, an advance royalty of one dollar per acre, per year was to be paid to the lessors.
Oreskovich and Silbiger, by instrument dated October 10, 1955, assigned all of their rights to mine the coal contained in the option-lease agreement of October 4, 1955, to Atwater Company, the partnership.
Atwater Company, through Oreskovich, entered into an agreement on October 11, 1955, whereby it assigned to Keller Mines, Inc. all of the coal underlying the Myers tract, covered in the October 4, 1955 optionlease agreement for the payment to Atwater of 50 cents per ton of the coal mined and sold by Keller Mines, Inc.
Test drilling on the tract took place after October 4, 1955 and before March 29, 1956, when the Myerses were notified that*279 the option would be exercised. At the latter time Atwater paid the Myerses an advance royalty of $330 as provided by the October 4, 1955 agreement. The test drilling showed that the Myerses' property was one of the best coal properties in Mahoning County.
Keller Mines, Inc. began strip mining coal from the Myerses' property during the last part of its fiscal year ending October 31, 1956. During the next fiscal year it extracted and sold from the Myerses' property 11,976.26 tons of coal and paid Atwater the agreed royalty of $5,988.13. For the same coal Atwater in turn paid the Myerses $3,592.88, as agreed.
Atwater Company, by similar transactions, obtained a 90-day option for the right to mine and sell coal for a 30 cents per ton royalty on all coal sold, from a 100-acre Brodzinski tract, adjacent to the Myerses' property, and assigned it within the option period to Keller Mines, Inc. for a royalty of 50 cents per ton of coal sold. Prior to the expiration of the option, and on October 29, 1956, Atwater exercised the option and paid an agreed advanced royalty of $100. A small quantity of the coal seam extended from the Myerses' property into the adjoining Brodzinski property. The*280 acquisition of the Brodzinski lease afforded Keller Mines advantages in its working of the Myers tract. A total of 2,539.8 tons of coal was mined from the Brodzinski property which called for a royalty of $761.94 to Brodzinski at 30 cents per ton. No further coal will be mined from the property, but Atwater paid the Brodzinskis total royalties of $1,000 as agreed. Keller Mines, Inc. paid Atwater $1,269.90, at the 50 cents per ton royalty rate, for the Brodzinski coal.
Prior to 1955 tax counsel advised the parties that the coal strip mining business should be conducted by the partnership instead of the corporation; that new leases should be acquired by the partnership; and that Keller Mines, Inc. should liquidate after completing the mining of their present properties.
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1962 T.C. Memo. 31, 21 T.C.M. 142, 1962 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-mines-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1962.