Kettleman Hills Royalty Syndicate No. 1 v. Commissioner
This text of 116 F.2d 382 (Kettleman Hills Royalty Syndicate No. 1 v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Kettleman Hills Royalty Syndicate No. 1, a trust, hereafter called taxpayer, petitions for a review of a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals holding it a business trust, an association corporate in character, and its income for the tax years 1934, 1935, and 1936 taxable under the provisions of Section 801(a)(2) of the Revenue Act of 1934 and Section 1001(a)(2) of the Revenue Actof Í936, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, §. 3797(a)(3).
. Taxpayer is a trust, admittedly in the corporate form. * Its enterprise is the ad *383 ministration of royalty rights contracts with the Associated Oil Company covering lands in what are known as the North Dome Arca and the Middle Dome Area of Kettle-man Hills in Kings County, California.
Taxpayer claims that in exercising its rights and performing its obligations under these contracts it is not conducting a business for profit of the character of the business enterprises in Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U.S. 344, 56 S.Ct. 289, 80 L.Ed. 263; Swanson v. Commissioner, 296 U.S. 362, 56 S.Ct. 283, 80 L.Ed. 273; Helvering v. Coleman-Gilbert Associates, 296 U.S. 396; Helvering v. Combs, 296 U.S. 365, 56 S.Ct. 287, 80 L.Ed. 275.
It is stipulated concerning all the royalties received by the taxpayer in the tax year in question and in prior years that they were received from the North Dome lands under an agreement of May 5, 1928, providing that “Second party [Associated] agrees to pay to first party [taxpayer] a royalty of 7%% of the value at the well of all oil and/or gas produced and sold by second party (except oil or gas used for production purposes or unavoidably lost) * * *, or at first party’s [taxpayer’s] option, exercised not oftener than once in any one calendar year, upon sixty days’ previous written notice, second party will deliver into first party’s tanks on the said premises, or at the mouth of well to pipe line designated by first party, first party’s 7%% of said oil,” and later modifying agreements, hereafter discussed, retaining this option provision. The royalty interest in the continuing production thus create for the taxpayer the right to receive such oil and gas or their money equivalent.
Under the original contracts covering the Middle Dome lands, it was provided that taxpayer’s royalty interest should be delivered in “money or in kind and in the same manner as delivery is made to the Government.” Whether the option to have delivery in money or in kind under this provision rests in taxpayer, Associated or the Government, delivery in kind necessarily is contemplated as a likely business function by the taxpayer trust holding the royalty contract.
The acquisition and distribution of such oil and gas necessarily involve the business of selling the successive deliveries of such material either'through such an agency as that in United States v. Trust No. B. I. 35, 9 Cir., 107 F.2d 22, 26, or by the taxpayer itself. The articles of association contemplate such a business activity in connection with the royalty and provide that taxpayer is authorized to “buy and sell oil, gas, gasoline or hydrocarbon substances.”
It is thus apparent that the taxpayer has to make the business judgment from time to time concerning the existing continuing production, whether it will be more profitable for the enterprise to exercise one or the other of the options to receive payment (a) in the form of oil, gas or gasoline or (b) in cash. The trust declaration provides that in order that taxpayer “may dispose of” these petroleum products when received in kind it may make “promissory notes” and “evidences of indebtedness * * * necessary in their judgment to protect or take advantage” of their acquisition. That is to say, the trust contemplates the taxpayer might store and process the oil, gas or gasoline and dispose of them as was done in Trust No. B. I. 35, supra, and gives it in detail the power so to do.
It is our opinion that in making these successive decisions whether it will require the delivery of the royalty product in kind or in cash, the taxpayer is making a succession of business judgments and “is doing the business” within the decision of Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U.S. 344, 360, 56 S.Ct. 289, 80 L.Ed. 263, though through the tax years in question it thought it better business to accept cash rather than the oil products.
*384 In prior years the taxpayer trust had engaged in other business activities. It was proposed to taxpayer that .the North Dome contract be modified to provide that instead of the royalty coming from the described lands, there should be a merger of production with a much wider area of land and that taxpayer should receive a percentage of the total production of the wider area in lieu of that from the lesser. Taxpayer exercised its business judgment and entered into a so-called modified but, in fact, a new contract for a different percentage of the petroleum products from a different area.
It likewise exercised its business judgment in making a similar new agreement in lieu of that for the lands 'in the Middle Dome Area.
The business of making the new contract with the Associated for the North Dome Area oil lands was prior to the tax years in question,- but the income for the tax years come from that one of the two new contracts. That the income was so derived from one of the business actions of prior years does not make it any the less the income of a business trust. Morrissey v. Commissioner, supra, 296 U.S. 361, 56 S.Ct. 289, 80 L.Ed. 263.
The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.
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116 F.2d 382, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 139, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kettleman-hills-royalty-syndicate-no-1-v-commissioner-ca9-1940.