King Oil Co. v. Commissioner

3 T.C.M. 1006, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 106
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1944
DocketDocket No. 1714.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 3 T.C.M. 1006 (King Oil Co. 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
King Oil Co. v. Commissioner, 3 T.C.M. 1006, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 106 (tax 1944).

Opinion

King Oil Company v. Commissioner.
King Oil Co. v. Commissioner
Docket No. 1714.
United States Tax Court
1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 106; 3 T.C.M. (CCH) 1006; T.C.M. (RIA) 44314;
September 27, 1944
*106 Harry C. Weeks, Esq., Sinclair Bldg., Fort Worth, Tex., for the petitioner. Frank B. Appleman, Esq., for the respondent.

ARUNDELL

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

This is a proceeding to redetermine deficiencies in income and excess profits taxes for the calendar year 1939, in the amounts of $9,693.29 and $3,428.09, respectively. Certain concessions have been made by both parties and will be given effect in the recomputation under Rule 50. Only one issue remains, namely, whether petitioner can deduct from its 1939 income "intangible drilling and development costs," the amount of which is not in dispute, incurred in the drilling of certain oil wells on leased properties.

Findings of Fact

Petitioner, the King Oil Company, is a Delaware corporation with its principal office in Wichita Falls, Texas. It is engaged primarily in the business of developing oil properties and producing oil. Its return for the period here involved was filed with the Collector of Internal Revenue for the second collection district of Texas.

Petitioner had previously exercised the option where it was available under proper circumstances to charge to expense so-called "intangible drilling and development*107 costs" incurred in the drilling of oil wells. In its return for 1939 deductions for intangible drilling and development costs in connection with the following wells and leases were claimed as set forth below:

Claimed
Name of LeaseWell No.Deductions
Waggoner "N"9$ 3,977.08
Crudup66,882.29
Waggoner "R"7 and 84,497.05
King-Waggoner35,895.79
Rathke33,612.96
Wigley4, 5, 6 and 746,734.03
J. & J. Waggoner112,484.28

WAGGONER "N" WELL NO. 9

The Waggoner "N" lease comprises a 320 acre tract in Wilbarger County, Texas, which had been leased to petitioner on December 9, 1935, by W. T. Waggoner Estate. The lease contained the usual royalty provision and read in part as follows:

"That the Lessor in consideration of the sum of One Dollar, cash in hand paid by the Lessee, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and the covenants and agreements hereinafter set out, to be kept and performed by the Lessee have granted, demised, leased and let and by these presents do grant, demise, lease and let unto the Lessee for the sole and only purpose of drilling and mining (but not manufacturing) for gas and oil or either of them, the following lands*108 in Dilbarger County, Texas, to-wit:

* * * * *

"As a part of the consideration hereof the Lessee covenants and agrees and binds himself to begin actual drilling of a well on said premises within 30 days from date hereof, and to prosecute the drilling thereof with due diligence to a depth of 2400 feet, unless oil or gas is found and produced and saved at a lesser depth

"If no well be begun hereon, as above provided, or if a well is begun and the drilling is not prosecuted with due diligence, as herein provided, or if said well should be abandoned, (failure to drill for as much as 30 days at any one time, shall be an abandonment) then this lease shall immediately become null, void and of no effect and shall automatically revert to the Lessor herein without the action of any court

"Provided, however, in case a well is abandoned, and the next well shall be drilling within 20 days from abandonment of the former well, the Lessee shall have 60 days from the completion of one well in which to begin the actual drilling of another well, such well to be prosecuted with due diligence and to be under the same conditions, requirements and limitations as the first well mentioned herein. And *109 the Lessee shall and will continue to dig additional wells on said tract, each succeeding well to be begun within 60 days from the completion of the preceding well, and to be drilled under the same conditions, requirements and limitations as provided for the first well, until the Lessee shall have dug a well on each twenty acres herein, the well for a center. Only producing wells shall hold twenty acres in a square form, the well for a center, for the time herein specified."

Prior to 1939 petitioner had drilled eight wells on this lease, six of which were producers. The ninth well, the one here in question, was begun on February 22, 1939, and completed as a producer April 5, 1939. At the time well No. 9 was begun there were four producing wells within the limits of the N.E. one-fourth, containing 80 acres of the leased tract. Well No. 9 was located in this N.E. one-fourth. Twenty acres in square form with well No. 9 as the center cover acreage not included in any other square 20 acre tract having any other well as the center thereof. Petitioner expended $3,977.08 for intangible drilling and development costs in the drilling of well No. 9.

GRUDUP WELL NO. 6

Prior to August 1, *110 1938, H. L.

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Related

F. H. E. Oil Co. v. Commissioner
3 T.C. 13 (U.S. Tax Court, 1944)
Hardesty v. Commissioner
43 B.T.A. 245 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1941)

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3 T.C.M. 1006, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-oil-co-v-commissioner-tax-1944.