McDuffie v. United States

19 F. Supp. 239, 85 Ct. Cl. 212
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 3, 1937
Docket42552
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 19 F. Supp. 239 (McDuffie v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDuffie v. United States, 19 F. Supp. 239, 85 Ct. Cl. 212 (cc 1937).

Opinion

BOOTH, Chief Justice.

This tax suit is brought by the receiver of the Pan American Petroleum Company, a California corporation, for an alleged overpayment of income taxes for the calendar year 1925. . The facts involved have been stipulated, thereby reducing the issues to be adjudicated to two distinct ones.

The plaintiff is engaged in the production and transportation of crude oil, and this controversy arises out of its activities with respect to this commodity. Plaintiff’s and its parent company’s consolidated tax return for the calendar year 1925 disclosed plaintiff’s tax liability to be the sum of $416,654.20, and this total sum was paid by plaintiff in quarterly installments during the year 1926. Thereafter on January 5, 1928, March 6, 1929, and March 20, 1933, plaintiff filed three claims for the refund of alleged overpayments of taxes for 1925, the final one seeking the refund of the total tax paid for 1925. It is conceded that these claims were filed in time and meet the law and regulations of the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

On September 22, 1933, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued to plaintiff a certificate of overassessment for the year 1925 for the sum of $22,379.79, and on October 7, 1933, rejected all the above refund claims to the extent of $394,274.41. The sum of $22,379.79 was an overpayment and was credited upon an outstanding judgment against the plaintiff in favor of the United States'.

The first item in suit grows out of the following facts: Plaintiff during the calendar year 1925 incurred incidental expenses represented in wages paid, money expended for repairs, fuel, and hauling in connection with its development and operation of oil leases, to the extent of $1,007,493.50. Plaintiff originally capitalized these expenditures. June 18, 1927, the following Treasury Decision, known as T. D. 4025, was approved:

“Under the provisions of Article 223, Regulations 69, such incidental expenses as are paid for wages, fuel, repairs, hauling, etc., in connection with the exploration of oil and gas property, drilling of wells, building of pipe lines, and development of such property may at the option of the taxpayer be deducted as a developmeñt expense or charged to capital account. The regulations promulgated under the Revenue Acts of 1918, 1921, and 1924 provide for the same option.
“In view of the change in the basis for depletion provided in the Revenue Act of 1926, in the case of oil and gas wells, taxpayers may make a new election as to the treatment of the expenditures above mentioned for taxable periods beginning on or after January 1, 1925, but not later than six months after the date of this decision. Taxpayers desiring to make a new election are required to file amended returns for the taxable periods involved within six months from the date of this decision.”

December 16, 1927, plaintiff complied with the provisions of T.D. 4025, filed an amended return for 1925 and claimed as a deduction the above exploration expenses, and the Commissioner thereafter allowed the claim in full. What plaintiff now complains of is the fact that after the Commissioner allowed the full amount of stated intangible expenses as a deduction, he made an offsetting adjustment of plaintiff’s tax liability by treating part of said intangible *244 expenses as part of the cost of products held in plaintiff's closing inventory for 1925, thereby increasing plaintiff’s taxable net income for 1925 in the sum of $522,-391.37.

As stated in the findings, “in determining the amount of this adjustment the Commissioner applied a rate of 21.73 percent as the relation which transfers of oil from leases bore to total transfers and purchases of oil. However, both parties hereto agree that the correct rate to be applied is 17.675 percent.” In the event the basis followed by the Commissioner in determining the cost of the closing inventory is approved, the effect of the stipulation would be to reduce the closing inventory by the difference between $522,391.37, the adjustment made by the Commissioner on the basis of a rate of 21.73 per cent, and $459,885.31, the adjustment based upon the rate of 17.675 per cent, now agreed upon.

What the Commissioner did in determining the plaintiff’s inventory adjustment was to ascertain the cost of plaintiff’s oil on hand at the close of the year 1925 by treating as a part thereof the intangible development costs incurred on the properties in 1925 and allowed as an expense under plaintiff’s election. These costs comprised expenses incurred on wells as follows: (1) Expenses incurred after production commenced on wells that produced during the year; (2) expenses incurred before production (but during the year) on wells that produced during the year; and (3) expenses during the year on wells that did not produce during the year, but which were located on the producing property.

The plaintiff concedes that a pro rata. proportion of intangible expenses incurred during the period of production is properly allocated to inventory costs of oil on hand at the end of the year, so that what remains of plaintiff’s challenge to the Commissioner’s action is confined to the second and third factors resorted to by the Commissioner in valuing plaintiff’s closing inventory for the year 1925.

The Commissioner under the regulations treated the oil leasehold as a unit, and manifestly as thus segregated the oil deposit, if any, obtained from exploration of the leasehold involves the process of drilling wells, some of which may produce and others may be nonproductive. Nevertheless the expense involved in the exploration of the property becomes pro rata a part of the cost of oil obtained from the same and on hand at the close of the taxable year.

It is true the plaintiff possessed an option either to deduct intangible costs as operating expenses or capitalize them returnable through depletion. The issue we have is whether the exercise of this option precludes the Commissioner in the ascertainment of inventory values from resorting in part to this class of expenses as a part of the cost of the product on hand at the close of the year. That it does not is admitted by plaintiff as to producing wells, and the Commissioner resorts to the disputed items only when the nonproductive wells are located upon a leasehold (property) that did produce oil during the taxable year.

The plaintiff’s argument, as we apprehend it‘centers cost of the product upon precisely the same items employed by the Commissioner, but limits the computation to individual producing wells rather than to the unitary character of the transaction.

If “A” leases from “B” a 160-acre tract of land for the purpose of drilling for oil, and “A” drills twenty wells thereon, ten of which produce oil and ten of which are nonproductive, then i't is apparent that if the leasehold yields 10,000 barrels of oil within the year the pro rata expense of the exploration for that period enters into the cost of the oil produced, and inventory values are to be stated in accord with the provision of the revenue act authorizing the same.

The above illustration may, we think, be applied to intangible development expenses incurred with respect to wells drilled upon a leasehold prior to production. When the wells so drilled come into production, the result is precisely similar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 239, 85 Ct. Cl. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcduffie-v-united-states-cc-1937.