Mobil Oil Corp. v. Department of Treasury

373 N.W.2d 730, 422 Mich. 473
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1985
Docket70388, (Calendar No. 3)
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 373 N.W.2d 730 (Mobil Oil Corp. v. Department of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobil Oil Corp. v. Department of Treasury, 373 N.W.2d 730, 422 Mich. 473 (Mich. 1985).

Opinion

Boyle, J.

This case involves the taxation of oil and gas royalties under Michigan’s Single Business Tax Act (sbta), MCL 208.1 et seq.; MSA 7.558(1) et seq. Petitioner Mobil Oil is an operator-lessee under an oil and gas lease. The lease in question obliges Mobil to give over to the landowner-lessor, either in kind or in money, 1/8 of the gross production from the property.

In computing its taxes for 1976, Mobil did not include the 1/8 of the gross production from its leased property, which it had given over to the landowner-lessor, in its Michigan tax base. Respondent, Michigan Department of Treasury, assessed a deficiency against Mobil’s 1976 taxes equal to the single business tax on 1/8 of the gross production. Mobil petitioned the Michigan Tax Tribunal, which held in favor of the department. The Court of Appeals affirmed, and we granted leave to ap *476 peal. We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.

I

This matter is presented on stipulated facts and with agreed upon issues which can be summarized as follows:

Does the phrase "all royalties” as used in the SBTA, § 9(4)(g), MCL 208.9(4)(g); MSA 7.558(9)(4)(g), include oil and gas royalties? Does the use of the term "deduct” in the sbta, § 9(4) mandate that oil and gas royalties not be reached by the sbta, § 9(4)(g)? Do the economic realities of oil and gas royalty transactions and the system of taxation created by the sbta require that oil and gas royalties be taxed to the recipient, rather than to the payor?

Section 9 of the sbta, MCL 208.9; MSA 7.558(9), provides for the calculation of a taxpayer’s initial tax base. The initial tax base is thereafter apportioned between Michigan and other states in which the taxpayer does business. MCL 208.40-208.69; MSA 7.558(40)-7.558(69). Certain adjustments and exclusions are then allowed against the Michigan tax base. MCL 208.23, 208.35; MSA 7.558(23), 7.558(35). What remains after these calculations have been performed is subject to the single business tax. MCL 208.31; MSA 7.558(31).

Section 9 begins the calculation of the corporate taxpayer’s initial tax base with federal taxable income, sbta, §9(1). In the remainder of §9, certain items are added to and subtracted from federal taxable income. Section 9(4), the section involved in the present litigation, provides:

*477 Add, to the extent deducted in arriving at federal taxable income:

*
*
(g) All royalties.

A related provision, the sbta, § 9(7), provides:

Deduct, to the extent included in arriving at federal taxable income:
(c) All royalties.

In the federal tax base, federal taxable income, royalties paid out are not included, but royalties received are included. Section 9(7)(c) requires royalties to be taken out of the sbta tax base if they are included in the federal tax base, and § 9(4)(g) requires royalties to be added to the sbta tax base if they are not included in the federal base. In other words, the Michigan sbta, in terms, taxes the one who pays royalties and not the one who receives them.

Mobil here contends, however, that the. sbta, §9(4)(g) is not applicable to the 1/8 of gross production it gives over to the landowner-lessor under its oil and gas lease. Mobil and amici curiae assert that the term "royalties” in § 9(4)(g) does not include oil and gas royalties; that, because oil and gas royalties are "excluded,” rather than "deducted,” in "arriving at federal taxable income,” § 9(4)(g) does not require them to be added to the sbta tax base; and that the economic realities of oil and gas transactions, and the system of taxation created by the sbta, are such that the Legislature cannot have intended to reach oil and gas royalties under § 9(4)(g). Although the department does not dispute that these royalties are excluded in arriving at federal taxable income, it asserts that oil and gas royalties are included in the § 9(4)(g) term "royalties”; that the term "deduct” *478 in § 9(4) is used in its general meaning of "reduce,” rather than in its technical sense; and that the economic realities of oil and gas leases, and the system of taxation established by the sbta, are such that §9(4)(g) must also reach oil and gas royalties.

II. Are "Oil and Gas Royalties” the "Royalties” Meant to be Included by the sbta, § 9(4)(g)?

Mobil and amici curiae argue 1 that oil and gas royalties are not the kind of "royalties” referred to by the sbta, § 9(4)(g), while the department asserts that they are. The essence of the argument by Mobil and amici curiae is that § 9(4)(g) "royalties” are payments made by the taxpayer for the use of another’s property, and that oil and gas royalties cannot be characterized as "payments.” "Payments,” it is argued, are the giving over of the payor’s property to the recipient. It is contended that an oil and gas royalty involves the giving over, by the operator-lessee, of the recipient landowner-lessor’s property, and thus cannot be understood as a "payment.” Mobil further points to the sbta, § 2(2), MCL 208.2(2); MSA 7.558(2X2), which provides that terms used in the sbta shall have the same meaning as those used in federal income tax law unless otherwise defined. It contends that federal income tax law characterizes oil and gas royalties as a turning over of the recipient land *479 owner-lessor’s property, rather than as a "payment,” and thus concludes that, under the sbta, §2(2), the §9(4)(g) term "royalties” cannot be interpreted to include oil and gas royalties.

A. Oil and Gas and Other Royalty Transactions Compared

Oil and gas transactions are often extremely complicated, involving several parties, each of whom holds different kinds of interests relating to oil or gas beneath the surface of a particular piece of real estate. The fundamental transaction, like the one in the instant case, is an agreement between an operator and a landowner denominated as an "oil and gas lease.”

Under the terms of the "lease,” the operator-lessee is entitled to enter onto the surface of the property to explore for oil and gas, to drill wells, to install pumping equipment, and to extract oil or gas from the property. To the extent that it does not interfere with these activities of the lessee, the landowner-lessor is entitled to use the surface of the property; however, he may not extract oil or gas himself or transfer the right to do so to another for the duration of the lease. Upon execution of this lease, the operator-lessee typically pays to the landowner-lessor a sum of money which is denominated a "bonus.” Further, under the lease, the operator-lessee must give over as "royalty” 1/8 of gross production, either in kind or in money, to the landowner-lessor and may retain as owner 7/8 of the oil or gas extracted.

It is evident that this transaction is a legal hybrid which cannot be neatly characterized as either a lease or a sale because it possesses some of the elements of each.

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Bluebook (online)
373 N.W.2d 730, 422 Mich. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobil-oil-corp-v-department-of-treasury-mich-1985.