Norman Shutler and Virginia Shutler v. United States of America, A. H. Turner and Edith Turner v. United States

470 F.2d 1143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 1973
Docket71-1496
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 470 F.2d 1143 (Norman Shutler and Virginia Shutler v. United States of America, A. H. Turner and Edith Turner v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman Shutler and Virginia Shutler v. United States of America, A. H. Turner and Edith Turner v. United States, 470 F.2d 1143 (10th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

McWILLIAMS, Circuit Judge.

(Reassigned for opinion to McWilliams, Circuit Judge, from Holloway, Circuit Judge, on November 16, 1972.)

Norman and Virginia Shutler brought an action in the District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma for refund of income taxes paid for the year 1966. A. H. and Edith Turner at the same time filed a separate proceeding in that same court which also sought a refund of income taxes paid for that same year. These two proceedings were consolidated for purposes of discovery and trial by appropriate order of the trial court and these consolidated cases were then later submitted to the trial court on a comprehensive stipulation agreed to by the parties. Based on the stipulation the trial court made certain findings and entered judgment against the United States for the Shutters in the amount of $5,180.50, plus interest, and in favor of the Turners in the amount of $1,046.-45, plus interest. The United States now appeals.

As indicated, the essential facts are agreed to by the parties. Virginia Shut-ler and Edith Turner are parties to the proceeding simply because they filed joint income tax returns for the tax year 1966 with their respective spouses. Norman Shutler and A. H. Turner, hereinafter referred to as the taxpayers, are described in the stipulation as “co-tenants in farming operations in Kingfisher County, Oklahoma,” and as such they jointly owned or leased various tracts of land used in their farming operation.

The particular tract of land which precipitates this controversy is the northeast quarter of section 36, township 17 north, range 6 west, Kingfisher County, Oklahoma. On April 29, 1966, the taxpayers were high bidders for and purchased the northwest quarter of that section from the Adele Nieman estate. For a number of years prior to 1966 Adele Nieman had been the lessee of the northeast quarter of section 36 under a so-called Preference Right Lease with the State of Oklahoma. This lease covered land owned by the State of Oklahoma and supervised by the Commissioners of the Land Office for that *1145 state. On April 29, 1966, the taxpayers also purchased at auction from the Nie-man estate the Preference Right Lease to the aforesaid northeast quarter of the section with which we are here concerned. The taxpayers paid a total sum of $15,000 for the lease in question, $13,000 of which was allocated to the cost of acquisition and $2,000 to the value of the improvements thereon. Under the lease the annual rental paid the State for the property was $850.

Pursuant to the requirements of the Land Office of the State of Oklahoma, the Nieman estate executed a relinquishment in favor of the taxpayers. The latter then made formal application for the lease and eventually obtained a lease for the period of time from August 23, 1966, to and including December 31, 1966, from the State. Such period of time incidentally was the balance of time remaining on the five-year lease held by Adele Nieman at the date of her death. Thereafter, the taxpayers obtained a renewal of the lease from the State for a five-year period, i. e., from January 1, 1967, to and including December 31, 1971, at an annual rental of $850. The critical issue in the case relates to the nature of the $13,000 expenditure incurred by the taxpayers in acquiring the lease from the Nieman estate, which in turn concerns the nature of the so-called Preference Right Lease thus acquired by the taxpayers. A bit of background will perhaps place the matter in focus.

The State of Oklahoma, through the Commissioners of the State Land Office, is entrusted with the leasing and sale of school lands. Such land is owned by the State and the income therefrom is designated for specific purposes. Although some acreage in the past has been sold outright, today practically none is sold, but is leased. Thus the Land Office enters into approximately 3,500 agricultural and grazing leases on these school lands, all for a term of five years, all of which come due on the same date. Approximately half of these leases are so-called Preference Right Leases, under which' the State grants the lessee the preferential right to purchase the land he is leasing from the State for an amount equal to the highest bid at an auction sale, if and when the State ever decides to sell.

Prior to 1946, all Preference Right Leases also contained a provision that the lessee had the right to re-lease the land upon the expiration of the lease then in force. This provision was dropped in 1946. However, ever since that date it has been, and is, the policy of the Land Office to re-lease the school lands at the end of the five-year period to, and only to, the person in possession at the expiration of the lease, except for cause, such as, for example, nonpayment of rent, abuse of the land, and the like.

As for the transferring of a Preference Right Lease, the Land Office has the lessee execute a relinquishment in favor of the proposed new lessee. Then following an investigation of the proposed lessee, a new lease is entered into for the remaining portion of the five-year term of the original lease.

In this general setting, the taxpayers filed their 1966 tax returns with each claiming that he was entitled to deduct from his gross income his proportionate share of the cost of acquiring the Preference Right Lease on the aforesaid northeast quarter of section 36. The Internal Revenue Service disallowed this deduction, with the taxpayers paying the full tax and then suing for a refund. As above stated, the trial court ruled in favor of the taxpayers and the Government appeals.

The findings of the trial court are rather meager and give little insight into its reasoning. However, there was the obvious finding that the taxpayers acquired a lease on certain lands in the State of Oklahoma and paid therefor $13,000, which sum was paid during the year 1966 for a lease which expired December 31, 1966. In connection therewith the trial court then went on to make what it obviously believed to be a critical finding to the effect that the lease thus acquired “contained no option, *1146 and there was no reasonable certainty that the Commissioners of the Land Office would renew said lease for any given period of time.” In this latter regard, the trial court opined that such leases are subject to the “whims of the Oklahoma Legislature, which meets every year and which has over the years enacted and repealed various laws dealing with the administration of State Lands.”

In our view, the trial court’s finding that there was no “reasonable certainty” that the Land Office would renew the lease thus acquired by the taxpayers for any period of time is contrary to the stipulation. While it is true that the Preference Right Lease did not itself grant the lessee a preferential right to re-lease at the end of a leasehold period, the fact remains that from the record one can only conclude that it was the unvarying practice to so do. Some proof of this practice, though of course not controlling, is the fact that the taxpayers did in fact obtain a renewal of the lease which they acquired from the Nie-rnan estate.

Concerning the practice of renewing the lease to the party holding it when the lease period expires, the deposition of N. A. Gibson, Chief Counsel for the Commissioners of the Land Office of the State of Oklahoma, was before the trial court as a part of the stipulation, and his declaration, which stands unrefuted, was as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
470 F.2d 1143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-shutler-and-virginia-shutler-v-united-states-of-america-a-h-ca10-1973.