O. H. Deshotels, Jr., and Fay C. Deshotels v. United States

450 F.2d 961
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1972
Docket31093
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 450 F.2d 961 (O. H. Deshotels, Jr., and Fay C. Deshotels v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O. H. Deshotels, Jr., and Fay C. Deshotels v. United States, 450 F.2d 961 (5th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

The question this appeal presents is whether an attorney may deduct depletion allowance from funds realized in 1962 through litigation of oil and gas rights under a 1956 contract describing his interest as “a contingent fee coupled with an interest”.

O. H. Deshotels, the taxpayer, an attorney in Kaplan, Louisiana, represented Casey Pierce, the owner of mineral rights subject to a lease held by Atlantic Refining Company. Atlantic had drilled a producing well on land not owned by Pierce but within the same unit under a state unitization order. In October 1956 when Atlantic failed to pay royalties to Pierce, Deshotels sent Atlantic a written demand for cancellation of the lease. October 29, 1956, Deshotels and Pierce executed a contract reading in pertinent part, as follows:

That the said Landowner does hereby employ the said Attorney for the purpose of suing or obtaining a compromise with respect to the voiding of certain leases executed by David White on October 10, 1950, affecting 15 acres, more or less; and that certain lease dated October 10, 1950, executed by Casey Pierce, affecting 9.25 acres, more or less, all situated in Section 37, township 14 south, range 3 east, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana.
It is agreed and understood that no compromise will be made without the consent of both parties hereto and that no expense will be borne by the said Landowner for any portion of the law suit or compromise.
For and in consideration of the above services the said Attorney is to be paid one-third (%rd) interest in any settlement or judgment obtained in the matter.
This is designated as a contingent fee coupled with an interest.

Upon Atlantic’s refusal to cancel the leases, Deshotels sued on behalf of Pierce to have the leases cancelled. Atlantic prevailed in the trial court, but in 1962 the Louisiana Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed the trial court’s judgment, declared the leases null and void, and directed Atlantic to account to Pierce for all production from his property. Later in 1962 by an agreed accounting, Atlantic paid $169,377.25, representing the value of the minerals allowable to Pierce’s interest minus a proportionate share of development and production expenses. Of this amount, Deshotels received $56,-125.75; in addition he received an attorney’s fee of $5000 from Atlantic. Pierce then gave to Deshotels a formal deed to one third of his seven-eighths interest in the mineral property.

In his 1962 tax return Deshotels listed the $5000 fee as ordinary income, but reported the $56,125.75 as depletable income from oil and gas production. He included no amount for the fair market value of the mineral interest deeded to him in 1962. He adopted this approach on the theory that the 1956 contract gave him a present interest in the minerals in place and that the 1962 deed was merely confirmatory.

*963 The Commissioner disallowed Desho-tels’ deductions for depletion allowance, determining that the cash received in 1962 was simply a legal fee. In addition, the Commissioner determined that Deshotels should have included in his 1962 return the fair market value of the mineral interest deeded to him in that year.

Deshotels paid the assessed tax and sued in the district court for a refund. The district judge permitted the taxpayer and the client to testify as to their intention in signing the 1956 contract. Each testified that in the 1956 contract they had intended a transfer of title from Pierce to Deshotels of one third of Pierce’s interest in the mineral property. 1 The district judge made the following finding of fact:

Their understanding and specific intention was that Pierce was then and there transferring and O. H. Desho-tels, Jr. was acquiring a %rd interest in %ths of Pierce’s minerals. The parties recognized that the %ths interest was then covered by an outstanding lease to Atlantic Refining Company which they felt had been terminated by Atlantic’s failure to pay royalties. They further recognized that even if the lease was not terminated by the state court suit, the %ths mineral interest might eventually revert to Pierce by forfeiture, other nonperformance, or otherwise, and Deshotels’ %rd interest therein would be more valuable. They agreed that their contract would not be recorded so that Deshotels would not have to be made a party to the lease cancellation suit.

On the basis of this finding, 2 the court concluded that Deshotels was enti- *964 tied to take depletion deductions on the cash realized from the 1962 accounting and that the value of the mineral rights need not have been included in Desho-tels’ 1962 gross income. We reverse the judgment of the district court.

The contract between Deshotels and Pierce must first be considered in light of existing federal precedent. In Blake v. C. I. R., 1953, 20 T.C. 721, an attorney agreed to represent a client in attempting to regain title to certain land and its attendant mineral rights. At the time of the agreement they drew up a contract defining the rights and duties of the attorney and the client. The contract included the following language:

In consideration for the services heretofore performed and to be performed by Mr. Blake as my said attorney, I hereby bargain, sell, and convey unto Mr. Blake an undivided one-fourth (14th) part of all my right, title and interest in said tract of land, and in all the settlements, benefits and proceedings arising therefrom. * * * (Emphasis added.)

Later the client executed and recorded a confirmatory deed to the attorney. The tax court found that the contractual language conveyed a present interest in the land and mineral rights to the attorney. The court therefore concluded that the attorney was entitled to deduct depletion allowance from the cash recovery he received for past production when litigation was successfully concluded.

Blake is significant because it emphasizes the clarity with which the attorney’s present interest was granted to him by the client. “The language in the agreement was unequivocal,” the Tax Court stated. It then continued: “The agreement must speak for itself, and it speaks as a conveyance of a present interest to petitioner.” 3 Thus Blake, the only federal case directly in point with the present set of facts, allowed a deduction only upon an agreement not ambiguous on its face.

The application and interpretation of the Internal Revenue Code is a matter of federal law. The form of a document and its effect under state law are therefore not controlling in these federal determinations. Burton-Sutton Oil Co. v. C. I. R., 1946, 328 U.S. 25, 66 S.Ct. 861, 90 L.Ed. 1062. We may, however, look to Louisiana law in this case to assist us in understanding the Deshotels-Pierce agreement which forms the nucleus of this dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
450 F.2d 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-h-deshotels-jr-and-fay-c-deshotels-v-united-states-ca5-1972.