Skelly Oil Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation

131 N.W.2d 632, 269 Minn. 351, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 496, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 788
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 25, 1964
Docket39,164, 39,214
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 131 N.W.2d 632 (Skelly Oil Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skelly Oil Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation, 131 N.W.2d 632, 269 Minn. 351, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 496, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 788 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Certiorari upon the relation of the commissioner of taxation and Skelly Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as Skelly, to review an order of the Board of Tax Appeals. Skelly contends that said order was in error and not in conformity with law in the following respects: (1) In including in its income apportionable to and subject to tax in Minnesota, a portion of its production income for the years 1951 to 1955; (2) in failing to make provision for deduction of the full amount of Federal income taxes paid by it on the class of income assignable to Minnesota.

Skelly is a Delaware corporation with its principal offices in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It is qualified to transact business in this state and files tax returns here as required by Minn. St. c. 290. Its Minnesota corporate income and franchise tax returns are completed according to the accrual method of accounting, that being the method employed in keeping the taxpayer’s books.

The company is engaged principally in the production and sale of crude oil and natural gas, both of which are carried on wholly outside Minnesota, and in the refining of crude oil and the marketing of the resulting refined products and of related accessories, appliances, and products such as tires, batteries, and liquid petroleum gas. Its activities in this state related only to such refining and marketing, which are carried on partly within and partly without this state. This was true during the years 1951 to 1955.

*353 Skelly is organized internally on a departmental basis with operating departments and service or administrative departments. The operating departments are known as Lands and Leases, Geology and Geophysics, Oil and Gas Production, Manufacturing, and Marketing — each under a vice president — and also a Pipeline Department which is connected with the Manufacturing Department and is supervised by a manager. The first three departments are concerned only with the company’s production activities. The latter three are concerned only with refining and marketing.

There are four administrative departments — Accounting, Purchasing, Law, and Secretary-Treasurer. These departments provide services to the several operating departments and also to Skelly’s president and executive vice president and their assistants.

Skelly has carried on the manufacture of refined petroleum products during the times herein mentioned at three widely separated refineries — one at El Dorado, Kansas, a second at Longview, Texas, and the third at Denver, Colorado. The first two refineries have each been served by pipelines owned and operated by the taxpayer for the transportation of crude oil from adjacent production areas. Skelly also has a pipeline in Velma, in southern Oklahoma, but this line has no connection with any Skelly refinery. It is actually a field-gathering system connected with production rather than a pipeline for purposes of transportation and is so far from any Skelly refinery that transportation costs would make it uneconomical to use it for transportation of oil to the company’s refineries. The Kansas pipeline is substantially larger than the other two and services about 4,000 wells as against 400 by the Velma line and 75 by the Longview line. (The latter was sold subsequent to the years here in issue.)

When decisions are made as to where, when, and in what volume Skelly’s production of crude oil and natural gas shall be carried on, they are made without participation by the Manufacturing or Marketing Departments and without regard to whether Skelly has refineries, or to the needs of such refineries, although they are subject to the control exercised by state regulatory authorities. Such decisions lie wholly within the hands of the three departments having to do with *354 production, namely, Lands and Leases, Geology and Geophysics, and Oil and Gas Production. The job of the Department of Geology and Geophysics is to search and explore for likely producing areas and to make recommendations when evidence favors their acquisition. These recommendations go to Lands and Leases, which secures the necessary drilling and production rights, usually through leases but occasionally by the purchase of fee title, and makes other necessary arrangements including agreements with other producers which will facilitate drilling and exploration.

The Departments of Geology and Geophysics and Lands and Leases make the decision with respect to the drilling of the first well on acquired acreage, the Department of Oil and Gas Production participating only in decisions with respect to the drilling of additional wells on the same acreage. The Manufacturing and Marketing Departments are not consulted in the making of production decisions even though there may be a Skelly refinery nearby. Lands and Leases and Geology and Geophysics work closely together and share joint offices at strategic points from Bismarck, North Dakota, to Shreveport, Louisiana. The record is clear that no such office has ever been maintained in Minnesota and that Skelly has never done any geological work in Minnesota nor had any oil or gas leases, refinery, wells, or pipelines in the state, its activities here being limited to marketing.

The operation of the producing wells is the sole responsibility of the Oil and Gas Production Department. The gas produced is sold in its natural state at the well to connecting transmission companies. If there is any condensate drawn off at the gas wells, this is also sold to third parties at the point of production and customarily removed by tank trucks.

Oil obtained from the wells is run directly into one or more storage tanks which the production department maintains on the producing leasehold, the number of tanks varying with the number and productivity of the wells and the size of the property. With two exceptions, the oil is then sold to outside pipeline companies operating in the area, with delivery to the pipeline at the tanks if direct connection *355 has been made, or, if not, by trucking to a point of delivery elsewhere. The exceptions noted are that about 60 percent of the taxpayer’s production in Kansas is transported to its refinery at El Dorado for manufacture there, and about 10 percent of its east Texas production to its refinery at Longview for like purpose.

Skelly’s production in the vicinity of Velma, Oklahoma, is sold to outside interests, delivery to the purchaser being made at a central storage point to which Skelly moves the oil through its Velma gathering system. Skelly also buys the oil of other producers in this area and moves it together with its own production to the storage point, where it is all sold to buyers who transport it through connecting pipelines to refineries in the area. The cost of transportation to Skelly’s refineries would be prohibitive.

All sales of Skelly crude production to third parties are made at what is called the “posted field price” or, if the sale is made at a point elsewhere than at the producing premises, that price plus cost of transportation to such point. The posted field price is the announced price being paid currently by purchasers of the crude oil at the wellhead in a specific area for crude petroleum of the kind and quality there available. All large buyers “post” such prices, and they do so by circulation of printed bulletins.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W.2d 632, 269 Minn. 351, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 496, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skelly-oil-co-v-commissioner-of-taxation-minn-1964.