Sun Co. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner

74 T.C. 1481, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 353
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1980
DocketDocket No. 9559-76
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 74 T.C. 1481 (Sun Co. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Co. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 1481, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 353 (tax 1980).

Opinion

Goffe, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the Federal income taxes due from the petitioners in the following amounts for the designated taxable years:

TYE Dec. 31— Deficiency

1969 . $3,193,299

1970 . ..2,618,218

1971 . ..1,196,609

After settlement of numerous issues determined in the Commissioner’s statutory notice of deficiency, only the taxable year ending December 31, 1971, remains in controversy. The only issue remaining for our decision is whether petitioners may deduct as intangible drilling and development costs their aliquot share of the intangible costs of drilling 17 offshore wells1 from mobile drilling rigs.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.

I. Entities Involved in This Controversy

Petitioners Sun Co., Inc., and Subsidiaries are an affiliated group of corporations whose common parent is Sun Co., Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the petitioner). Petitioner was organized under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania. Its principal place of business, at the time the petition herein was filed, was Radnor, Pa.

Petitioner or its predecessor filed consolidated Federal income tax returns on behalf of all of the petitioners for the affiliated group’s taxable years ending on December 31 of 1969, 1970, and 1971. Such returns were timely filed with the District Director of Internal Revenue in Philadelphia, Pa.

Since the year in issue, the affiliated group has been reshuffled and some of the corporations within the group have changed names. During the calendar years 1969 and 1970, and through September 30, 1971, Sun Oil Co., the parent corporation to whom the statutory notice of deficiency herein was sent (hereinafter Sun Oil Co. NJ), was a New Jersey corporation. Effective October 1, 1971, Sun Oil Co. NJ and its multiple subsidiaries reshuffled the affiliated group so that a different Sun Oil Co. (hereinafter Sun Oil Co. PA), a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, became the parent holding corporation for the affiliated group. Subsequent to 1970, Sun Oil Co. PA changed its name to Sun Co., Inc. Thus, petitioner Sun Co., Inc., is successor to the parent corporation to whom the statutory notice of deficiency herein was addressed.

Some of the subsidiaries of petitioner are: Sun Oil Co. (Delaware), a Delaware corporation; Sun Oil Co. of Pennsylvania, a Pennsylvania corporation; and North Sea Sun Oil Co., Ltd. (hereinafter North Sea Sun), a Delaware corporation. At all times material to this case, petitioner and its consolidated subsidiaries (and the predecessors of petitioner and the consolidated subsidiaries of such predecessors) have been engaged in the business of acquiring and developing oil and gas properties and of marketing and transporting petroleum and petroleum products. In the course of the internal corporate restructuring which occurred in 1971, all of the oil and gas properties located in North America (including offshore interests) in which Sun Oil Co. NJ previously held an interest were transferred to Sun Oil Co. (Delaware). There being no reason for distinguishing between the various Sun entities herein, all of the Sun corporations will be dealt with as a single entity (hereinafter known as Sun) except where an entity is mentioned specifically to facilitate understanding of this opinion.

Sun Co., Inc., and its predecessors maintained their books of account and filed their consolidated Federal income tax returns on the accrual basis and on the basis of the calendar year for the years in issue.

Sun timely exercised the option to expense intangible drilling and development costs, which option is provided in section 263(c), I.R.C. 1954,2 and in section 1.612-4, Income Tax Regs. The drilling ventures of which Sun became a member timely elected, pursuant to section 761(a)(2) and the regulations thereunder, not to be treated as partnerships for purposes of the Federal income tax.

II. Origin of This Controversy

Though we will subsequently set forth the detailed facts of the drilling activities, the costs of which are the focus of this controversy, we feel that a brief summary of the facts at this juncture will be helpful to the reader.

Generally, these are the facts around which this controversy has developed. Sun participated in the exploration, leasing, and development of many offshore oil and gas properties during the year before us. In order to spread the costs and risks inherent in offshore mineral development, Sun would participate in these activities as part of various combines or joint ventures, two of which are relevant to this case. Sun participated in developing offshore Louisiana mineral properties as a member of a combine known as the SCAAND Group (herein sometimes referred to as SCAAND). Sun also participated in developing North Sea mineral properties via an arrangement whereby North Sea Sun held 90 percent of the operating interest in the relevant North Sea leases and North Sea Exploitation & Reserach Co. (hereinafter North Sea Exploitation) held the remaining 10 percent of the operating interest in such leases. Though the parties do not refer to this arrangement as a combine, it was effectively just such a joint venture. We will refer to that combine as the North Sea Group.

Prior to submission of bids for the right to drill in certain areas offshore Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico, SCAAND expended substantial sums on general and detailed seismic surveys in order to gather geological and geophysical (G & G) information upon which to make the decisions regarding which areas to lease and where to drill on any blocks that they were successful in leasing. For the same reasons, the North Sea Group also expended substantial sums on G & G data prior to bidding for the rights to explore and produce certain offshore areas in the United Kingdom sector of the North Sea.

Based upon the G & G information gathered by the seismic surveys, SCAAND, in December 1970, bid and paid the following amounts for the operating interest in each of the following offshore blocks:

Number of acres in block Amount 'paid Block

5,000.00 $15,502,050.00 West Cameron 639

5,000.00 4,001,350.00 East Cameron 312

5,000.00 5,001,350.00 East Cameron 349

5,541.44 2,773,102.82 Vermilion 281 .

5,000.00 6,001,850.00 Vermilion 320 .

5,000.00 7,501,350.00 West Cameron 588

SCAAND participated in the drilling of six wells from mobile rigs on West Cameron Block 639 (such wells being designated as West Cameron 639-1 through West Cameron 639-6). Only the intangible costs of five of those wells (West Cameron 639-1 through West Cameron 639-5) remain in issue. West Cameron 639-2 was drilled as a joint unit well on an area unitized from West Cameron Block 639 and an adjoining tract, West Cameron Block 638.

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Sun Co. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner
74 T.C. 1481 (U.S. Tax Court, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
74 T.C. 1481, 1980 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-co-subsidiaries-v-commissioner-tax-1980.