Trace Fork Mining Co. v. Commissioner

15 B.T.A. 872, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2771
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1929
DocketDocket No. 16030.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 B.T.A. 872 (Trace Fork Mining Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trace Fork Mining Co. v. Commissioner, 15 B.T.A. 872, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2771 (bta 1929).

Opinion

[876]*876OPINION.

Littleton:

The Commissioner allowed depletion in the amount of $378.47, based upon total development cost of $13,624.75 and a life for petitioner’s mine of 36 years. The deficiency notice shows that this development cost is made up as follows: development, $2,482.50; siding, $8,000; loss of 1919 capitalized, $3,142.37. The Commissioner also allowed depreciation in the amount of $5,962.64, which he determined as follows:

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[877]*877The petitioner contends that it is entitled to a total allowance for depletion and depreciation of $11,448.64, based upon a total cost of $114,486.35 for development, equipment, houses, and lease, and an average life of 10 years for these properties. The cost basis is made up as follows:

Houses_$29,568.64
Development_ 2, 482. 50
Equipment_^_ 35,122.23
Leasehold_ 40, 000. 00
Additions of eauipment and livestock averaged for six months_ 7, 312. 98
Total_ 114, 486. 35

At the hearing the Commissioner conceded that the life of petitioner’s mine is 20 years, and not 36 years as stated in the deficiency notice, and that depletion should be redetermined upon the basis of the shorter period.

As to the depreciation on the houses, it will be noted that the parties are in accord as to the basis, cost of $29,568.64, and differ only as to the rate. The Commissioner used a rate of 8 per cent, while the petitioner uses a rate of 10 per cent. Upon the evidence we have found that the life of these houses is from 10 to 13 years, and the rate used by the Commissioner fairly reflects the average. The rate of 10 per cent contended for by the petitioner is premised upon a life of 10 years for the mine, but, for reasons which will be stated later, we believe that this premise is wrong. The allowance by the Commissioner for depreciation of houses will not be disturbed.

As to depletion of development, the Commissioner allowed one thirty-sixth of a total cost of $13,624.75. The cost of development shown in petitioner’s schedule of property costs amounts to only $2,482.50, but it has included $32,500 for development in the cost of $40,000 claimed for leasehold. Thus, the depletion claimed by petitioner for development is based upon a total cost of $34,982.50, and a life for the mine of 10 years. We are satisfied from the evidence, and have found as a fact, that the cost of driving the entries and air systems, to January 1, 1920, was not less than $21,562.50. To this amount there should be added $8,000, representing the cost of siding as determined by the Commissioner, making a total cost for development of $29,562.50. The balance sheet, as of January 1, 1920, shows a deficit of $3,142.37, and the Commissioner has included in development cost an item of $3,14-2.37, representing loss of 1919 capitalized.” If the balance sheet items, houses and development, are increased to reflect the costs of those assets which we have found, the deficit will be wiped out, and the restoration to income of 1919 [878]*878oí expenditures for capital additions will undoubtedly result in showing a net income rather than a loss for that year. For this reason, we have excluded the item of $3,142.37 which the Commissioner included in development cost.

This brings us to the question as to whether the lease acquired by petitioner from Disel, Freeman, and Lawson, at or about the date of organization, for $7,500 par value of capital stock, had a bonus value at the date of acquisition which may be made the subject of a depletion allowance. The Commissioner determined that the lease had no bonus value when paid in, while the petitioner contends that it had a value equal, at least, to the par value of the stock issued therefor. Talcing the evidence as a whole, we believe the Commissioner’s determination to be correct. Two witnesses testified that in their opinion the lease had a bonus value at the date paid in. The witness Ryley testified that in his opinion the lease had a value of at least $5,000. The witness Dudley was persistently noncommittal in placing a definite value on the lease. Ryley, it was developed on cross-examination, had little or no knowledge of conditions existing in the Hazzard coal field at or about the time the lease was acquired. He was engaged, at the time, in carrying on a coal sales agency business at some distant point. He made his first visit to the field and to petitioner’s mine when he acquired petitioner’s stock in 1920. Even then his investigation of conditions appears to have been of the most superficial nature. Dudley based his opinion largely upon statements made to him by others as to sales of leases in this and adjacent fields, but of which he had no personal knowledge. He gave evidence as to one transaction involving the sale of a lease in which he had a personal interest, as a stockholder, but that transaction took place in 1920, more than two years after the lease in question was acquired by the petitioner, and at a time when the coal industry was still enjoying a war-made prosperity.

The lease in question was granted by the Kentucky River Coal Corporation. That company owned or controlled more than 145,-000 acres of coal lands in or adjacent to the Hazzard field. It had 33 leases in force, including 7 on Lotts Creek and Trace Fork Creek, in the immediate vicinity of the lands under lease to petitioner. Without objection there was placed in evidence a copy of the report of its leases submitted to the Commissioner by that corporation. Of the 33 leases, 19 were made in the years 1917, 1918, and 1919 on a royalty basis of 10 cents per ton and, in that respect, did not differ from the lease in question.

Petitioner calls our attention to the fact that of the original authorized capital stock, $22,500 par value was sold for cash at par. But we can give only small weight to that fact, as the evidence dis[879]*879closes that nearly all such sales were made to the same persons who paid in the lease for stock.

In view of the foregoing we hojd that the lease had no bonus value at the date paid in, and that the total amount which petitioner is entitled to recover through annual allowances for depletion is $29,562.50.

Petitioner contends that the depletion allowance should be determined on the basis of a life for the mine of 10 years. This is the result of a retrospective survey of conditions affecting the lease which were not known to exist and coup! not have been reasonably anticipated during 1920. According to the statement in the return for 1920, the petitioner estimated that there were 516,000 tons of recoverable coal to be extracted under the lease. In the return for 1922, it was estimated that there were 199,200 tons of coal still to be recovered, and this return was rendered after the survey of 1922, which disclosed that there were but 94 acres of recoverable coal instead of 160 as stated in the lease. Wo have heretofore had occasion to decide that in determining what is a reasonable allowance for depletion, no consideration could be given to developments which take place in a subsequent year and which could not reasonably have been anticipated. In Sterling Coal Co., Ltd., 8 B. T. A. 549, we held as follows:

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Related

Kehoe-Berge Coal Co. v. Commissioner
41 B.T.A. 282 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1940)
Trace Fork Mining Co. v. Commissioner
15 B.T.A. 872 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
15 B.T.A. 872, 1929 BTA LEXIS 2771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trace-fork-mining-co-v-commissioner-bta-1929.