Turbeville v. Commissioner

31 B.T.A. 283, 1934 BTA LEXIS 1117
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 1934
DocketDocket Nos. 43733, 47900, 55553, 64334, 64560.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 31 B.T.A. 283 (Turbeville 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
Turbeville v. Commissioner, 31 B.T.A. 283, 1934 BTA LEXIS 1117 (bta 1934).

Opinion

OPINION.

GoodRich :

In these proceedings, which upon motion were consolidated, petitioner seeks redeterminations of the following deficiencies in income tax:

1925_$2,376.93
1926_ 57, 653. 05
1927_ 43, 973. 57
1928_ 17, 588.18
1929_ 6, 095. 91

The principal controversy involves amounts received in each year as bonuses and royalties under oil and gas leases granted by petitioner. Respondent determined that these amounts, in their entirety, were the income of and taxable to petitioner. Petitioner contends the bonuses and royalties were community income and should therefore be divided and taxed equally between herself and her husband. She contends further that even though these amounts were not community income, still one half of these payments belonged to her husband either by reason of her assignment thereof to him, or as compensation for his services rendered in managing her separate properties and negotiating the leases.

She alleges also that respondent erred (a) in treating the amounts received as bonuses as income for the year in which received and failing to spread the same over the life of the leases; (b) in failing to tax the bonuses received as capital net gains, subject to the 12% percent limitation; (c) in failing to allow as a deduction from income an allowance for depletion of bonuses amounting to 27% percent thereof; (d) in failing to allow as deductions from income the full amount of certain items of business expense incurred in connection with the receipt of the bonuses and royalties; (e) in failing to allow as deductions from income the full amount of state, county, and school district ad valorem taxes levied and paid on account of her retained royalty interest in the leased lands; and (f) in failing to [285]*285allow as a deduction from her income in 1929, $12,500, being one half of an amount claimed lost on a bank deposit.

The facts were submitted upon stipulation which we adopt as our findings. A briefer statement will serve for the purposes of this report.

At the times here material petitioner was a resident of Archer City, Texas. She married J. H. Turbeville on April 22, 1919. She had been married previously to S. M. Cowan, who died, a resident of Texas, in 1917, leaving him surviving petitioner and their four minor children. At the time of Cowan’s death he and petitioner owned a substantial amount of community property, including a ranch of about 8,000 acres near Archer City, constituting one body or tract of land, known as the Copper Mine Nandi. Petitioner qualified as community administratrix of Cowan’s estate, and thereafter on October 28, 1922, acquired from her children their one-half interest in the ranch. Shortly before her marriage to Turbeville, petitioner, individually and as administratrix, granted to him an oil and gas lease covering the Copper Mine Banch, reserving a one-eighth interest of the sale proceeds of oil and gas. The lease was for a five-year term and so long thereafter as oil or gas might be produced, but required that, unless production was obtained within a year from date of grant, annual delay rentals should be paid for the privilege of extending the drilling time. A few months after his marriage to petitioner this lease was assigned by Turbeville to others.

Before and at the time of her marriage to Turbeville, petitioner had no business experience, nor had her children. At her request, Turbeville took over complete management of the properties belonging to petitioner and her children, and handled them along with and as his own. Because of petitioner’s lack of business experience and Turbeville’s assumption of the management of her properties, they reached a verbal agreement and understanding that one half of all income from the property of either should belong to the other.

In the fall of 1921 petitioner and her husband, and two of her sons, formed a partnership to engage in the cattle and ranching business and purchased a large ranch upon which they assumed a substantial indebtedness. Due to unfavorable conditions arising in the cattle business, the financing of the ranch purchase became a difficult problem, the burden of which fell on Turbeville, who, up until 1925, was forced to use every available means of credit to meet this obligation. As a means of saving their properties, and in consideration of Turbeville’s labor and efforts, he and petitioner further verbally agreed that all their income from whatever source should [286]*286be considered community income and be used by him to pay community obligations and to carry on the business of the partnership. Pursuant to that agreement all income from Turbeville’s separate property, from petitioner’s separate property, and from their community properties went into a common fund and was used by Tur-beville, without reference to its source, as the community income of himself and petitioner.

During this time Turbeville was endeavoring to secure exploitation and development of the Copper Mine Ranch under the oil and gas lease previously granted to him, and by him assigned. His repeated efforts to get the assignees to comply with the terms of the lease having failed, he and petitioner brought suit in the local court seeking cancellation of the lease and its assignments. The suit was removed to United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, which, on December 3,1928, decreed the cancellation of the lease as to 490 acres, revesting the title thereto in petitioner and her husband, and allowing the defendants limited additional time within which to commence drilling upon the remaining acreage. Development was not begun within the time fixed, and the lease as to the remaining acreage was forfeited in April 1924. Thereupon, Turbe-ville, continuing his efforts to have the property exploited, succeeded in making a number of leases during the years 1925, 1926, 1927, and 1929 covering various portions of the Copper Mine Ranch. These leases were executed by petitioner and her husband, and reserved one eighth of the oil as royalty. As a result of development under one or more of these leases, oil was discovered on the Copper Mine Ranch on July 12, 1926. Bonuses upon the granting of the leases and royalties upon production thereunder were received in the following amounts:

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These amounts were received by Turbeville and placed to his credit in banks of which he was a customer, and under the preexisting agreement between him and petitioner, they belonged one half to petitioner, and one half to him, “ the said agreement being that in consideration of the services of the said Turbeville to manage, look after and control their properties and to secure oil development on the properties of petitioner or her husband, that all royal[287]*287ties, revenues and bonuses received therefrom should equally belong to petitioner and to the said Turbeville.”

When these leases were granted and the bonuses paid, there was no production of oil upon the acreage covered by the several leases, but from and after July 12, 1926, there was oil produced continuously from the Copper Mine Eanch.

The business expenses directly attributable to the receipt of the bonuses and royalties and the amounts of state and local taxes paid on the retained royalty interest in the Copper Mine Eanch are as follows:

With respect to the last issue, the facts are stipulated as follows:

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Turbeville v. Commissioner
31 B.T.A. 283 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
31 B.T.A. 283, 1934 BTA LEXIS 1117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turbeville-v-commissioner-bta-1934.