United States v. Joseph M. Thomas and Jill G. Thomas

329 F.2d 119
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1964
Docket18306_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 329 F.2d 119 (United States v. Joseph M. Thomas and Jill G. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Joseph M. Thomas and Jill G. Thomas, 329 F.2d 119 (9th Cir. 1964).

Opinions

JERTBERG, Circuit Judge.

On their joint Federal Income Tax Returns for the calendar years 1953 and 1954, appellees, who report their income on the cash receipts and disbursements method, computed their deductions for percentage depletion on the basis of the net amounts received by them from the operators of certain oil and gas properties. Appellees timely filed claims for refunds for overpayments and claimed therein that they were entitled to compute percentage depletion on the basis of a share in the gross income from the oil and gas operations. The claims were rejected by the Commissioner. Appellees filed a timely suit in the District Court to recover such claimed overpayments. Following trial, judgment was entered in their favor.

The broad question presented on the appeal is the amount which the appellees are entitled to use as a base for computing the percentage depletion.

Through a series of assignments of interests in oil and gas leases and subleases, and operating agreements held by Quality Oil Company, hereinafter “Quality”, appellees on October 25, 1949 acquired an undivided ten percent (10%) in the subleases held by Quality and Richfield Oil Corporation, hereinafter “Richfield”, and an undivided one-sixth (Vé) interest in subleases held by Quality and Hancock Oil Company of California, hereinafter “Hancock”.

The interests which appellees acquired arose in the following manner:

In 1948, Quality was sublessee under certain oil and gas leases and owned the exclusive right to the oil, gas and other hydrocarbon substances in the property described in the oil and gas leases, subject only to the payment of royalties to the landowners and other parties having royalty interests therein. On March 17, 1948, Quality entered into two contemporaneous agreements with Richfield relating to a specified portion of the land under its sublease. Under one of the agreements, entitled “PARTIAL ASSIGNMENT OF OIL AND GAS LEASES”, Quality assigned to Richfield an undivided 70% “of all * * * [its] right title and interest * * * in and to” the two subleases and “in and to the estates created by said leases” as to part of the land specified. The partial assignment stated that Quality retained an undivided 30% “in and to” the subleases ; that royalties and other sums of money “with respect to the interest of assignor and assignee in said leases” relating to the part of the land covered by the agreement were to be paid in aecord-[122]*122anee with an “operating agreement” made and entered into concurrently with the assignment.

Paragraphs 4 and 6 of the assignment read as follows:

“4. All geological, exploratory, drilling, operating and producing operations, and all other operations with respect to the hereinabove described lands, shall, notwithstanding the separate ownership by Assignor and Assignee of undivided interests in said leases, be conducted as an entirety and as the operation of one lessee, all in accordance with terms and conditions of said operating agreement hereinabove mentioned.”
“6. Neither Assignor nor As-signee shall hereafter sell, assign, transfer, convey, quitclaim or otherwise dispose of any interest in said leases, or either of them, or in the lands leased thereby or in the estates created thereby, without the written consent of the other party hereto, except in accordance with the terms and conditions of said operating agreement hereinabove mentioned.”

The operating agreement entitled “OPERATING AGREEMENT (carried interest)” referred to the partial assignment by Quality of an undivided 70% leasehold interest to Richfield and recited that Richfield “is an operating company, experienced in the development and operation of oil and gas properties, and it is desirable for the parties hereto to enter into this operating agreement because of the ownership by each party hereto of an undivided interest in and to said leases in so far as they affect said joint lands.” Under paragraph 1 of the agreement, Richfield was designated as the “operator” of the joint lands and was given, for the purposes of this agreement,

“the sole and exclusive right to explore for, drill for, operate for, develop, produce, save, process and/or market oil, gas, and other hydrocarbon substances in, under or recoverable from said joint lands, and to extract and/or manufacture products therefrom during the term of this operating agreement, or any renewal or extension hereof, and Richfield, as such Operator, shall conduct and manage the operation of the joint lands for the exploration, discovery, development, and production thereon and therefrom of oil, gas, and other hydrocarbon substances under the terms and conditions of said leases and this agreement.”

Richfield was required to commence drilling operations within six months or in lieu thereof Richfield could terminate the operating agreement and reassign or quitclaim all of its right and interest in and to the joint lands. Richfield was required to maintain a “joint account” which meant “the accounting to be maintained by Richfield as operator hereunder, for the purpose of recording all joint expenses, transfers, revenues, income and other transactions pertaining to the joint lands and the operations thereof, and for the purpose of maintaining records and rendering statements to the parties hereto and settling accounts between them.”

In the “joint account” Richfield was to record the gross revenues from operations, except for royalties payable to other parties; Richfield was also to record in the “joint account” and as “joint expense” the costs and expenses of every nature including all costs of exploration, discovery, drilling, developing, equipping, operating and maintaining the property, and of producing and marketing oil and gas obtained therefrom, as well as all other charges and liabilities, including the sum of $40,000 paid by Richfield to Quality for the assignment by Quality to Richfield of the interest in joint lands, “and the parties shall share therein and pay therefor in the proportion of 70% by Richfield and 30% by Quality.” The operating agreement provided more detailed accounting procedures in Exhibit “A” attached to the agreement.

[123]*123Paragraphs 6, 7, 9, 12, 13, 16, 22 and 24 of the agreement provide:

“6. Richfield, as Operator hereunder, shall, in the first instance, pay all joint expense and shall charge the same to the joint account between Richfield and Quality as joint expense. Richfield, as Operator hereunder, shall credit all gross revenues from operations hereunder to the joint account. Quality shall not be personally liable for joint expense other than to the extent of its interest in gross revenues, and Rich-field, as Operator, shall reimburse itself for joint expense solely from "the joint account and the gross revenues therein, and may recover all joint expense to the extent that joint ■expense can be recovered from gross revenues by crediting to the joint .account all such gross revenues. No net proceeds shall accrue during any ■calendar month until the joint account has been reimbursed for all net deficits for the current and preceding calendar months from gross revenues credited to the joint account, and until Richfield as Operator hereunder, has been fully reimbursed for all joint expense theretofore charged to the joint account.”
“7.

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329 F.2d 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joseph-m-thomas-and-jill-g-thomas-ca9-1964.