Weinert v. Commissioner

31 T.C. 918, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 246, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1220
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1959
DocketDocket No. 56328
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 31 T.C. 918 (Weinert 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
Weinert v. Commissioner, 31 T.C. 918, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 246, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1220 (tax 1959).

Opinions

OPINION.

Drennen, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ income tax of $817.31 and $4,193.86, for the calendar years 1949 and 1950, respectively. In their petition, petitioners seek a determination that there have been overassessments of $1,399.06 and $7,987.30 for the years 1949 and 1950, although the basis for the claimed overassessments is not clear.

The sole issue raised by the pleadings is whether petitioners were taxable on revenues from their interest in certain oil and gas leases and a recycling plant, received by a trustee under an assignment thereof, in the years 1949 and 1950.

The case was submitted on a stipulation of facts which consisted of certain facts and a number of documents attached thereto or filed at the hearing as exhibits. The facts so stipulated are found as stipulated and the stipulation, together with the exhibits, is incorporated herein by reference.

There is no disagreement between the parties as to the basic facts in this case, but only as to the ultimate tax effect of the various transactions involved.

Petitioners are the Executrix of the Estate of H. H. Weinert, Deceased, and Hilda B. Weinert, widow of the deceased. H. H. Weinert, deceased, and petitioner Hilda B. Weinert were husband and wife, living together at all times pertinent to this proceeding up to the time of his death.

H. H. Weinert, deceased, and petitioner Hilda B. Weinert filed joint income tax returns with the former collector of internal revenue for the first collection district, Austin, Texas, for each of the calendar years 1949 and 1950.

Petitioners kept their books and filed their income tax returns on the cash basis of accounting. All of the business operations of H. H. Weinert, deceased, and petitioner Hilda B. Weinert were conducted for their community estate by the husband, H. H. Weinert.

For many years prior to and during the years involved in this proceeding, H. H. Weinert was engaged in the operation, development, and production of oil and gas properties.

Prior to April 15, 1947, H. H. Weinert and others (hereinafter referred to collectively as petitioner) owned certain oil and gas leases covering lands in the North Pettus Field, in Goliad and Karnes Counties, Texas.

On or about April 15, 1947, petitioner entered into an agreement (hereinafter referred to as sales agreement) with the Lehman Corporation and Maracaibo Oil Exploration Corporation (hereinafter collectively referred to as Lehman), wherein petitioner agreed to sell and Lehman agreed to buy an undivided one-half interest in the above-mentioned leases insofar as they covered minerals produced from horizons below the base of the Cockfield Zone. The sales agreement also provided that petitioner agreed to sell and Lehman agreed to purchase a $50,000 production payment, payable out of the proceeds from petitioner’s retained one-half interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from the leases above mentioned, and also from the petitioner’s interest in the proceeds and revenues from the operation of a recycling plant to be built under the terms of a unitization agreement, hereinafter mentioned. The consideration for the sale of the undivided one-half interest in the oil and gas leases mentioned above and the $50,000 production payment was $100,000 cash, to be paid upon execution of certain other documents referred to therein.

The sales agreement also provided that simultaneously with the execution and delivery of the assignment of the one-half interest in the oil and gas leases and payment of the purchase price therefor, the parties to the sales agreement would enter into a certain “Loan Agreement,” and that petitioner would also execute and deliver an “Assignment of Runs and Production Payment” from his remaining one-half interest in said leases.

The sales agreement also specifically stated that it was anticipated that petitioner would enter into certain agreements relating to a proposed plan to pool and unitize said oil and gas leases with certain other oil and gas leases covering lands in the North Pettus Field, and that conveyance from petitioner to Lehman would be subject to any such agreements which may have been executed prior to the date of such assignment.

Prior to the assignment of the one-half interest in said oil and gas leases to Lehman, petitioner entered into six separate agreements affecting said leasehold interests, referred to collectively as the North Pettus operating and unitization agreements, as contemplated in the sales agreement.

The effect of the North Pettus operating and unitization agreements was that petitioner pooled the deep rights in the subject oil and gas leases with other oil and gas leases in the area so that all unitized substances within the unit area and all leases and lands comprising such area, to the extent of unitized substances therein and thereunder, were pooled and unitized as if the said substances and lands had been included in a single lease. The percentage of participation of each participant in the unit was determined on the basis of acre-feet of effective sand each participant put into the unit.

The parties in the North Pettus unit and the parties in another unit, known as the Burnell unit, joined in an agreement to construct and operate a plant to process unitized substances produced and saved from the two units, the percentage of undivided ownership of each of the parties in the plant to be determined by the ratio of the acre-feet of effective sand contributed by each to the acre-feet of effective sand contributed by all the parties. Unit operators for the two fields and a plant operator for the processing plant were designated.

Under the terms of the several unitization and processing agreements affecting the subject leasehold interests, each party became personally obligated to pay his pro rata part of all costs and expenses incurred in the development and operation of the unit area to the unit operator, as well as his pro rata part of all costs and expenses incurred in the construction and operation of the processing plant to the plant operator.

Each of the parties owning an interest in the recycling and processing plant owned the same interest in the hydrocarbons extracted and saved at the plant as he owned in the plant. However, the agreements contemplated the possible processing of production from leases other than those covered by the unitization agreements in this plant.

On or about October SO, 1947, pursuant to the sales agreement mentioned above, petitioner and others executed three agreements, as follows: (a) An Assignment; (b) a Loan Agreement; and (c) an Assignment of Buns and Production Payment.

The Assignment conveyed to Gas Properties, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary and nominee of the Lehman Corporation, and Maracaibo an undivided one-half interest in the deep rights in the oil and gas leases mentioned above, subject to the six unitization agreements affecting these leases. Insofar as petitioner is concerned this Assignment, considered in connection with the unitization agreements, conveyed an undivided one-half of his interest in the unitized leases and one-half of petitioner’s rights to participate in the ownership of the processing and recycling plant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 T.C. 918, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 246, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinert-v-commissioner-tax-1959.