William A. Landreth, Sr., Mary Adele Landreth Smith, Co-Trustees of W.A. Landreth, Jr., Trust, Under the Will of Adele H. Landreth v. United States

963 F.2d 84, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 599, 70 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6296, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 13924, 1992 WL 116436
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1992
Docket91-1468
StatusPublished

This text of 963 F.2d 84 (William A. Landreth, Sr., Mary Adele Landreth Smith, Co-Trustees of W.A. Landreth, Jr., Trust, Under the Will of Adele H. Landreth v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William A. Landreth, Sr., Mary Adele Landreth Smith, Co-Trustees of W.A. Landreth, Jr., Trust, Under the Will of Adele H. Landreth v. United States, 963 F.2d 84, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 599, 70 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6296, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 13924, 1992 WL 116436 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:

The Landreth trust (Landreth) 1 received no cash distributions in 1981, 1982, or 1983 on its net profits interest (NPI) 2 in certain oil properties operated by Amoco Oil Company (Amoco). Landreth, a cash method taxpayer, argues that because it received no distributions, it had no gross income and thus no net income for purposes of the windfall profit tax. So Landreth claims that it is due a refund of all windfall profit tax paid for those tax years. The district court rejected Landreth’s arguments and dismissed its refund claim. Landreth v. United States, 766 F.Supp. 284 (N.D.Tex.1991). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Landreth’s interest exists under a contract with Amoco as operator of the oil properties as to which Landreth claims refund. The contract requires Amoco each year to charge against Landreth’s interest all taxes (other than income taxes) assessed upon the properties, current-year operating costs, and unpaid operating costs incurred in any previous year when costs exceeded revenues. As a result of these contractual charges, Landreth received no distributions under the contract in the years at issue. Landreth filed a claim with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), seeking refund of the windfall profit tax that Amoco withheld and paid to the IRS on Landreth’s account for those years.

Landreth’s approach to windfall profit tax accounting would eliminate gross income in the years in question by deducting from Landreth’s share of oil sale proceeds the amounts Amoco charged for both windfall profit' tax and unpaid operating expenses accumulated from prior years. And with no gross income, Landreth could have no net income for purposes of computing the net income limitation to the windfall profit tax, and thus could have no windfall profit tax liability. The IRS, however, decided that Landreth was not entitled to deduct from gross income either the windfall profit tax or the excess production expenses Amoco charged from prior taxable periods. That decision prompted this suit.

The district court agreed that Landreth received no cash distribution during the relevant tax periods because the amount of *86 windfall profit tax that Amoco withheld, plus the operating expenses that Amoco carried over from prior accounting periods, exceeded oil sale proceeds. Landreth, 756 F.Supp. at 286. However, the court concluded that, “[b]ecause the Code does not provide for the deduction of either amount ..., [Landreth is] liable for windfall profit taxes.” Id. at 287. Landreth appeals.

II. DISCUSSION

Congress enacted the Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax Act of 1980 (the Act), I.R.C. §§ 4986-98, in conjunction with its deregulation of oil prices. The Act’s title is misleading. The tax imposed by the Act is not a tax on profits or income, 3 as is the federal income tax that is codified in I.R.C. subtitle A, 4 and therefore liability under the Act does not directly depend upon the profitability or income of the producer or interest owner. 5 Rather, it is an excise tax, a tax that burdens the exercise of one or more of the powers incident to ownership. See Bromley v. McCaughn, 280 U.S. 124, 137-38, 50 S.Ct. 46, 48, 74 L.Ed. 226 (1929); Mangum, supra note 5, at 768.

Congress levied this tax on the difference between the deregulated sale price of oil and the regulated price that would have applied had deregulation not occurred. Amerada Hess, 109 S.Ct. at 1619; see also Barry R. Miller & Dan G. Easley, The Windfall Profit Tax —An Overview, 12 St. Mary’s L.J. 414, 415 & n. 2 (1980). The Act taxes the producer’s right to sell oil for more than the regulated price by taxing the removal of oil from the producer’s property. I.R.C. § 4986(a); see Mangum, supra note 5 at 767-68, n. 4. The Act includes a provision, called the “net income limitation,” which prevents production from being taxed beyond the point of profitability. The net income limitation has the effect of capping taxable windfall profit at ninety percent of the net income from the property, as net income is defined for purposes of section 4988(b)(1). See Rev.Rul. 85-79, 1985-1 C.B. 337 (explaining operation of net income limitation).

Section 4988(b)(2) defines net income per barrel as “the taxable income derived from the oil removed from a particular property for a given year divided by the number of barrels from that property taken into account for that year.” Treas.Reg. § 51.-4988 — 2(b)(1)(ii) requires that taxable income be computed according to I.R.C. section 613(a), subtracting certain expenses from the property’s gross income. Gross income from the property is the amount for which the taxpayer sells the oil in the immediate vicinity of the well, minus any rents or royalties paid or incurred by the taxpayer in respect to the property. Treas.Reg. § 1.613-3(a).

A. Deductibility of the Windfall Profit Tax

The net income limitation circumscribes windfall profit tax liability according to the profitability of production. Landreth would define income under the net income limitation as it is defined under I.R.C. subtitle A, which codifies the taxes imposed on income. Indeed, for the purpose of the tax on income, the windfall profit tax is already deductible under I.R.C. section 164. 6 The I.R.C. provisions govern *87 ing computation of the windfall profit tax, however, and the associated regulations interpreting the net income limitation, dispose of Landreth’s contention that the tax itself is deductible from section 4988 income.

Section 4988(b)(3)(B) states that, in calculating taxable income from the property, “[n]o deduction shall be allowed for ... the tax imposed by section 4986,” the windfall profit tax. And the associated Treas.Reg. § 51.4988—2(b)(1)(ii) computes taxable income by reducing the property’s gross income “by all allowable deductions attributable to the production of taxable crude oil ... except windfall profit tax ” (emphasis added). See also Rev.Rul. 85-79, 1985-1 C.B. 337 (explaining rationale for nonde-ductibility of windfall profit tax in computing section 4988 net income). I.R.C. provisions and regulations pertaining specifically to the windfall profit tax of I.R.C. subtitle D govern the definition of income for the purposes of that tax. Those regulations are set forth in Treas.Reg. § 51.4988-2(b)(1)(ii) and, by reference, I.R.C. § 613— 3(a). We find no evidence that Congress intended for the net income limitation either to change the windfall profit tax from an excise tax to an income tax, or to incorporate the definition of income from I.R.C. subtitle A provisions that concern taxes imposed on income.

Nor do we find Rev.Rul. 83-185, 1983-2 C.B. 200, applicable.

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963 F.2d 84, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 599, 70 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6296, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 13924, 1992 WL 116436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-a-landreth-sr-mary-adele-landreth-smith-co-trustees-of-wa-ca5-1992.