Houston Oil and Minerals Corp. v. C.I.R., 90-4068

Decision Date31 January 1991
Docket NumberNo. 90-4068,90-4068
Citation922 F.2d 283
Parties-492, 91-1 USTC P 50,067 HOUSTON OIL AND MINERALS CORPORATION, Petitioner-Appellee, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellant.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Charles Bricken, Gary R. Allen, David English Carmack, Shirley D. Peterson, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Tax Div., Peter K. Scott, I.R.S., Washington, D.C., for respondent-appellant.

Wm. C. Griffith, Baker & Botts, Houston, Tex., for petitioner-appellee.

William M. Linden, Charles D. Tetrault, Vinson & Elkins, Houston, Tex., for amicus curiae Louisiana Land & Exploration Co.

Appeal from the Decision of the United States Tax Court.

Before THORNBERRY, DAVIS and SMITH, Circuit Judges.

W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (Commissioner) appeals the Tax Court's conclusion that overriding royalty interests in oil and gas leases are not "oil, gas, or geothermal property" under Sec. 1254 of the Internal Revenue Code. 1 We affirm.

I.

Houston Oil and Minerals Corporation (HOMC) held mineral leases covering properties in the United States and several foreign countries. Between January 1, 1976, and April 24, 1981, HOMC explored and developed many of these properties, incurring substantial intangible drilling and development costs (IDCs). The Internal Revenue Code allows taxpayers to deduct IDCs. See 26 U.S.C. Sec. 263(c). HOMC exercised that option.

In 1980 Tenneco agreed to acquire all of HOMC's outstanding stock in exchange for stock in Tenneco. To reduce the number of shares Tenneco would have to issue and to permit HOMC's shareholders to retain a direct equity interest in HOMC's mineral leases, HOMC carved out overriding royalty interests in its oil and gas leases and conveyed those interests into a trust. The trust agreement divided beneficial interest in the trust among HOMC's shareholders on a pro rata basis according to the number of shares held by each shareholder.

Just after HOMC created the trust, a Tenneco subsidiary merged into HOMC. HOMC survived the merger as a wholly owned subsidiary of Tenneco. HOMC still operates most of the leasehold interests from which it carved the overriding royalties.

The Commissioner reviewed HOMC's 1980 and 1981 tax returns and determined that the transfer of overriding royalties to the trust was a disposal of property under Sec. 1254 of the Internal Revenue Code. Section 1254 requires taxpayers who dispose of "oil, gas, or geothermal property" to recognize a gain (i.e., ordinary income) for "the aggregate amount of expenditures after December 31, 1975, which are allocable to such property and which have been deducted as intangible drilling and development costs under Sec. 263(c) by the taxpayer or any other person...."

HOMC petitioned the Tax Court for redetermination of the deficiency. The parties stipulated to the facts of the case, and the only question was whether the overriding royalty interests are "oil, gas, or geothermal property." The Tax Court held that overriding royalty interests are not "oil, gas, or geothermal property." HOMC, therefore, did not recapture any of the IDCs. The Commissioner appeals.

II.

We review Tax Court decisions under the same standard used for civil actions decided by a federal district court. See 26 U.S.C. Sec. 7482(a). Because the parties stipulated to the facts of this case, we need not examine the Tax Court's factual determinations. We review the Tax Court's conclusions of law de novo. See Dresser Indus. v. Comm'r., 911 F.2d 1128, 1132 (5th Cir.1990).

The recapture provision in Sec. 1254(a)(1) applies only to "oil, gas, or geothermal property." 2 To qualify as "oil, gas, or geothermal property," the overriding royalty interests must meet two requirements under Sec. 1254(a)(3): (1) the royalty interests must fall within the definition of "property" in Code Sec. 614; and (2) the royalty interests must be property to which the IDCs "are properly chargeable." 3

Code Sec. 614 defines "property" as "each separate interest owned by the taxpayer in each mineral deposit in each separate tract or parcel of land." The Treasury Regulation interpreting this provision states that the term "interest" includes, among other things, overriding royalties. See Treas.Reg. Sec. 1.1614-1(a). The overriding royalty interests at issue in this case fit comfortably within the definition of "property" in Sec. 614, thus meeting the first requirement of "oil, gas, or geothermal property."

To meet the second requirement of "oil, gas, or geothermal property," the royalty interests must be property to which the IDCs "are properly chargeable." The Tax Court concluded that the overriding royalties are not "oil, gas, or geothermal property" because IDCs "are properly chargeable" only against working interests and royalties are nonworking interests. The Commissioner concedes that IDCs are properly chargeable only against working interests, that overriding royalties are nonworking interests, and that HOMC retained 100 percent of the working interests in the oil and gas leases. On the other hand, HOMC admits that the overriding royalties were part of the working interest when the IDCs were deducted (i.e., before carve-out and disposition of the overriding royalties). The only question, therefore, is whether the Tax Court correctly concluded that a property interest must be a working interest at the time of its disposition to qualify as "oil, gas, or geothermal property." We conclude that the Tax Court was correct.

We find the plain language of Sec. 1254(a)(3) dispositive. That section defines "oil, gas, or geothermal property" as "any property (within the meaning of section 614) with respect to which any expenditures described in [section 1254(a)(1)(A) ] are properly chargeable." (emphasis added). The present tense verb--"are chargeable"--requires us to consider the nature of the property interest at the moment of disposition, not at the time the IDCs are charged against the interest. Because IDCs are not properly chargeable to overriding royalty interests, those interests are not "oil, gas, or geothermal property" and HOMC need not recognize a gain.

The Commissioner urges us to ignore verb tense and instead focus on the expenditures referred to in Sec. 1254(a)(3), i.e., the expenditures described in Sec. 1254(a)(1)(A). 4 Those expenditures include all IDCs that "have been deducted" and that "would be reflected in the adjusted basis of the property" if they had not been deducted. The IDCs at issue here meet both of those requirements. The Commissioner argues that any time IDCs meet those requirements, they must be recaptured. But this assertion sidesteps the fundamental question underlying this case: which property must be sold before the IDCs are recaptured? The two tests in Sec. 1254(a)(1)(A) determine only the amount of IDCs to be recaptured; they do not determine whether that amount is "properly chargeable" to any particular property interest.

The Commissioner suggests that our interpretation of Sec. 1254 will lead to abuse. According to the Commissioner, taxpayers wanting to avoid recapture could carve out an overriding royalty interest equal to 99 percent of the net profits from the working interest and sell that royalty interest without recognizing any gain. Although the taxpayer would recapture previously deducted IDCs upon disposition of the working interest, the amount of recapture is limited under Sec. 1254(a)(1)(B) to the amount of gain realized. In effect, therefore, the taxpayer would recapture few if any IDCs because the working interest, now devoid of 99 percent of the revenue interest, would have little gain.

Although this abusive transaction is a hypothetical possibility, the Commissioner concedes that HOMC is not attempting to abuse the tax law in this case. Courts have also developed methods--for example, the step-transaction doctrine 5 and the substance-over-form doctrine 6--to overcome abuse in exceptional cases. We will not depart from the plain words of Sec. 1254 based on the uncertain possibility of abuse in a small number of cases.

In summary, the parties agree that the IDCs were not chargeable against the overriding royalty interests at issue here when those interests were transferred. The plain words of Code Sec. 1254(a)(3) lead us to...

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