1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*76
The petitioner sold working interests in certain oil and gas leases to B, retaining production payments which he then sold to C, a partnership with substantial net worth. C financed the purchase by obtaining a loan from a bank. To induce the bank to make the loan to C, the petitioner agreed, if requested to do so on the maturity of the note, to find a purchaser for the note, or purchase it himself, for a sum equal to the unpaid balance plus accrued interest.
50 T.C. 803">*804 The1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*77 respondent determined a deficiency in the petitioners' income tax of $ 184.92 for the taxable year ended December 31, 1962. The sole issue for decision is whether the petitioner Mr. Landreth constructively received additional income by reason of his having, in effect, guaranteed a loan made by a bank to a partnership which purchased an oil and gas production payment from him in an ABC transaction.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts are stipulated, and those facts are so found.
George H. Landreth and Alice J. Landreth are husband and wife who resided in Midland, Tex., at the time the petition was filed in this case. They filed their income tax returns for the years ending December 31, 1961, 1962, and 1963, using the cash method of accounting, with the district director of internal revenue, Dallas, Tex.
The petitioners were engaged in the oil and gas business, as well as other businesses, during 1961, 1962, and 1963. They owned a portion of the working interest or royalty interest in many oil and gas leases.
Prior to August 1961, the petitioners had acquired an undivided interest in oil and gas leaseholds in the Willis, C. Meek, and Winkleman leases in Midland County, Tex., the Kelly1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*78 lease in Martin County, Tex., and the Kyle lease in Loving County, Tex. In the summer of 1961, Mr. Landreth entered into discussions with Myron Anderson concerning the sale of these leases. Mr. Anderson was the manager of Petroleum Investors, Ltd. (Investors), a limited partnership engaged in the business of financing oil properties, and was president of Petroleum Associates, Inc., a corporation which was the general partner of Investors. Mr. Landreth was not a partner, and had no interest, in Investors.
As a result of these negotiations, it was agreed that the leases would be sold in an ABC transaction. 1 On August 23, 1961, Mr. Landreth conveyed an undivided half interest in the five leases to Myron Anderson, trustee, who was acting for Thomas M. O'Brien, for $ 15,000. In this conveyance, he reserved a production payment in the principal sum of $ 30,000, plus an additional amount equal to interest at the rate 50 T.C. 803">*805 of 6 1/2 percent per year on the unliquidated balance of the production payment, payable out of 95 percent of all oil, gas, and other hydrocarbons produced from the undivided one-half interest transferred to Anderson. At the same time, Mr. Landreth conveyed1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*79 the other half interest in the leases to Marvin N. Hime for $ 15,000. In this conveyance, he also reserved a production payment in the principal amount of $ 30,000, plus an amount equal to interest at 6 1/2 percent per year on the unliquidated balance of the production payment, payable out of 95 percent of the oil, gas, and other hydrocarbons produced by the half interest transferred to Mr. Hime.
1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*80 Also on August 23, 1961, Mr. Landreth sold the reserved production payments to Investors for $ 30,000 each. At this time, Investors was a going business, engaged in the financing of oil properties, and had a net worth in excess of $ 300,000. To finance its purchase, Investors, on the same day, borrowed $ 60,000, with interest at 6 percent per year, from the First National Bank of Midland, Tex. (Midland Bank or the bank). Investors gave Midland Bank its note, which matured in 3 years, secured by a deed of trust conveying the two $ 30,000 oil production payments to C. J. Kelly, trustee, for the benefit of Midland Bank. Although Investors contemplated that the note would be paid off out of the proceeds of the oil accruing to the production payments, its liability on the note was in no way limited.
On August 23, 1961, Mr. Landreth executed and delivered to the Midland Bank an enforceable letter agreement which stated that after a period of 36 months, he would, upon demand by Midland Bank, purchase or find a purchaser for the unpaid principal and accrued interest on the note given by Investors to the bank. The letter provided that the bank would assign its security interest in the1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*81 production payments to such purchaser. Midland Bank, believing that Investors was a shell corporation with no assets, and being unfamiliar with the purchasers of the working interests who were to operate the leases, would not have made the loan to Investors without Mr. Landreth's takeout letter. However, although Mr. Landreth and Mr. Anderson had, in the preliminary negotiations, discussed a possible guarantee by Mr. Landreth, this matter was dropped prior to the reaching of any agreement as to what properties were to be transferred and on what terms. Investors and Mr. Anderson were unaware, at the time of the transactions and to the date of the hearing in this case, of the agreement between Mr. Landreth and Midland Bank.
All of the documents described above, which were executed on August 23, 1961, stated that they were to be effective as of August 1, 1961, and thus the proceeds of production on and after that date allocable to the production payments were paid over to the Midland Bank to apply on Investors' debt. The gross oil runs, the production 50 T.C. 803">*806 taxes, and the net amount paid to the Midland Bank from the leases are as follows:
Year | Gross oil | Production | Net paid |
runs | taxes | to bank | |
1961 | $ 8,414.66 | $ 387.07 | $ 8,027.59 |
1962 | 13,417.60 | 617.19 | 12,800.41 |
1963 | 10,911.04 | 501.91 | 10,409.13 |
1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*82 The Midland Bank collected the following amounts as interest on its $ 60,000 loan to Investors:
Year | Amount |
1961 | $ 1,388.44 |
1962 | 2,493.19 |
1963 | 1,605.40 |
In addition to payments made to the bank out of the oil runs, Investors made some payments out of its own funds. Production from the transferred leases fell shortly after the August 23 transactions, the note was not paid off by its maturity date in August 1964, and the bank extended its maturity to August 1965 and then to August 1966. In the latter part of 1964, Midland Bank, at Mr. Landreth's request, returned the takeout letter to him, and absolved him of further liability with respect to the Investors' loan. The bank took this action because it believed its security for the note was adequate and because Mr. Landreth was a good customer whose business the bank wanted to keep.
In late 1965 or early 1966, the purchasers of the working interest, Myron Anderson, trustee, and Marvin Hime, having each realized losses of approximately $ 30,000 with regard to the properties in the August 1961 transaction, sold their interests in four of the leases to Mr. Landreth for $ 6,000. The other lease, the Kyle lease, was at the1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*83 same time sold to a third party, Jack S. Reeves, for $ 22,250. At about the same time, Investors and the Midland Bank released all the leases except the Kyle lease from the production payment.
During the period 1961 to 1966, Mr. Landreth was financially able to purchase the unpaid principal balance and accrued interest on the Investors' note, but at no time was he called upon to do so, nor did he do so. After the bank returned the takeout letter to him in 1964, Mr. Landreth had no obligation with respect to Investors' note, and there was no understanding that he would protect the bank or Investors from loss with respect thereto.
At the date of the hearing in this case, Investors still held the production payment on the Kyle lease and expected that it would suffer no loss as a result of its transactions with respect to the production payment.
50 T.C. 803">*807 On their 1961 tax returns, the petitioners reported as income a capital gain from the sale of the working interests and production payments in the transferred leases. They reported no income from the production payments in 1962.
In his statutory notice of deficiency, dated March 26, 1965, the respondent gave the following explanation1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*84 for his determination:
(a) It is determined that the transaction during 1961 wherein you sold interest in oil and gas leases to Marvin Hime and Myron Anderson, Trustee, reserving a production payment of $ 60,000.00, which you assigned to Petroleum Investors, Ltd., who borrowed $ 60,000.00 from the First National Bank of Midland as a production payment loan and whereby you guaranteed to find a purchaser of the loan balance at any time the bank requested, constituted one transaction. It is further determined that your guarantee to the bank resulted in your retaining the production payment of $ 60,000.00 and that income from the production payment constituted taxable income to you. * * *
Because he determined that the petitioners' adjusted gross income for 1962 should be increased, his notice disallowed a portion of the petitioners' claimed deduction for medical expenses.
OPINION
In this case, we have in form an ABC transaction, with embellishments. In the normal ABC transaction, A, the seller, treats as the proceeds from the sale of property what he receives from the sale of the working interest to B and what he receives from the sale of the production payment to C; B reports the1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*85 income accruing to the working interest, and C reports that accruing to the production payment. See, e.g.,
The concept of economic interest, which originated as a test to determine what kinds of income derived from mineral production and sale are subject1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*86 to depletion (
A similar situation was recently considered by this Court in
In short, the guaranty was part and parcel of the production payment. As payments were made on the oil production payment, any possible liability of Donnell was reduced with regard to it. Since Calm Corp. (or Texas Bank & Trust Co.) did not have to look merely to oil production for satisfaction of the oil payment, but instead could look to the personal guaranty of Donnell, we think this situation comes within the ambit of the
The respondent argues 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*90 that his position in the present case is supported by
Contrary to the respondent's contention, we conclude that the ownership of, and the economic interest in, the production payment passed to Investors as a result of the transaction. After the transfer, Investors bore the ultimate risk of loss from failure of production from the transferred leases to satisfy the production payment. In the first place, Investors was not a mere strawman; there was uncontradicted testimony, and we have found, that Investors had a net worth of greater than $ 300,000 in August 1961. 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*91 Investors' liability on its note to the Midland Bank was general -- it was not limited to the production payment. Although the Midland Bank agreed to make the loan without realizing that Investors had substantial assets, the bank actually had a meaningful right to shift any loss on the production payment to Investors. 2
50 T.C. 803">*810 It is true, as the respondent points out, that if the Midland Bank found its security interest in the production payment insufficient to protect itself from loss on its loan to Investors, it could look to Mr. Landreth to fulfill the terms of his takeout letter. However, the fact that Mr. Landreth might have a guarantor's obligation to the Midland Bank is not sufficient to establish that he had the economic interest in the production payment. Having purchased1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*92 the note, Mr. Landreth, or someone found by him pursuant to the terms of the takeout letter, would step into the shoes of the Midland Bank as a creditor of Investors, and have a right against Investors for the unpaid balance plus interest on the note. In view of the facts that the purchaser of the note would have a right against Investors and that Investors had sufficient net worth at the time of the transactions to make the right meaningful, we find that the takeout letter did not cause the economic interest to remain with Mr. Landreth; the investment risk lay upon Investors. The respondent urges that Mr. Landreth intended to bear the risk of loss himself. However, there is nothing in the record to indicate that, if he had to fulfill his obligations under the takeout letter, he would not have fully exercised his rights against Investors. The respondent contends that the
When the facts of this case are viewed1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*93 properly,
In the interests of a workable rule,
In the present case, however, there is no question but that a production payment, one which satisfies the requirements of
50 T.C. 803">*811 The respondent appears also to be arguing that
The holder, of course, is Petroleum Investors, Ltd. There is nothing and no one it can look to besides the oil and gas runs to satisfy the production payments, and if they are insufficient, either in total amounts or in amounts of daily production, its only remedy is to mumble to itself until it has completely exhausted that remedy. [Petitioner's brief 8]
Thus, even if
In
The inapplicability of
50 T.C. 803">*812 production payment ran from Sango to the bank and that the existence of the deed of trust [which covered property other than production payment oil] gave rise to an additional security which under the rule of
1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*97 However, the Court found that the respondent, who had the burden of proof in that case, had failed to prove that Scripps lacked substance. It held that the purchaser of the working interest was taxable only on the income accruing to that interest, notwithstanding that the bank had a lien against the entire property to secure its loan.
The issue in this case may also be stated as whether or not the purported transfer of the production payment to Investors was in substance a "sale." We have found that, as a result of the transaction, the investment risk was transferred to Investors. Mr. Landreth received full payment for the sale of his interest. He did guarantee the loan and as a result incurred some risks, but those risks were not significantly different from those he would have retained had he sold the production payment on credit; that is, had Investors paid for the production payment by giving Mr. Landreth its demand note for the purchase, secured by the production payment and Investors' personal liability, Mr. Landreth would have been exposed to at least as much risk as he actually was, acting as guarantor for the bank. Yet, it would follow
There is in the respondent's brief a suggestion that he would tax Mr. Landreth on the production payment income simply because the takeout letter did guarantee the bank's loan. His theory appears to be that because, by reason of the guarantee of the loan to Investors, Mr. Landreth's assets were subjected to a contingent $ 60,000 liability to the bank, that as payments were made to the bank from the oil runs this possible liability was reduced, and that Mr. Landreth correspondingly received income. If by this argument the respondent intended to suggest that because of the seller's guarantee, the sale of the production payment should not be recognized for tax purposes, we do not agree. Under
If the1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 76">*99 respondent intends to suggest that any person who guarantees the payment of a loan realizes income when the principal debtor discharges the loan, we reject the proposition. The respondent cites, and we have found, no authority for the proposition that a guarantor 50 T.C. 803">*813 constructively receives income when the debtor makes payments to the creditor on his obligation, and we think that it has no foundation in the principles of the tax law. The situation of a guarantor is not like that of a debtor who as a result of the original loan obtains a nontaxable increase in assets. The guarantor obtains nothing except perhaps a taxable consideration for his promise. Where a debtor is relieved of his obligation to repay the loan, his net worth is increased over what it would have been if the original transaction had never occurred. This real increase in wealth may be properly taxable.
Because we have found that the petitioners did not err in failing to report the production payment income on their return, we also hold for the petitioners on the resulting issue concerning the medical expense deduction.
1. In a typical ABC transaction, A, the owner of producing oil and gas leases, sells to B the working interest in such leases for a cash consideration and retains a production payment in a specified dollar amount together with an amount equal to interest on the unliquidated principal balance of the payment. A production payment "is a right to oil and gas in place that entitles its owner to a specified fraction of production for a limited time, or until a specified sum of money (which may be determined by a formula) or a specified number of units of oil or gas has been received." Breeding and Burton, Income Taxation of Oil and Gas Production par. 2.07 (1961). Simultaneously, A sells the retained production payment for a purchase price equal to its principal amount to C, an investor, who finances the purchase by a loan from a lending institution secured by a deed of trust and mortgage on the production payment and an assignment of the income accruing to the production payment.↩
2. Our reasoning and holding herein are based on our factual determination that Investors was a financially responsible party. Had Investors been a shell, we would have a different case, as to which we express no views at this time.↩