1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*196
In 1959, taxpayer, an open-pit mining operator, acquired the fee title to a tract of land, containing commercially marketable limestone deposits, subject to a right-of-way for an existing gas pipeline. During the taxable year, taxpayer, in order to continue operations, obtained the release of the right-of-way in exchange for an alternative right-of-way and payment of the expenses of relocating the pipeline.
55 T.C. 672">*673 OPINION
Respondent determined deficiencies in the income taxes of petitioner as follows:
FYE -- | Deficiency |
Feb. 28, 1963 | $ 7,924.65 |
Feb. 29, 1964 | 6,469.53 |
Feb. 28, 1965 | 15,917.53 |
The parties have disposed of all the issues except that relating to a deduction in 1965 under section 616(a) or
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*198 All of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.
Petitioner, Geoghegan & Mathis, Inc., is a Kentucky corporation whose principal place of business, at the time of filing the petition herein, was Bardstown, Ky. Its return for the taxable year ending February 28, 1965, was timely filed with the district director of internal revenue, Louisville, Ky.
Petitioner's principal business is the operation of limestone quarries. In 1959, petitioner purchased the fee title to a tract of land near Bardstown, Ky. Prior to petitioner's purchase, it had been determined that the tract contained limestone in commercially marketable quantities and that such limestone lay under the entire surface of the tract.
A gas pipeline crossed the central portion of the tract purchased by petitioner. The owner of the pipeline, Louisville Gas & Electric Co. (hereinafter the utility company), possessed a perpetual right-of-way or easement across the tract for the purpose of constructing and maintaining this pipeline. Petitioner's title to the tract was specifically made subject to this right-of-way. The right-of-way agreement contained the following clause:
The said grantors, their heirs, personal1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*199 representatives and assigns, shall have the right fully to use and enjoy the said premises except for the purposes herein granted to said grantee, his heirs, personal representatives and assigns.
In 1959, petitioner began extracting the limestone on the western boundary of the tract by using the open-pit method. This method utilized a vertical mining face and a horizontal mining floor. The original face and floor were established by excavation. Subsequently, the method by which the limestone was removed involved essentially two steps. First, the earth overburden which covered the limestone formations 55 T.C. 672">*674 was removed by excavation. Second, the limestone was removed from the face of the mine by blasting and drilling.
As more limestone was extracted, petitioner's mining operations necessarily came closer to the pipeline. The existence of the pipeline and the right-of-way impeded further mining operations. The existing mining face could no longer be advanced unless the pipeline were removed.
Petitioner's officers negotiated with the utility company concerning relocation of the pipeline. On January 15, 1964, an agreement was reached whereby petitioner granted the utility 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*200 company a new easement or right-of-way around the northern and eastern edges of the tract and the utility company surrendered its old right-of-way or easement to petitioner. As part of the arrangement, petitioner also agreed to bear the costs of relocating the pipeline on the new easement or right-of-way.
During petitioner's taxable year ending on February 28, 1965, the pipeline was relocated at a cost to petitioner of $ 14,682.78, which petitioner deducted as a development expenditure in addition to its deduction for depletion. Petitioner's continuing mining operations subsequently extended the mining face into that portion of the tract which was originally northeast of the earlier location of the pipeline.
Resolution of the issue in this case turns upon whether the cost to petitioner of relocating the utility company's pipeline represents, as petitioner contends, a development expenditure deductible under section 616(a) 2 or an ordinary and necessary business expense deductible under
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*202 The thrust of petitioner's argument with respect to section 616(a) is that, since the purpose of its arrangements with the utility company was to obtain access to the limestone with respect to which it already owned all mineral rights, its expenditure for relocation of the pipeline falls within the same category as expenditures for roads with respect to an open-pit mine (
It cannot be gainsaid that petitioner had, prior to the arrangement with the utility company, been vested with fee title to the minerals themselves. But the fact remains that the
We think it clear that by its arrangement with the utility company petitioner eliminated a property interest in favor of the latter and acquired a
We recognize that the approach of
Perhaps in anticipation of our focussing on its acquisition of a right of access in the form of an interest in property represented by the outstanding right-of-way, petitioner has, in the alternative, sought to dissect the arrangements between it and the utility company. Thus, it contends that the consideration for the release of the right-of-way 55 T.C. 672">*677 was solely the furnishing by petitioner of a substitute right-of-way and that, petitioner having thus obtained the unimpaired right of access, the payment1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*208 of the cost of relocating the gas pipeline was simply an expenditure for exploiting its right of access. We disagree. We think it completely unrealistic to conclude that the utility company bargained its right-of-way exclusively for another right-of-way. It is clear to us that the bargain was the existing right-of-way and pipeline for another right-of-way
The foregoing rationale is equally dispositive of petitioner's further claim that such expenditures constitute an ordinary and necessary business expense under
1. All references are to the Internal Revnue Code of 1954 unless otherwise specified.↩
2. SEC. 616. DEVELOPMENT EXPENDITURES.
(a) In General. -- * * * [There] shall be allowed as a deduction in computing taxable income all expenditures paid or incurred during the taxable year for the development of a mine or other natural deposit (other than an oil or gas well) if paid or incurred after the existence of ores or minerals in commercially marketable quantities has been disclosed. This section shall not apply to expenditures for the acquisition or improvement of property of a character which is subject to the allowance for depreciation provided in section 167, but allowances for depreciation shall be considered, for purposes of this section, as expenditures.
The predecessor of sec. 616(a) was sec. 23(cc) of the
3. The legislative history, as well as the judicial and administrative treatment of the problem from as early as the Revenue Act of 1918, indicates that determinations were guided mainly by the experiences of subsurface mining operations. See Alexander & Grant, "Mine Development and Exploration Expenditures,"
4. Compare
5. We are bolstered in our conclusion that a distinction should be drawn between expenditures for rights of access and those simply to exploit rights of access by the cases holding that a portion of the cost of land not necessary for mining a deposit can and should be allocated to the basis for determining cost depletion.