delivered the opinion of the Court.
Oklahoma City Company in 1931 owned certain royalty interests, fee interests, and deferred oil payments in properties in Oklahoma. During that year it entered into a written contract with petitioner Prichard providing for the conveyance to him of these interests for the agreed consideration of one hundred sixty thousand dollars, payable fifty thousand in cash and one hundred ten thousand from one-half of the proceeds received by him which might be derived from oil and gas produced from the properties and from the sale of fee title to any or all of
The gross proceeds derived from the production and sale of oil from the properties
3
during 1932 amounted to
It is settled that the same basic issue determines both to whom income derived from the production of oil and gas is taxable and to whom a deduction for depletion is allowable. That issue is, who has a capital investment in the oil and gas in place and what is the extent of his interest.
Helvering
v.
Bankline Oil Co.,
. Oil and gas reserves like other minerals in place, are recognized as wasting, assets. The production of oil and gas, like the mining of ore, is treated as an income-рroducing operation, not as a conversion of capital investment as upon a sale, and is said to resemble a manufae-
The sole owner and operator of oil properties clearly has a capital investment in the oil in place, if anyone has, and so is taxable on the gross proceeds of production and is granted a deduction from gross income as compensation for the consumption of his capital. See
Burnet
v.
Harmel, supra,
at 107-108;
Helvering
v.
Clifford,
Other situations, falling between the two mentioned, have been put on one side оr the other as the cases arose. The holder of a royalty interest — that is, a right to receive a specified percentage of all oil and gas produced during the term of the lease — is deemed to have “an economic interest” in the oil in place which is depleted by severаnce.
Palmer
v.
Bender,
Thomas
v.
Perkins,
The holder of an oil payment right, as an original proposition, might be regarded as having no capital investment in the oil and gas in place. The value of the right, even though dependеnt upon the extent of the oil reserves, is fixed at the moment of creation and does not vary directly with the severance of the mineral from the soil. In this sense it resembles the right to cash payments more closely than the right to- royalty payments. Yet it does depend upon the production of oil, оrdinarily can be realized upon only over a period of years, and permits of a simple and
The Government maintains that the present case is distinguishable from Thomas v. Perkins for the reason that the bаsis for decision there was that ownership of sufficient oil to make the payments had not been conveyed to the assignee but remained in the assignor. It asserts that the terms of the contract and the instruments of conveyance here negative any intention on the part of the parties to withhold from the operation of the grant an amount of oil equal to the oil payments. The following factors, among others, are relied upon as supporting this contention: (1) the contract contains no qualifying language reserving from the grant any interest in the oil and gas in place; (2) the deferred payments of one hundred ten thousand dollars were payable in cash and not directly in oil; (3) the deferred payments drew interest until paid; (4) Oklahoma Company had a first lien and claim against one-half of the oil and gas production and fee interest; (5) petitioner Prichard had the right to sell the fee interest covered by the contract and discharge the deferred payments out of the proceeds of such sale rather than out of the proceeds of the oil and gas production.
The reservation of an interest in the fee, in addition to the interest in the oil production, however, materially affects the transaction. Oklahoma Company is not dependent entirely upon the production of oil for the deferred payments; they may be derived from sales of the fee title to the land conveyed. It is clear that payments derived from such sales would not be subject to an allowance for depletion of the oil reserves, for no oil would thereby have been severed from the ground; an allowance for depletion upon the proceeds of such a sale would result, contrary to the purpose of Congress, in a double deduction — first, to Oklahoma Company; second, to the vendee-owner upon the production of oil.
Helvering
v.
Twin Bell Oil Syndicate,
Petitioners, as purchasers and owners of the properties, are therefore taxable upon the gross proceeds derived from the oil production, notwithstanding the arrangement to pay over such proceeds to Oklahoma Company. See
Helvering
v.
Clifford,
Affirmed.
Notes
Petitioners state that “the instruments of transfer of those properties were absolute and unqualified assignments and conveyancеs” and that there was “no reservation of any sort of interest, much less any legal interest, specified in those assignments and conveyances.”
The remaining 10% interest was acquired for one Olsen, whose case was consolidated with those of Prichard and Anderson, and disposed of in the same opinion below, but who has not sought review here.
The record does not indicate what portion of the gross proceeds was derived from the production and sale of oil and gas and what
Revenue Act of 1932, c. 209, 47 Stat. 169.
The lien here appears to cover both the oil and gas production and the fee interest from which the deferred payments were to be derived.
