CALTEX OIL VENTURE, CALTEX MANAGEMENT CORPORATION, TAX MATTERS PARTNER v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Docket No. 3793-08
United States Tax Court
January 12, 2012
levied funds is a refund claim under
V. Conclusion
The IRS is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law with regard to Ms. Minihan‘s potential claim for a refund under
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order will be issued.
Halvor N. Adams III, Margaret Burow, and James P.A. Caligure, for respondent.
OPINION
GUSTAFSON, Judge: On November 13, 2007, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA) for taxable year ending December 31, 1999, to Caltex Management Corp., the tax matters partner (TMP) of Caltex Oil Venture. (It is the latter entity—Caltex Oil Venture—to which we refer herein as “Caltex“.) This case is a partnership-level action based on a petition filed by the TMP pursuant to
Background
The following facts are not in dispute and are derived from the pleadings, the stipulations of fact, the parties’ motion papers, and the supporting exhibits attached thereto.
Caltex was organized in 1999. For Federal income tax purposes, Caltex is a partnership that uses the accrual method of accounting and has a taxable year ending December 31. On December 31, 1999, Caltex entered into a turnkey contract with Red River Exploration, Inc. Under the contract, Red River assigned to Caltex a 74.33-percent interest in a well in Louisiana designated “J.O. Kimbrell 2-8#1” and a 90-percent interest in a well in Oklahoma designated “NW Sulphur #2“. Red River agreed to “commence or cause to be commenced” the drilling of wells at the two sites “[a]s soon as practicable after the execution of * * * [the contract] but in no event later than March 31, 2000“. “[T]hereafter * * * [Red River would] continue or cause to be continued the drilling [of the wells] with due diligence and in a workmanlike manner to a depth to adequately test the objective formation.” For purposes of the IRS‘s motion for partial summary judgment, we assume (as Caltex asserts) that “a typical well will take two years to grow from concept to commencement to production for the purpose of selling hydrocarbons.”3
The contract called for Caltex to pay to Red River by the close of business on December 31, 1999, $4,123,333 in cash and note “as Turnkey Drilling Costs” and “$1,049,333 for the Intangible Completion Costs“, for a total of $5,172,666. Caltex paid Red River with two checks dated December 27, 1999, in the amounts of $308,293.50 for “drilling” and $119,892 for “completion“,4 totaling $428,185.50, and executed a note in favor of Red River for approximately $4.8 million.5
Caltex timely filed, for 1999, a Form 1065, “U.S. Partnership Return of Income“. On the Form 1065, Caltex claimed a deduction of $5,172,666 for nonproductive IDCs.
In November 2007 the IRS issued its FPAA determining that Caltex was not entitled to deduct any portion of the IDCs because, among other things, the economic performance requirement of
On February 12, 2008, Caltex, through its TMP, timely filed a petition pursuant to
On September 18, 2009, the IRS moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of whether the economic performance requirement of
For purposes of deciding this motion, we will consider to what extent, if any, the services attributable to the $5,172,666 in IDCs were economically performed during 1999 or within a time that the Code and regulations allow the services to be treated as if performed in 1999.
Discussion
I. Standard for summary judgment
Under Rule 121 (the Tax Court‘s analog to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure) the Court may grant full or partial summary judgment where there is no genuine issue of any material fact and a decision may be rendered as a matter of law. The moving party bears the burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists, and the Court will view any factual material and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Dahlstrom v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 812, 821 (1985); cf. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986) (same standard under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56). “The opposing party is to be afforded the benefit of all reasonable doubt, and any inference to be drawn from the underlying facts contained in the record must be viewed in a light most favorable to the party opposing the motion for summary judgment.” Espinoza v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 412, 416 (1982).
The issue presented in the IRS‘s motion—i.e., whether the economic performance requirement of
II. Statutory and regulatory framework
The issue before us is an accounting question: What is the proper year for claiming deductions for costs that are related
A. “All events test”
Under an accrual method * * * a liability * * * is incurred, and generally is taken into account for Federal income tax purposes, in the taxable year in which all the events have occurred that establish the fact of the liability, the amount of the liability can be determined with reasonable accuracy, and economic performance has occurred with respect to the liability. * * * [Emphasis added.]
See United States v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 481 U.S. 239, 242-243 (1987). The IRS does not dispute that Caltex satisfied the first two requirements of the “all events test” (i.e., (1) that all the events occurred to establish the liability; and (2) that the amount of the liability was determinable with reasonable accuracy). Rather, the IRS contends that Caltex failed to satisfy the third “all events” requirement, namely, “economic performance“.
1. General rule: provision of services
Before the enactment of
Generally, if the liability of the taxpayer arises from a third person‘s providing services to the taxpayer, economic performance occurs as the services are provided.
Before the enactment of
As a result, unless an exception to this general rule applies, the IDCs at issue here satisfy the economic performance requirement of
2. The two pertinent exceptions in dispute8
Caltex does not contend that Red River performed more than $5 million in services on the last day of 1999 (i.e., the day the contract was executed).9 Rather, Caltex claims its deduction is warranted under two possible exceptions to the general rule:
a. The 90-day rule
The 90-day rule of
b. The 3½-month rule
In the alternative, Caltex argues that, even if it is not entitled to a full deduction under the 90-day rule, it is entitled, at least, to a partial deduction of IDCs for 1999 under the 3½-month rule of
We now address these disputed issues.
III. The special 90-day rule for oil and gas tax shelters under section 461(i)(2)(A): “if drilling of the well commences”
In the case of a tax shelter, economic performance with respect to amounts paid during the taxable year for drilling an oil or gas well shall be treated as having occurred within a taxable year if drilling of the well commences before the close of the 90th day after the close of the taxable year. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, accrual-basis oil and gas tax shelters (such as Caltex) may deduct their IDCs in advance of drilling as long as the “drilling of the well commences” within 90 days after the close of the tax year for which the taxpayer is seeking to claim the deduction.
The question that this provision prompts is: When does the “drilling” of a well “commence“?
The IRS maintains that the drilling of a well commences when the well is “spudded“, meaning at the beginning of surface drilling (i.e., when the drill bit penetrates the ground), while Caltex argues that drilling is commenced when activities such as site preparation begin.
A. The plain language of the statute: “drilling * * * commences”
To construe a statute, we consult first the ordinary meaning of its language, see Perrin v. United States, 444 U.S. 37, 42 (1979), and we apply the plain meaning of the words used in a statute unless we find that those words are ambiguous, United States v. James, 478 U.S. 597, 606 (1986). Since the 90-day rule was added to the Code in 1984, see DEFRA sec. 91(a), and has remained relatively unchanged, these are not antiquated words or terms that would need special interpretation. According to Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 690 (2002), to “drill” means “to make (a rounded hole or cavity in a solid) by removing bits with a rotating drill“, while to “commence” means “to begin“. Id. at 456. Giving effect to the plain meaning of these words, we find it unambiguous that “drilling of the well commences” when the boring of a hole for the well begins. Therefore, we find that the plain language of
However, we need not look far to see strong corroboration of this interpretation—or, if the language were thought ambiguous, resolution of that ambiguity. The title of
To “spud” means “to begin to drill (an oil well) by alternately raising and releasing a spudding bit with the drilling rig“. Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 2212 (2002).12 As a result, we find that a well is “spudded” when
C. Giving effect to every word in the statute
In support of its contrary position, Caltex cites several State court opinions that interpret similar language in oil and gas leases but hold that actual drilling is not required. However, in most of the cases Caltex cites, the language and the contexts are different from
dently
In so doing, we follow the “‘elementary rule of construction that effect must be given, if possible, to every word, clause and sentence of a statute.‘” Vetco Inc. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 95 T.C. 579, 592 (1990) (quoting 2A Sutherland Statutory Construction sec. 46.06 (1986)). As a result, we will not ignore or minimize the word “drilling” in
D. Application to Caltex
Caltex has stipulated that “[n]o drill penetrated the ground for purposes of drilling a well by or on behalf of Caltex Oil Venture during 1999 or 2000.” Given that fact, Caltex is not entitled to the special timing rule of
IV. The 3½-month rule of 26 C.F.R. section 1.461-4(d)(6)(ii)
As we have shown, the general “economic performance” rule of
The IRS maintains that this 3½-month rule does not allow Caltex to treat the services due under the contract as having been economically performed in 1999 because the rule applies only if Caltex could reasonably expect all services due under the contract to be provided within 3½ months after the date of payment. The IRS acknowledges a distinction (and a different outcome) where the contract provides for differentiated or severable services to be performed under a single contract. The IRS concedes that, in the case of a divisible contract, also known as a severable contract,15 economic performance occurs (and any applicable economic performance exception will apply) separately with regard to each distinct service that was contracted for as that service is provided. See
Caltex disagrees and argues that the IRS‘s interpretation of the 3½-month rule must be rejected because if all the services called for under a turnkey contract had to be performed within 3½ months of payment, the rule could never be applicable to the oil and gas industry. Our record shows that digging an oil well usually takes over two years from conception to production and necessarily requires, among other things, extensive data collection, lease acquisitions, securing access roads, staking and permitting of the well site, negotiating contracts for subcontract services, buying and building
Thus, the questions before us are (i) whether the 3½-month rule contemplates that all of the services called for under a contract must be provided within 3½ months of payment, or whether the rule permits a taxpayer to accelerate a deduction for just the portion of the services that would be expected to be provided in the 3½-month period from payment, and (ii) whether the interpretation and application of the 3½-month rule changes depending on whether the contract at issue is severable or non-severable.
B. Construing 26 C.F.R. section 1.461-4(d)(6)(ii)
1. The ambiguity of the regulation
The starting point for interpreting a regulatory provision is, as with a statute, its plain meaning. Walker Stone Co. v. Sec‘y of Labor, 156 F.3d 1076, 1080 (10th Cir. 1998) (“When the meaning of a regulatory provision is clear on its face, the regulation must be enforced in accordance with its plain meaning“); Intermountain Ins. Serv. of Vail, L.L.C. v. Commissioner, 134 T.C. 211, 218 (2010), rev‘d on other grounds, 650 F.3d 691 (D.C. Cir. 2011). The 3½-month rule inquires whether Caltex reasonably expected Red River “to provide the services” within the relevant time period. See
We think that the IRS‘s proffered meaning (i.e., all of the services) is the more likely. The regulation reads:
A taxpayer is permitted to treat services or property as provided to the taxpayer as the taxpayer makes payment to the person providing the services or property (as defined in paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section), if the taxpayer can reasonably expect the person to provide the services or property within 3½ months after the date of payment. [ 26 C.F.R. sec. 1.461-4(d)(6)(ii) , Income Tax Regs.]
The regulation thus presumes a correlation between “the services” and “payment” therefor. Where multiple services are provided pursuant to a contract that calls for a single payment, and the single payment is thus not linked to fewer than all of the contracted services but is instead paid for all of the contracted services, “the services” that must be provided within 3½ months would seem to be the services for which “payment” is made—i.e., all the services.
However, the regulation does not include either the phrase “all of” or the phrase “any of“. We cannot say that Caltex‘s interpretation is impossible. Since the meaning of the regulation is thus ambiguous, we will look to other principles and canons17 to see whether they confirm or correct our initial reading of the regulation.
2. Narrow construction of deductions
It is well settled that deductions are a matter of legislative grace and should be narrowly construed. INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79, 84 (1992); New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering, 292 U.S. 435, 440 (1934). Caltex asks us to read the 3½-month rule expansively—i.e., giving the taxpayer a greater entitlement to accelerate deductions—whereas the IRS‘s interpretation is narrower. This tends in favor of the IRS‘s interpretation, especially since the 3½-month rule, even narrowly construed, is already a relaxation of the general economic performance rule of
It is well settled that where a statute is ambiguous, we may look to legislative history to ascertain its meaning. Burlington N. R.R. v. Okla. Tax Comm‘n, 481 U.S. 454, 461 (1987); Griswold v. United States, 59 F.3d 1571, 1575-1576 (11th Cir. 1995). The rules of statutory construction also apply to the construction of regulations. See Estate of Schwartz v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. 943, 952-953 (1984). Therefore, when a regulation is ambiguous, we may likewise consult its “regulatory history“—i.e., statements made by the agency contemporaneously with proposing and adopting the regulation—to ascertain its meaning. See Armco, Inc. v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 865, 868 (1986) (“A preamble will frequently express the intended effect of some part of a regulation * * * [and] might be helpful in interpreting an ambiguity in a regulation“); see also Abbott Labs. v. United States, 84 Fed. Cl. 96, 103 (2008) (“the court [is] permitted to consult the agency‘s interpretations or the regulatory history to determine meaning” if the regulation is ambiguous), aff‘d, 573 F.3d 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2009). Proposed regulations under
[I]n the case of a liability of a taxpayer arising from the provision by another person of property or services to the taxpayer, the statute provides that economic performance occurs as the property or services are provided to the taxpayer. The regulations provide rules designed to lessen the burden on a taxpayer incident to determining when property or services are provided to the taxpayer. For example, the regulations provide that a taxpayer may treat property or services as provided to the taxpayer as the taxpayer makes payment for the property or services. However, this treatment is available only if the taxpayer can reasonably expect the property or services to be provided by the other person within 3½ months after the payment is made. [1990-2 C.B. 805, 806; emphasis added.]
priately operates to relieve taxpayers of the burdens incident to determining precisely when services and property are provided, while assuring that economic performance occurs within a reasonable time following payment.” Id.
In
that the 3½-month rule appropriately operates to relieve taxpayers of the burdens incident to determining precisely when services and property are provided, while assuring that economic performance occurs within a reasonable time following payment. [T.D. 8408, 1992-1 C.B. at 157; emphasis added.]
Therefore, the history of
4. Difficulty for the oil and gas industry
Caltex argues that the IRS‘s interpretation of the 3½-month rule must be rejected because if all the services called for under a turnkey contract have to be performed within 3½ months of payment, the 3½-month rule could never be applicable to the oil and gas industry because of the immensity of its projects, thereby making the rule superfluous.
It is true that, generally speaking, an interpretation that renders a statutory provision superfluous should be avoided, since that interpretation would offend “the well-settled rule of statutory construction that all parts of a statute, if at all possible, are to be given effect.” Weinberger v. Hynson, Westcott & Dunning, Inc., 412 U.S. 609, 633 (1973).
However, the 3½-month rule is a general exception to the economic performance rule of
Moreover, we do not find that the IRS‘s interpretation of the 3½-month rule would always make it inapplicable to the oil and gas industry. For example, if a contract for the drilling of an oil or gas well were drafted in such a manner that payments were allocated to specified services, the 3½-month rule could apply to such oil and gas contracts. See
In any event, we do not reject the IRS‘s interpretation of the 3½-month rule simply because the rule might be used in the oil and gas industry only infrequently.
C. Application to Caltex
1. Caltex is not entitled to the special timing provisions of the 3½-month rule.
We hold that the 3½-month rule contemplates that all of the services called for under an undifferentiated, non-severable contract must be provided within 3½ months of payment. Therefore, a determination of Caltex‘s entitlement to use the 3½-month rule requires (1) a determination of whether the contract at issue is an undifferentiated, non-severable contract (see supra note 15), versus a severable one, and (2) a determination of whether the services called for thereunder could have reasonably been expected to be performed within 3½ months of payment. In doing so, we find that Caltex is not entitled to the special timing provisions of the 3½-month rule.
Caltex‘s contract with Red River fits the definition of a “turnkey contract” (see supra note 16). It did not provide an exhaustive, itemized list of services to be provided
vided in order for Red River to “commence or cause to be commenced” the drilling of wells at the two sites, and it called for lump-sum payments of $4,123,333 for drilling costs and $1,049,333 for completion costs without any allocation of those sums to particular services. As a result, we hold that the contract at issue here is an entire, non-severable contract, as the IRS contends.
Given that the contract is non-severable, Caltex may use the 3½-month rule only if all the services called for in the contract with Red River could have been reasonably expected to be performed within 3½ months of payment. Caltex has never alleged that it expected all of the services to be provided within 3½ months of payment. On the contrary, Caltex concedes that it did not reasonably expect all services to be performed within 3½ months of payment, since “turnkey contract services in the oil and gas industry could never be completed in such a limited time frame.” As a result, we find that Caltex may not treat any of the services due under the contract as having been economically performed in 1999 by operation of the 3½-month rule of
2. Deductions under the 3½-month rule are limited to payments made by cash or cash equivalents, not notes.
For purposes of the regulation at issue, “payment” has the same meaning as it has for taxpayers using the cash receipts and disbursement method of accounting. See
payment includes the furnishing of cash or cash equivalents and the netting of offsetting accounts. Payment does not include the furnishing of a note or other evidence of indebtedness of the taxpayer, whether or not the evidence is guaranteed by any other instrument (including a standby letter of credit) or by any third party (including a government agency).
After this regulation was proposed, see Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Economic Performance Requirement, IA-258-84, 1990-2 C.B. 805, 814, commentators objected to this rule and, among other things, asked that the regulation provide that a note or other evidence of indebtedness which bears an arm‘s-length rate of interest be included as “payment“. T.D.
V. Economic performance under the general rule of section 461(h)
Even though Caltex does not qualify for the exceptions discussed above, it may still invoke the general rule of
The IRS acknowledges this principle but argues that economic performance with respect to at least $5,165,593.20 of the claimed IDCs of $5,172,666 did not occur in 1999, because (it says) Caltex stipulated that only $7,072.80 of the IDCs due under the contract was incurred in 1999. The actual language of the stipulation is: “Petitioner contends that it incurred $7,072.80 of intangible drilling costs relating to * * * [the contract] during 1999.” Therefore, reasons the IRS, Caltex‘s maximum potential deduction for IDCs for 1999 under
Caltex counters that while it stipulated that it contends that $7,072.80 of IDCs was incurred in 1999, it did not stipulate that it contends that only $7,072.80 of IDCs was incurred in 1999. As a result, Caltex maintains that the precise amount of IDCs incurred in 1999 remains in dispute.
Moreover, we note that the IRS does not maintain that, by way of summary judgment on this point, we can use the stipulation to avoid a trial on the issue of the amount of Caltex‘s 1999 IDC deductions under the general rule of
Conclusion
The IRS is entitled to summary judgment on two issues: (1) Caltex is not entitled to the 90-day special timing rule of
An appropriate order will be issued.
MYLES LORENTZ, INC., PETITIONER v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT
Docket No. 2901-09. Filed January 25, 2012.
