The respondents were married men residing in Texas and under its matrimonial community laws during the years 1925 and 1926. Incomes received by them respectively as beneficiaries of the same trust were held by the Board of -Tax Appeals to be community incomes and were thus taxed. The Commissioner here contends that such incomes were altogether the separate property of the respondents ; but if not, so much of them as came from bonus and royalty payments from oil and gas properties were separate. The.trust involved is sufficient.ly set forth in McCrory v. Commissioner (C. C. A.)
Income which accrues to the matrimonial community in Texas belongs equally to husband and wife and is to be taxed one-half to each. Hopkins, Collector, v. Bacon,
It is argued that the result should be otherwise because the husbands do not get the revenue directly from the property but through the hands of the trustee and subject to the expenditures which he is authorized to make. But the trustee is bound to act always for the benefit of the beneficiaries and to divide the net results among them. All net income and corpus ultimately go to them. The beneficiaries receive the income as income. The corpus is theirs in equity, the legal title being conveyed to the trustee expressly for their benefit. In Irwin v. Gavit,
The “delay rentals” on oil and gas leases are rents within the rule just announced. They accrue by the mere lapse of time like any other rent. They do not depend on the finding or production of oil or gas and do not exhaust the substance of the land. While having some likeness to a bonus payment which is held to be advance royalty, Murphy Oil Co. v. Burnet,
On the other hand, royalties, including bonus, are not paid for time but for oil and gas taken out, and represent an actual removal and disposition of the contents of the soil. In some states, as for instance Louisiana, the law looks to the fugaciousness of oil and gas and considers that they belong to no one until captured and confined, so that an oil and gas lease is only a contract for the use of the land for 'the purpose of capture, and what is paid is rent. In Texas oil and gas in place in the soil are by the established rules of property a part of the realty and capable of separate ownership and conveyance. Texas Co. v. Daugherty,
