The question involved in this appeal is of a depreciation allowance denied the taxpayer for the year 1929, and claimed by it under section 114 of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 USCA § 2114). It is the owner of a natural gas well in the western part of New York from which it directly supplies consumers in two nearby villages, from one to five miles away. The decision turns upon the words, “In the case of oil and gas wells the allowance for depletion shall be 27% per centum of the gross income from the property during the taxable year” (section 114 (b) (3), 26 USCA § 2114 (b) (3); and the exact issue is whether this percentage is to he computed upon the income of the taxpayer derived from the sale of gas to consumers at the meter, or upon so much of that income as is estimated to represent the value of the gas at the mouth of the well. The purpose of the section, and of section 23 (Z), 26 USCA § 2023 (Z), to which it is ancillary, is to allow an annual deduction to amortize the original cost (or value) of a wasting deposit of mineral wealth. United States v. Ludey,
It is quite true, as the taxpayer says, that no single formula will give a rational result for all wells. The same percentage will be too much for one deposit and too little for another; that is an inevitable consequence of abandoning any effort to learn its amount; the plan is a makeshift, at best no more than an approximation to the average of many instances. Moreover, instead of fixing an arbitrary proportion of the original cost (or value), it makes the “basis” the yearly value of the product when sold. That is a further irrational factor. But these defects are no excuse for not eliminating whatever else will impair the validity of the solution, so far as it has any validity at all. Because the formula is rude and imperfect, we are not
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justified in injecting into the “basis” the added value imparted to the output by work done upon it after it reaches the surface. That cannot fail to make the deviation greater and to introduce a variable which adds a quite unnecessary discrimination to a result arbitrary .enough at best. True, its correction involves some computation; the sales price must be broken down into two component parts, the value contributed by the later services, and the remainder of •the gross price. But the contributed value is not inaccessible; the apparatus for transportation is known, its cost, its wear and tear, its coefficient of obsolescence; the calculation is like much that is customary in reckoning other taxes, and there is no reason to suppose that Congress would shrink from it. Indeed, it cannot be avoided in many cases. Article 221 (i) of .Regulations.74 requires, both when,the gas and oil is refined and when it is transport•ed, that the “market or field price * * * -before conversion or transportation” shall be the “basis for depletion.” The taxpayer concedes, and must concede, that this is the right rule when the product is converted into something else. Brea Cannon Oil Co. v. Commissioner,
Nothing in the congressional debates throws any light upon the question; Herring v. Commissioner,
The text of the section is in accord. Section 114 (b) is in three subdivisions all designed to define the “basis for depletion.” The first refors back to section 113 and makes cost (or value) the “basis”; the second is for mines and fixes “fair market value” at “discovery,” once the “basis” for oil and gas wells. It ends with a limitation to 50 per cent, of the net income “from the property.” Consistently the third subdivision should also make the cost or value of the well the “basis.” It does not do that, for it uses income; but we should expect the “basis” to be the income from the, well, and grammatically that is just what it does. It does not speak of “oil” or “gas,” but of “oil and gas wells” as the “property” from which the income is to arise. If calculation is necessary to find that income, calculation is implied. Nor does the second sentence introduce any complications which compromise this interpretation, as *163 the taxpayer would have us understand., It is true that the net income “from the property” cannot be found, even after the gross income at the mouth of the well has been computed, without the allocation of the “overhead” or general expenses. Article 221 (i) provides for that by a reasonable formula; it is not unduly difficult of application; the implied administrative detail is surely preferable to the inequalities which result from the taxpayer’s proposal. Moreover, it is a matter of some importance that this sentence of subdivision three was carried over substantially unchanged from the Revenue Act of 1924 (section 204 (c), 26 USCA § 935 note). There, at any rale, the word “property” meant “well.” We can find no reason for change from its present context; it seems to us that the “basis” is income from the wells, not from the oil or gas after it has been carried through perhaps many miles of piping.
Order affirmed.
