The taxpayer, Willis R. Dearing, during the tax year 1932 was a partner in the firm of R. H. Dearing &' Company, which was doing a large business in drilling oil wells and receiving pay for its services partly in cash and partly in a right to payment of a fixed sum out of the oil and gas produced, saved and marketed from the several wells successfully brought in. The present contest relates to the proper treatment for income tax purposes of the receipts in or from these socalled “oil payments.” The partnership returned only the money received, having always made its returns on a cash receipts basis, and claimed that as to each successful well it should apply the receipts in money from the oil payments first to extinguish the cost of drilling the particular well and treat the excess only as a taxable gain. The Commissioner as to each partner held that the right to receive in the future the agreed oil payments was, when the well turned out a producer, a property having present market value, and therefore was a taxable gain in the year the well was completed, and fixed that gain at 75% of the total to be paid out of the well; ‘and he held also that when the payments from the oil contract in after years exceeded the 75% thus taxed the excess was an additional taxable gain. He allowed no deduction for depletion. The Board of Tax Appeals held that although such an oil payment contract might be salable, there was too much uncertainty and contingency about it to make it a property having a readily ascertainable market value, following Edwards Drilling Co. v. Commissioner,
We think the Board is right. There is no claim here to deduct anything as necessary expense of business in the year the expenditure was made. As to the oil payments contracts here involved, the drilling expenditures were paid out in previous years. Such as were not then deducted as necessary expense of business or repaid by cash payment on the contract were, according to the case of Vinton Petroleum Co. v. Commissioner, 5 Cir.,
Affirmed.
