F.G. Holl died on December 21, 1985 (Doc. 7, Stip. ¶ 2). At the time of his death, he had substantial oil ánd gas holdings in producing oil and gas properties. His executor timely filed a federal estate tax return in which the mineral interests were valued at nearly $9,000,000 as of the date of death. Using the alternative valuation date of June 21, 1986, the assets were valued at approximately $3,100,000 (Doc. 7, Stip. 113; Jt.Exh. 1-A, Sch. FI, item 1). As presented to the trial court, between the date of death and the alternative valuation date, the Estate received $980,698.47 in net income from the sale of oil and gas (Doc. 7, Stip. 1118). The Estate gave an in-place *1438 value to this oil and gas of $686,488.93 (Jt.Ex. 1-A at 57, Sch. FI, item 2). The executor elected to value the assets as of the alternative valuation date under § 2032 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 2032 (1954)) (Jt.Ex. 1-A, 11 2, 1) making the total net estate tax due $4,202,764.84 (Jt.Exh. 1-A at 1, 1119).
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) proposed additional taxes against the Estate. Following the receipt of the statutory notice of deficiency, in which the Commissioner proposed the assessment of $6,211.86 in additional estate taxes, the Estate filed a petition in the Tax Court seeking a redetermination of the deficiency. The parties agreed to certain adjustments and the remaining dispute was tried on May 14, 1990 (Doc. 1, at 1). From the Tax Court’s Order entered February 12, 1991,
Findings of fact made by the United States Tax Court are reviewed by a clearly erroneous standard.
Commissioner v. Duberstein,
At a hearing on the value of the assets, Mr. Fair, the Estate’s expert, testified that prior to extraction, the oil and gas which was sold had an in-place fair market value of $686,488.93. Through further analysis, this figure was reduced to $683,306. In contrast, the IRS’s expert, Mr. Pilcher, determined the in-place value of the minerals sold by the Estate between the date of death and the alternative valuation date to be $930,839.76. The Tax Court rejected the Fair analysis and found the in-place value of the oil and gas between the date of death and the alternative valuation date to be that figure advanced by the IRS’s expert.
On appeal, the Estate argued case law applying § 2032 requires property to be valued as it existed at the date of death and changes in its character or condition must be disregarded. Because the Tax Court adopted a value primarily reflecting its sales price, the Estate asks this court to find that factual determination to be clearly erroneous as it does not reflect the willing-buyer/willing-seller standard. In addition, the Estate challenges the Tax Court’s finding that “the parties agree that the
proceeds
derived from oil and gas reserves produced and sold between the date of decedent’s death and the alternate valuation-date are “included property.” Tax Court opinion at 9 (emphasis added). The Estate says that what “the parties did agree to was that ‘the
value
of the oil and gas sold (during that period) should be included in the gross estate under I.R.C. § 2032.” Brief of Appellant at 36 (emphasis added). The Estate argues that the Tax Court’s treatment does not follow the principles set forth in the case of
Herbert H. Maass v. Higgins,
*1439
In
Flanders v. U.S.,
On the date of death, the character of the relevant “property” must be described as
unextracted
minerals. The Tax Court did not apply an analysis that valued this asset in its pre-change condition (before it was severed) and in effect imposed an improper tax on the income derived from this asset between the date of death and the alternative valuation date. Thus, we hold that the Tax Court erred in its application of the law and in accepting an erroneous method of valuation by the Commissioner’s expert focusing on “the actual sales price as of the date of sale in his valuation.” Tax Court Opinion at 19. We hold instead that the Tax Court on remand should consider evidence premised on a method of valuation starting with the prechange value of the reserves reduced to possession and sold during the interim period from the date of death to the alternate valuation date. While the Estate’s evidence generally following such an approach is persuasive, as a reviewing court we do not make a determination that this evidence of the Estate on this record must be accepted. On remand, the Tax Court should reconsider the valuation issue concerning the reserves produced and sold during the interim period “to determine the in-place value of the oil and gas produced as of the dates of severance” and evidence showing an “appropriate discount factor” to be applied.
Estate of Johnston,
The decision of the Tax Court is REVERSED and the cause is REMANDED for further proceedings in accord with this opinion.
