The issue involved in this appeal is whether royalty payments based upon the extraction of sand and gravel are entitled to capital gains treatment or whether, as the District Court found, they are ordinary income subject to the depletion allowance.
Beginning in December, 1954, Fred W. Alkire (the taxpayer) 1 conducted a sand and gravel business on leased property. In the summer of 1955, Star Rock Products, Inc., acquired this business. It paid the taxpayer $60,000 for his rock crush *780 ing plant, truck scales, and other leasehold improvements. The taxation of this income is not in dispute. As part of the transaction, the taxpayer assigned his leasehold right to mine the property to Star Rock Products in return for a royalty of three cents a ton of sand and gravel extracted and sold from the premises. Star Rock Products did not assume an obligation either to mine a minimum quantity or to pay a minimum royalty. The assignment was to remain effective as long as Star Rock Products extracted minerals from the premises.
The taxpayer contends that he sold the minerals to Star Rock Products and that royalties of $132,051.53 for the period 1959 to 1962 inclusive should be taxed at long-term capital gain rates. The government denies that a “sale” occurred, but asserts that regardless of how one characterizes the transaction, the taxability of the royalties is controlled by the “economic interest” test. Under this test, income from mineral extraction is ordinary income subject to the depletion allowance if the taxpayer retains an “economic interest” in the mineral deposit. Palmer v. Bender,
Here, the taxpayer assigned his right to extract sand and gravel for royalties from future production. Star Rock Products had no obligation to mine any minerals or to pay a minimum royalty. The minerals were the taxpayer’s only source of income, and this income was dependent on future mineral extraction.
The taxpayer’s reliance on patent cases in support of his contention that this transfer was a sale entitled to capital gains treatment is misplaced. Congress has recognized the peculiar character of the business of extracting natural resources. Burton-Sutton Oil Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The taxpayer also asserts that the “economic interest” test is confined to oil and gas cases and does not apply to hard mineral eases. He relies on Gowans v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
Appellant concedes that Gowans v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, supra, involves peculiar facts. Unlike the present case, the buyer in Gowans agreed to remove and pay for all of the taxpayer’s mineral deposit. Furthermore, the exact quantity of material was known prior to the execution of the agreement. This case is not in point.
In Wood v. United States,
This Court in the recent case of Hair v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
*781 Here, the taxpayer retained an economic interest in the minerals, and the royalties were properly taxed as ordinary income.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mrs. Lois O. Alkire is a party to this litigation because joint income tax returns are involved. She played no part in any of the transactions relevant to this controversy.
