The petition seeks to review the redetermination by the Board of Tax Appeals of certain income taxes for the years 1920 and 1921. During 1919 a Louisiana plantation, controlled as community property by J. C. Pugh, was put under an oil lease, and oil was discovered. Several wells were brought in and operated during 1920 and 1921. Their operation during 1920 impregnated the land 'surface with oil and salt water, and made it unfit for cultivation, and permanently impaired the value of the plantation for agricultural purposes. The fair market value of the surface rights as distinguished from mineral rights was found by the Board to be reduced by $50,000 during 1920. This loss, of value was claimed as ■ a deductible loss, but the claim was denied by the Board. A deduction from gross income can be claimed only as authorized by the statute. The authority relied on is section 214(a) of the Revenue Act of 1918, 40 Stat. 1066: “That in computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions: * * * (4) Losses sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise, if incurred in trade or business.” The loss in value of the land for agricultural purposes was evidently incurred by its use in the business of oil production, but it was not sustained during the taxable year within the meaning of the statute. There has been no sale, which is ordinarily neeessary to define and realize a loss arising from a fluctuation of value. The land has simply been turned from its former, agricultural use to another use which it was believed would be more profitable. The injury to its agricultural value was a probable if not inevitable result, and was expected to be offset, and was no doubt much more than offset, by. the increase in its mineral value. There was no physical destruction of a house or an orchard or a vineyard or other addition to the land of whose cost there could be a definite measure, and about whose disappearance there could be no doubt. There is only an attempted mental subdivision of elements of value in the land, and an estimated depreciation in one element without any actual sale or other conversion by the owner, either of that element or of the land as a whole. A loss is not sustained during the taxable year within the meaning of the statute unless ascertained and realized more definitely than by an opinion of changed market value.
The oil lease is not in the record, but it appears to be the ordinary arrangement
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to last so long as oil is produced, in paying quantities, with a reserved royalty of one-eighth of the oil produced. Under the laws of Louisiana oil or gas in the ground is not capable of ownership separate from the land in which it is found; but the right to have a part of that produced, whether the right resides in a so-called lessee or in the lessor as a royalty, is an interest in the land which can be fully conveyed by its owner in whole or in part. Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Salling’s Heirs,
Parol evidence was offered before the Board from the scrivener and the parties to the above conveyance to show that it was explicitly agreed among them that the depletion allowance on the oil necessary to pay the $200,000 should go to Pugh, and that Eastham had not claimed it in his tax return. The objection that parol evidence was inadmissible to add to or vary the writing both under general law and under article 2276 of the Civil Code of Louisiana was met with the statement that it was offered, “not for the purpose of changing the terms of the written agreement, but for the purpose of explaining the meaning and intention of the parties, and to clarify the agreement expressed in the contract.” The parties are thus presented as content with the terms of their conveyance, claiming no mistake or error or omission in them, and certainly seeking no reformation. The proposal is to give this recorded instrument an effect according to the wish of the parties rather than that attributable to it by law, and thus to control as against the United States the application of the tax laws. While it is sometimes broadly stated that the parol evidence rule has no application to any save parties to the instrument and their privies, In re Shields Brothers,
Petition denied. -
