Thе main question is, Where a landowner has made oil and gas leases for which he received bonuses and has taken the 27% per cent depletion allowances as a deduction in returning this income, and the leases are in a later year surrendered without any production, can the amount of the depletion allowances be treated as income in the tax account for the later year ? Another question is whether the landowner may treat his entire ranch, on parts of *769 which these and other leases were made, as one “property” in respect of depletion, or must he deal with each lease as “the property”.
Thе taxpayer Sneed, owning a tract of 80.000 acres in the Texas Panhandle which he operated as a single ranch, in 1926 after oil and gas had been discovered leased it for such operations in many separate parcels to different lessees for terms of ten years and so long as oil or gas might be produced. Bеsides the usual royalties, a cash bonus was received on each lease. Many leases were developed and production both of oil and gas secured. Twenty-six of the leases covering about 5.000 acres were not developed, though covering the same gas and oil pool, but were surrendered in 1936. At that date the gas pressures under the ground had, because of production, been reduced an average of 11 per cent, indicating that the gas reserve had been correspondingly diminished. The lands thus freed were by the taxpayer again leased in 1936, but smaller bonuses were received on which percentage depletion allowances were again taken. The Commissioner “restored to income” the depletion allowances deducted from the bonuses in the 1926 tax returns, aggregating (as corrected) 833,528, and assessed additional taxes for the year 1936, relying upon Regulations 69, Art. 216(d) of the year 1926 and Regulations 94, Art. 23 (m)-10(c) for 1936, and his General Counsel’s memorandum 14,448, XIV-1 Cum.Bul. р. 98, which construed the Regulations with respect to the decision in Herring v. Commissioner,
Since the 80,000-acre tract, throughout which the twenty-six leases in controversy are scattered, has suffered large production and an average 11 per cent depletion of gas reserve as a whole, and sinсe the Board has held in Crabb v. Commissioner,
Turning to the main question, the taxpayer first urges that by the surrender of thе leases in 1936, unworked, no income was realized in that year and none can be charged to him. It is not a good reply that Sneed got back the leasehold interest in the land in 1936. If that be the ground of income, the value in 1936 of what he got back would be in question. And in truth he got nothing back; the lease simply perished according to its original terms. The Commissioner’s position is not that he got land back but that the occurrences in 1936 developed a change in status of so much of the money income received in 1926 as then went untaxed because it stood for an anticipated depletion of his oil reserve, and being a return of capital was not income subject to taxation. It is too well settled to require further discussion that when oil and gas reserves are leased for bonus and royalty, the bonus is an advance royalty, and includes not only gain which is income but also a return of capital about to be depleted which is not income. The segregation of this return of capital is the purpose of all depletion allowances. As to royalties, the depletion actually happens as the royalty accrues, so the present question can hardly occur. As to the bonus, the depletion has not yet happened, and there was a question whether a deduction therefor could be taken until it did happen. This court, in Herring v. Commissioner, 5 Cir.,
The deduction for depletion from a bonus received never represents an actual but always an anticipated depletion. If the anticipated depletion does not occur and it becomes certain it never will, it then becomes plain that what was thus deducted is not a return of capital, but gain like the remainder of the bonus paid. An adjustment is due. Should it be'made by reоpening the tax settlement for the year the bonus was received and the deduction taken ? That would be most logical and accurate. But the limitation statutes, which would prevent it in this case, do not provide for it, and administrative convenience is against it. The Commissioner from the very beginning, under the broad regulatory power attached to every authorization of the deduction for depletion, solved the problem by requiring an addition to income in the year when the status as income of the amount deducted becomes clear. The provision was carried forward in the 1926 Regulations 69, Art. 216(d): “Upon the expiration, termination, or abandonment, without the rеmoval of any or all of the mineral contemplated by the lease the lessor shall be required to restore to capital account the excess of depletion theretofore allowable in respect of the bonus and royalty payments over the actual depletion or loss in value sustained as a result of the operations under the lease, and a corresponding amount must be returned as income for the year in which the lease expires, terminates, or is abandoned.” In
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that year (and since) there was added “(e) In lieu of the treatment provided for in the above paragraphs, the lessor of oil and gas wells may take as a depletion deduction * * * 27% per cent, etc.” It is argued that while the cost or discovery value basis deduction is and always has been subject to (d) above quoted, the meaning of (e) is that the percentage deduction is absolute and final. The Commissioner’s General Counsel did not think so when he ruled upon the matter in 1935, аfter the decision in the Herring case, XIV-1 Cum.Bul., p. 98; but he held that the meaning of the Herring case, in connection with Murphy Oil Co. v. Burnet,
The charging as income in 1936 of gain actually received in 1926 involves no constitutional question. Under the Sixteenth Amendment, that which is not income cannot be taxed as such, but there is no requirement as to the year in which income shall be taxed. Congress could fix decennial periods instead of annual ones. It has in general adopted the annual plan, but has authorized either actual receipts and disbursements or accrual as the basis of the accounting. On the latter basis, there may be a difference of years in entering the items on the account from what would have been true on a basis of actual receipts and disbursеments. But these two bases are elastic, for in the Revenue Act of 1926, Sec. 200(d), 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Acts, page 146, which directs income and deductions to be accounted for in the year received and paid or accrued, there is an exception: “Unless in order to clearly reflect the income the deductions or credits should be taken as of a different period.” Similar language occurs in the other Acts. The clear reflection of income that ought to be taxed is the main object. See Guaranty Trust Co. v. Commissioner,
It is further argued that since the Revenue Act of 1932, Sec. 113(b), 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Acts, page 518, dealt with adjustment of the basis for computing gain or loss in salеs in respect of percentage and discovery value depletion allowances prior to 1932 without referring to the matter of leases ending without production, no adjustment for the latter can be had. We do not think our present problem is so related to the provisions of that Section as to be affected by it. Neither a sale nor the cost basis for computing gain or loss thereon is here involved.
In summation, wé are of opinion that where there is omission or error in an annual return, correction generally is to be made on that return within the statutes of limitation; but in special cases, because of misrepresented facts creating an estoppel, the taxpayer in a later return may be held to those facts. But where the return is correct on the facts as they were when it was made, but occurrences in a later year alter the case, the adjustment is generally to be made in the latter year. This does substantial justice, gives more stability to the annual tax settlements, escapes the complication of limitation statutes, and serves administrative convenience. This case comes within the latter rule.
Affirmed.
