Appellants, Jean D. True (individually and personal representative of the estate *1168 of Henry A. True, Jr.), Henry A. True III, Karen S. True, Diemer D. True, Susan L. True, David L. True, and Melanie A. True (hereinafter “taxpayers,” “Trues,” or “True family”), challenge the district court’s summary judgment order in favor of the government, claiming the court erroneously applied the step transaction doctrine to invalidate certain business transactions they executed. In addition, Appellants argue the district court erred when it refused to apply the collateral estoppel doctrine to bar relitigation of particular issues decided in an earlier tax case involving the same parties. 1 We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. 2
I. Background
This tax refund suit arises from the Trues’ dispute with the Internal Revenue Service over the characterization of certain transactions involving several True family businesses. The Trues engage in a variety of business ventures including oil and gas production and exploration, and ranching. They conduct their family businesses primarily as general partnerships or Sub-chapter S Corporations, with Henry True, Jr. (prior to his death) and his wife, Jean, owning equal controlling interests, and their three sons, Henry, Diemer, and David, sharing equal minority interests in the ownership and operation of the businesses. 3 The family businesses involved in this case are True Ranches, a partnership engaged in ranching, farming, and feedlot operations; Smokey Oil Company, a Wyoming corporation engaged in oil and gas production and exploration; True Oil Company, a general partnership engaged in oil and gas production and exploration; and Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company, two Subchapter S corporations the Trues organized to acquire and deal in oil and gas leases.
Two separate series of transactions involving the Trues’ businesses are presently in dispute. The first involves a multistage purchase, exchange, and transfer involving ranchland properties (hereinafter “ranchland transactions”), and the second involves the acquisition and subsequent assignment of oil and gas leases in exchange for guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments (hereinafter “oil and gas lease transactions”). In order to explain clearly the events giving rise to this suit, we summarize the transactions separately.
A. Ranchland Transactions
During the 1980s, the True family purchased five new ranch properties to add to their ranching operations. Each purchase took place through the same series of steps, described as follows. First, instead of True Ranches directly acquiring the ranchlands, the taxpayers arranged for Smokey Oil Company to purchase the parcels of real property, while True Ranches acquired the operating assets of each ranch. Smokey Oil Company then transferred the ranchlands to True Oil Company in exchange for selected productive oil and gas leases. Internal Revenue Code § 1031 permitted the Trues to treat the exchange as a like-kind, tax-free exchange. 4 After the transfer, True Oil *1169 Company immediately distributed the newly acquired ranchlands to the individual family-member partners of True Oil Company as tenants in common. The partners then contributed their undivided interests in the lands to True Ranches by general warranty deed. Internal Revenue Code §§ 721 and 731 allowed the Trues to treat these distributions as non-recognition transactions.
This series of acquisitions, transfers and exchanges had positive tax implications for the Trues. Through the operation of I.R.C. § 1031(d), which essentially provides that the basis of property received in a tax-free exchange is the same as the basis of the property transferred, Smokey Oil Company received depletable oil and gas leases with the same cost basis it had in the non-depreciable ranchland it transferred in the exchange with True Oil Company. This allowed Smokey Oil Company to claim cost depletion deductions for the leases on its tax returns for 1989 and 1990 under I.R.C. § 612, resulting in substantial tax savings for the True family. True Oil Company, on the other hand, received the non-depreciable ranchland with a zero basis because the oil and gas leases it exchanged pursuant to I.R.C. § 1031 were fully cost depleted. Through the subsequent transfers, True Ranches acquired the ranchland with the same zero basis as True Oil Company’s oil and gas leases. Ultimately, the Trues reaped the tax benefits of turning non-depreciable assets (ranchlands) into cost-depletable assets (oil and gas leases) in the hands of Smokey Oil Company, with the residual effect of ridding True Oil Company of fully cost-depleted assets (oil and gas leases) and leaving True Ranches with a zero basis in otherwise non-depreciable assets (ranch-lands).
B. Oil and Gas Lease Transactions
Employing a similar strategy, the Trues utilized Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company to acquire and then assign numerous oil and gas leases. Neither of these entities had any employees, and they relied primarily on the land department of True Oil Company or independent landmen hired by True Oil Company to arrange the lease acquisitions. The Trues structured the transactions so that Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company acquired the oil and gas leases, and shortly thereafter, assigned a 100 percent interest in the leases to either True Oñ Company or Smokey Oil Company. In exchange, Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation or True Land and Royalty Company retained an overriding royalty of five percent, against which True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company made annual advance royalty payments or “guaranteed minimum overriding royalty” payments over the life of the lease.
As a result of these transactions, True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company deducted the guaranteed minimum overriding royalties paid to Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company on their tax returns for 1989 and 1990 under Treas. Reg. § 1.612— 3(b)(3). This arrangement allowed True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company to realize the tax benefits of immediately ex-pensing the guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments instead of capitalizing the purchase of the leases as the Internal Revenue Code ordinarily requires for direct purchases of those type assets. On the other side of the transaction, even though the Internal Revenue Code required Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company to report the guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments as income they received in exchange for the oil and gas lease assignments, the companies could claim an offsetting cost depletion deduction under Treas. Reg. § 1.612 — 3(b)(1). This maneuvering resulted in an overall tax advantage for the True .family businesses that passed through to the individual taxpayers.
*1170 C. Internal Revenue Service Proceedings
Suspicious of both the ranchland and oil and gas lease transactions, the Internal Revenue Service audited the Trues’ tax returns for tax years 1989-1990. As a result of the audit, the Internal Revenue Service recharacterized both the ranchland transactions and oil and gas lease transactions, denying the Trues the described tax benefits associated with them.
The Internal Revenue Service treated the ranchland transactions as if True Ranches had acquired the property in the first instance, and thus assigned True Ranches the same basis in the property as the amount Smokey Oil Company paid to acquire the land. The Internal Revenue Service also disallowed the cost depletion deductions Smokey Oil Company took for the leases acquired from True Oil Company in the tax-free exchange. Instead, the Internal Revenue Service allocated the income from those leases to True Oil Company and allowed True Oil Company to take percentage depletion deductions, rather than the cost depletion Smokey Oil Company originally claimed.
As for the oil and gas lease transactions, the Internal Revenue Service treated True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company as having directly acquired the leases instead of Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company. Accordingly, the Internal Revenue Service (1) disallowed True Oil Company’s and Smokey Oil Company’s guaranteed minimum overriding royalty deductions, and (2) required the companies to treat the cost of acquiring the leases as capital expenditures. The Internal Revenue Service allowed Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company to exclude the guaranteed minimum overriding royalty income, but did not permit the companies to claim a deduction for cost depletion.
The Trues paid under protest the deficiency from the 1989 and 1990 tax years as determined by the Internal Revenue Service audit, and then promptly filed an administrative claim for a refund. After the Internal Revenue Service disallowed the refund, the taxpayers filed the present refund suit in district court.
D. District Court Proceedings
In proceedings before the district court, the government filed motions for partial summary judgment contending, under the step transaction doctrine, the court must: (1) treat the series of exchanges and transfers involved in the ranchland purchases as a single transaction wherein True Ranches alone acquired the property, and (2) construe the assignment of oil and gas leases from Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company to True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company as a single transaction wherein True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company directly obtained the leases. In opposition to these motions, the Trues argued that the business transactions had independent economic significance, bona fide business purposes, and, in any event, presented issues of fact inappropriate for summary judgment. In addition, the Trues filed their own motion for partial summary judgment arguing on collateral estoppel grounds that earlier litigation and final judgment in a previous tax case (hereinafter “1973-1975 tax case”), involving the same parties and same issues as those involved in the present dispute over the oil and gas lease transactions, barred the government from relitigating those issues. 5
*1171 The district court rejected the Trues’ collateral estoppel argument, finding changes in controlling legal principles since the 1973-1975 tax case precluded its application in this case. Then, the court granted the government’s motions for summary judgment, finding the step transaction doctrine required the recharacteri-zation of both the ranchland transactions and the oil and gas lease transactions in the way the government requested.
II. Discussion
On appeal, the taxpayers argue the district court: (1) erred in ruling as a matter of law that the step transaction doctrine required True Ranches to be treated as the purchaser of the ranchland, thereby denying the economic benefits and advantageous tax treatment of the transactions; (2) erred in precluding the application of collateral estoppel to the dispute over the tax treatment of the oil and gas lease transactions; and (3) erred in deciding as a matter of law that, under the step transaction doctrine, the payment of guaranteed minimum overriding royalties should be collapsed into a single transaction. We review de novo the district court’s order granting summary judgment, employing the same legal principles as the district court and construing the factual record and the reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment.
See Byers v. City of Albuquerque
A. Collateral Estoppel
We first examine whether judgment in the 1973-1975 tax case precludes the government from relitigating the issue of the deductibility of the guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments in the context of the oil and gas lease transactions. In opposition to the Trues’ collateral estoppel claim, the government initially argues the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the issue because the Trues failed to raise this argument in their administrative refund filing. The district court did not address this jurisdictional challenge, and instead found collateral es-toppel inapplicable on other grounds. We find it necessary to address the jurisdictional contention.
Internal Revenue Code § 7422(a) provides “[n]o suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any internal revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected ... until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Secretary.” The claim for refund “must set forth in detail each ground upon which a credit or refund is claimed and facts sufficient to apprise the Commissioner of the exact basis thereof.” Treas. Reg. § 301.6402 — 2(b)(1);
see also Herrington v. United States,
Neither the parties nor our own research reveals any controlling authority specifically addressing whether a taxpayer must raise a collateral estoppel claim in the course of filing an administrative tax refund in order to preserve the issue for appeal. Thus, we treat this as an issue of first impression.
In support of its position that the Trues must plead collateral estoppel in the administrative filing, the government relies solely on the plain language of I.R.C. § 7422(a) and Treas. Reg. § 301.6402-2(b), and asserts the Trues did not “set forth in detail each ground upon which a credit or refund is claimed.” The Trues counter this argument, relying on
Parke, Davis & Co. v. United States,
The Trues’ reliance on Parke, Davis & Co. is misplaced. Parke, Davis & Co. and the cases cited therein
merely stand for the proposition that an issue raised in litigation, but not specifically referred to in the refund claim, might be permitted, if the newly raised issue was subsidiary to, or an integral part of, the grounds presented in the refund claim such that the omitted issue must have necessarily been considered by the [Internal Revenue Service] in its review, of the refund claim.
Lockheed Martin Corp. v. United States,
The Trues do not attempt to estop the Internal Revenue Service from changing its position on the tax treatment to be afforded the oil and gas lease transactions subject to the 1989-1990 audit. Indeed, the Internal Revenue Service never has adopted the Trues’ position on that issue. The Trues instead attempt to bind the Internal Revenue Service to the judicial disposition of a percentage depletion issue involving guaranteed overriding royalty payments in an independent case litigated some fifteen years earlier. We fail to see how the Internal Revenue Service would necessarily have considered the judicial disposition in the 1973-1975 tax case when reviewing the refund claim presently at issue. Unlike the situation in Parke, Davis & Co., we construe the Trues’ collateral estoppel claim to be an independent ground upon which to base their refund claim, not an “issue subsidiary to, or an integral part of,” other substantive claims they raised in the administrative proceeding. Accordingly, the Trues should have *1173 raised collateral estoppel as a distinct ground for a refund in the course of filing their administrative refund claim.
As for the Trues’ argument that the Internal Revenue Service’s knowledge of the prior lawsuit excuses their failure to raise the issue in their administrative refund claim, we conclude that in order to preserve the collateral estoppel issue for our review, “[i]t is not enough that in some roundabout way the facts supporting the claim may have reached” the attention of the Internal Revenue Service.
Levitsky v. United States,
■ Having reviewed the parties’ arguments and the cases generally dealing with the requirements of an administrative tax appeal, we hold the Trues cannot assert collateral estoppel for the first time in federal court, because they failed to raise the issue in the course of their administrative refund filing.
See James v. Chafer,
B. Substance Over Form Principle— Overview
We must now determine whether the Trues’ business activities pass for legitimate tax avoidance and sound financial planning, or whether they constitute manipulation of the intent and purpose of the tax code.
6
In order to ensure proper tax
*1174
treatment for the ranehland transactions and oil and gas lease transactions, we apply the substance over form principle.
See Commissioner v. Hansen,
Deciding “whether to accord the separate steps of a complex transaction independent significance, or to treat them as related steps in a unified transaction, is a recurring problem in the field of tax law.”
King Enters., Inc. v. United States,
C. Step Transaction Doctrine
Courts have developed three tests for determining when the step transaction doctrine should operate to collapse the individual steps of a complex transaction into a single integrated transaction for
*1175
tax purposes: (1) end result, (2) interdependence, and (3) binding commitment.
See Associated Wholesale Grocers, Inc. v. United States,
The end result test combines “into a single transaction separate events which appear to be component parts of something undertaken to reach a particular result.”
Kornfeld,
The interdependence test takes a slightly different approach. Under this test, we disregard the tax effects of individual transactional steps if “it is unlikely that any one step would have been undertaken except in contemplation of the other integrating acts.”
Kuper v. Commissioner,
Prior to our application of the end result and interdependence tests, we note the Trues initially challenge the district court’s summary judgment rulings for reasons collateral to that court’s step transaction analysis. First, the Trues argue the evidence they produced in response to the government’s motion for summary judgment created issues of fact pertaining to their intentions underlying the ranchland transactions and oil and gas lease transactions sufficient to preclude summary judgment. The Trues contend the district court inappropriately granted summary judgment by casting their uncontroverted testimonial evidence as mere argument, drawing inferences in favor of the moving party, and generally treating the case as if it was ruling on the issues following a bench trial instead of a motion for summary judgment.
Cases involving the issue of substance over form require resolution of significant questions of fact.
10
Nevertheless, the mere presence of a factual question does not automatically preclude summary judgment. Even in cases where some issues of fact remain, if no reasonable fact-finder could find in favor of the non-moving party, then summary judgment is still appropriate.
See Anderson,
In a second threshold argument, the Trues contend their evidence of legitimate business purposes and corresponding economic effects pertaining to the ranchland transactions and oil and gas lease transactions renders the step transaction doctrine inapplicable altogether. The Trues assert economic realities must govern, and if a legitimate non-tax business purpose motivates a transaction or actually causes some economic effects, then the transaction is endued with substance that resolves the substance over form inquiry without the need to engage the step transaction analysis.
We acknowledge the Trues’ evidence of business purpose and economic effects. However, we do not agree with their conclusion that business purposes and economic effects relating to the individual steps in each complex series of transactions preclude application of the step transaction doctrine in this instance.
11
The substance over form inquiry is not nearly as narrow as the Trues suggest.
*1177
To ratify a step transaction that exalts form over substance merely because the taxpayer can either (1) articulate some business purpose allegedly motivating the indirect nature of the transaction or (2) point to an economic effect resulting from the series of steps, would frequently defeat the purpose of the substance over form principle. Events such as the actual payment of money, legal transfer of property, adjustment of company books,
12
and execution of a contract all produce economic effects and accompany almost any business dealing. Thus, we do not rely on the occurrence of these events alone to determine whether the step transaction doctrine applies. Likewise, a taxpayer may proffer some non-tax business purpose for engaging in a series of transactional steps to accomplish a result he could have achieved by more direct means, but that business purpose by itself does- not preclude application of the step transaction doctrine.
Associated Wholesale Grocers,
D. The “End Result” and “Interdependence” Tests
1. Ranchland Transactions
Applying the end result test to the ranchland transactions, we examine whether the Trues intended from the outset to place the ranchlands in the hands of True Ranches. Recall that the individual tax significance of each step of a multi-step transaction is irrelevant when, considered as a whole, the steps accomplish but a single intended result, which in actual purpose and effect is subject to the given tax consequence.
See Crenshaw,
This analysis is inherently factual; however, as we emphasized above, the mere existence of a fact question does not render summary judgment inappropriate. If the proffered evidence is so one-sided that no reasonable fact finder could conclude anything other than that the Trues intended from the outset for the True Ranches to acquire additional ranchlands through a series of separate, otherwise unnecessary conveyances, then summary judgment applying the step transaction doctrine to collapse that multi-step transaction for tax purposes is appropriate.
*1178 The Trues present evidence showing they intended to expand the land holdings of True Ranches through a series of transactions so that the elder Trues (Henry A. True, Jr. and Jean D. True), who had more liquid assets readily available to finance the acquisition, would contribute a greater share of the purchase price. 13 The Trues emphasize that if the court applies the step transaction doctrine to collapse the ranch-land transactions, then the value equivalent to the purchase price of the properties will vanish from Smokey Oil Company’s books. This in turn will deprive Henry and Jean True (elder Trues) of any compensation for the additional amount they contributed to the purchase of the ranch properties, as well as the correspondingly greater share in profits they stood to realize from Smokey Oil Company’s ownership of the oil and gas leases acquired in the exchange with True Oil Company.
As mentioned above, we do not dispute the business purposes and economic effects the Trues cite; nevertheless we conclude those factors do not preclude summary judgment based on the overwhelming evidence of the Trues’ intent to achieve a particular end result. The Trues admit they intended from the beginning to ultimately place the ranch properties in the hands of True Ranches. This intent is further evidenced by the fact the ranchland was conveyed to Smokey Oil Company separate from the ranch operating assets, which True Ranches acquired directly. The fact the Trues arranged the steps so the elder Trues would bear a greater percentage of the acquisition cost does not establish an alternative intended end result, but merely demonstrates a financing consideration for structuring the transaction in a particular way. If the intended end result was in question, then the business purposes and economic effects the Trues demonstrate might be probative, but in this case there is no doubt the Trues designed and executed a series of steps to increase the land holdings of Trae Ranches. Thus, applying the end result test, the Internal Revenue Service must give tax consideration only to that intended result.
Cf. Security Indus.,
We reach the same conclusion reviewing the ranchland transactions under the interdependence test. Under this test, we objectively examine each step of the ranchland transactions to see whether the legal relations created by one of the steps seem fruitless without completion of the overall transaction.
See Kornfeld,
We conclude the steps involved in the ranchland transactions lack any reasoned economic justification standing alone. The record indicates Smokey Oil Company is involved only in oil and gas exploration and production. Thus, in the absence of evidence that Smokey Oil Company acquired the mineral rights beneath the ranchlands and believed oil or gas to be beneath those lands, its purchase of ranchland properties makes no objective business sense. In other words, there was no apparent purpose for Smokey Oil Company to purchase the ranchlands other than to facilitate the eventual placement of the property into the hands of True Ranches.
The exchange of producing oil and gas leases for the ranchlands between Smokey Oil Company and True Oil Company is similarly suspect. Like Smokey Oil Company, True Oil Company was not involved *1179 in ranching, and it had no apparent reason to exchange its oil and gas leases for ranch property other than to facilitate the transfer of the ranch property to True Ranches. The Trues argue the purpose of moving the oil and gas leases from one of their oil companies (True Oil Company) to another oil company (Smokey Oil Company) in exchange for ranchland was to allow Smokey Oil Company to grow as an operating entity; but that does not explain why True Oil Company, purporting to operate as a separate entity with its own interests to promote, would accept ranch properties in exchange for productive oil and gas leases. From the perspective of True Oil Company, an entity without any interest in ranch property, this step appears pointless without contemplation of the overall transaction.
None of the individual steps in the ranchland transactions is the type of business activity we would expect to see in a bona fide, arm’s length business deal between unrelated parties, and none of them makes any objective sense standing alone without contemplation of the subsequent steps in the transaction.
14
Each step in the ranchland transactions “led inexorably to the next,” and thus “clearly satisfied] the ‘interdependence’ test for application of the step transaction doctrine.”
Security Indus.,
Having reviewed the objective realities of the ranchland transactions, we conclude under either the end result or interdependence test, the step transaction doctrine applies. The Trues recognized that a large cash outlay for the direct purchase of the ranchlands through True Ranches would not result in any depreciation deductions. Consequently, they juggled the ownership of the ranchlands between their various business entities in order to produce a more favorable tax result, while still placing the ranchlands in the hands of True Ranches. By channeling the acquisition and exchange of the ranchlands through Smokey Oil Company and True Oil Company using a series of unnecessary exchanges and transfers, the Trues ended up with True Ranches holding a zero basis in the newly-purchased ranchlands and Smokey Oil Company holding a substituted, stepped-up basis in depletable oil and gas leases. We believe no reasonable juror could find these steps were anything but the Trues’ prearranged, integrated plan to accomplish indirectly tax advantages they could not accomplish directly.
See Crenshaw,
*1180 2. Oil and Gas Lease Transactions
The applicability of the step transaction doctrine to the oil and gas lease transactions under the end result test also turns on the fact question of the taxpayers’ intent — specifically, whether the Trues intended to acquire leases in the ordinary course of their lease brokering business or to accomplish the end result of placing the oil and gas leases in the hands of True Oil Company or Smokey Oil Company.
See, e.g., Brown,
The evidence of the Trues’ intended end result with regard to the oil and gas lease transactions is not nearly as one-sided as it was in the case of the ranchland transactions. The record shows that at the time Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation or True Land and Royalty Company acquired an oil and gas lease, the Trues did not know to which exploration and production entity they would ultimately assign the lease. In fact, Henry True testified Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company operated just like any other lease broker. The companies acquired leases and then in turn assigned them to some other entity interested in exploration and production. He also testified the oil and gas leases could have been transferred to any one of the Trues’ exploration and production companies or to a third party. We believe this evidence is sufficient to create a genuine issue as to whether the Trues purchased the leases intending from the outset to ultimately transfer them to True Oil Company or Smokey Oil Company. Therefore, to the extent the district court rested its decision on an end result analysis, we find summary judgment inappropriate.
Examination of the oil and gas lease transactions under the interdependence test also undermines the district court’s ruling. The record indicates the steps of the oil and gas lease transactions bear some indicia of independent economic significance. For example, it was entirely normal for Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company to acquire the oil and gas leases. The Trues organized both entities for that purpose. The assignment of the leases from the brokerage entities to True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company also falls within the realm of objective business activity we would expect to see between the parties. Neither Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation nor True Land and Royalty Company engaged in the production of oil and gas, but instead planned from the beginning of every lease acquisition to assign their interest in oil and gas leases to other oil and gas production companies. True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company, on the other hand, were in the business of oil and gas production and exploration, so it was natural for them to acquire interests in oil and gas leases from Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company just as they would from another lease broker.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Trues as the non-moving party, as we must, we conclude the question of whether the Trues intended from the outset to use Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company solely as conduits to facilitate the transfer of the oil and gas leases to True Oil Company and Smokey Oil Company remains a disputed issue of material fact. Such questions are inappropriate for resolution through summary judgment.
15
*1181
See Anderson,
III. Conclusion
We affirm the district court’s award of summary judgment on the question of the ranchland transactions. The ranchland transactions fail both the end result and interdependence tests. Although the Trues introduced some evidence of business purposes and economic effects pertaining to those transactions, the facts plainly demonstrate they intended to accomplish through the series of steps the particular end result of placing the ranch-lands in the hands of True Ranches. In addition, the clear interdependence and lack of independent justification for the individual steps of the ranchland transactions warrants application of the step transaction doctrine. However, with regard to the oil and gas lease transactions, we fiñd the district court improvidently granted summary judgment. We believe the question of whether the Trues intended from the outset to accomplish the end result of transferring the oil and gas leases to True Oil Company or Smokey Oil Company remains a disputed issue of material fact. Moreover, the individual steps involved in the oil and gas lease transactions do not reflect the degree of interdependence necessary to apply the step transaction doctrine as a matter of law. Finally, we decline to consider whether the eollat-eral estoppel doctrine applies to the oil and gas lease transactions involved in this case because the Trues failed to raise the issue in their administrative claim for refund.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.This case originally included a cross-appeal designated No. 98-8018, which involved a dispute over pipeline depreciation. We need not address this matter because the parties stipulated to dismissal and the appeal was dismissed by order dated June 29, 1999. They agree our decision in
Duke Energy Natural Gas Corp. v. Commissioner,
. We reviewed the government’s motion to dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction and its arguments in support thereof, and conclude the motion should be denied.
. Karen S. True, Susan L. True, and Melanie A. True are parties to this lawsuit by virtue of having filed joint returns with their husbands, Henry, Diemer, and David, who are minority shareholders or partners in the True family businesses.
.The Internal Revenue Service has issued a
*1169
Revenue Ruling stating improved ranchland and producing oil and gas leases are "like kind” properties for purposes of I.R.C. § 1031. Rev. Rui. 68-331, 1968-
. In the 1973-1975 tax case, True family members assigned oil and gas leases to True Oil Company in exchange for guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments. As in the present case, True Oil Company deducted the guaranteed minimum overriding royalties paid while the recipient recognized the amount as income and took a cost depletion deduction against the income received. The government challenged this arrangement, but a juiy decided the guaranteed minimum overriding royalty payments True Oil Company "made to [True] family members were entered into for valid and substantial business purposes having economic reality."
True. v. United States,
. We emphasize, as a prelude to our substance over form analysis, ''[t]he legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid them, by means which the law permits.”
Gregory
v.
Helvering,
. While traditionally utilized in the context of corporate liquidation-reorganizations, courts also have applied the step transaction doctrine to various other kinds of taxpayer activities. Jacob Mertens, Jr., The Law of Federal Income Taxation § 43.253 (1997).
. The binding commitment test is seldom utilized, and only applies to situations “where the taxpayer is subject to an obligation or binding commitment, at the time the first step is entered into, to pursue the successive steps in a series of transactions,” usually spanning several years.
See
Jacob Mertens, Jr.,
supra
n. 7, § 43.256 (1997). As a general rule, "the binding-commitment test is only applicable where a substantial period of time has passed between the steps that are subject to scrutiny.”
Id.
Because the transactions in the present case do not span a long period of time or involve a binding commitment to pursue successive steps, we do not analyze them under this test.
See Associated Wholesale Grocers,
. We emphasize that under -the end result test, our focus is not on the legitimacy of the intended result, but instead on whether the taxpayer undertook multiple steps to achieve a particular result. Thus, if a taxpayer engages in a series of steps that achieve a particular result, he cannot request independent tax recognition of the individual steps unless he shows that at the time he engaged in the individual step, its result was the intended end result in and of itself. If this is not what the taxpayer intended, then we collapse the series of steps and only give tax consideration to the intended end result.
See Crenshaw v. United States,
. Like the overall question of substance over form embodied by the step transaction doctrine, the issues involved in our application of the end result and interdependence tests, especially with regard to the taxpayer's intent, are undeniably questions of fact.
Kornfeld,
. The Trues’ evidence and arguments regarding business purpose and economic effects raise issues more relevant to a sham transaction doctrine analysis than a step transaction doctrine analysis. Although both the step transaction and sham transaction doctrines are corollaries of the basic substance over form principle,
see Kirchman,
. Just as we reject the Trues' argument that the effect on their companies' books automatically gives the transaction economic substance, so too do we reject the government's notion that a transaction has no economic substance if it is possible for the taxpayer to merely adjust his books to reflect the Internal Revenue Service's recharacterization of the disputed transaction.
. Because Henry and Jean True (elder Trues) owned a substantially larger percentage interest in Smokey Oil Company (96.5%) than in True Ranches (73.9%), purchasing the ranchlands through Smokey Oil Company allowed the elder Trues to contribute a correspondingly greater share of the purchase price than the minority shareholders/partners.
. We emphasize in response to the cases the Trues cite highlighting the validity of various I.R.C. § 1031 exchanges, that our opinion has no impact on the legality of individual like-kind exchanges. A like-kind exchange, standing alone, is unproblematic. However, if a taxpayer engages in an I.R.C. § 1031 exchange as part of an overall plan involving a series of transactional steps designed and executed to accomplish an end result beyond the exchange, and which otherwise exalts form over substance and defeats the clear intent of the Internal Revenue Code, then the Internal Revenue Service is entitled to challenge the transaction. In the present case, the problem is not with the oil and gas lease/ranchland exchanges, but with the Trues' use of those exchanges along with the other transactional steps to turn an expenditure for non-deprecia-ble land into a depletable, stepped-up basis in oil and gas leases. End result and interdependence analysis does not invalidate complex or multiple-party § 1031 exchanges standing alone, only those forming part of an otherwise invalid step transaction.
. The district court points out a variety of facts that cast suspicion on the substance of the oil and gas lease transactions. For exanv pie, Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company had no em *1181 ployees of their own. Employees of True Oil Company or independent landmen paid by True Oil Company actually performed all of the preliminary work in identifying attractive leases and negotiating their acquisition. However, the record further indicates Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company each paid a $250 monthly fee to True Oil Company for its services. The district court notes that if True Oil Company performed or paid for all the work associated with acquiring the leases, then "no economic rationale would justify [its] expenditure of amounts greater than the actual lease costs in order to obtain the leases” through Bear Lodge Mountain Corporation and True Land and Royalty Company. We agree. Nevertheless, the evidence before the court is not so one-sided as to apply the step transaction doctrine as a matter of law.
