In 1945 farmer W. W. Oliver bought a piece of country property, the 41-acre “Bailey Tract,” for the purpose of developing it into residential homesites. During January of 1960 he agreed to sell “all sand, gravel and other suitable and marketable materials” in a pit on the tract of approximately seven acres to Tidewater Sand Company. The instrument provided that Tidewater was to have two years and four months to remove all of the sand from the pit in consideration for which it was to pay to Oliver eight cents per short ton of materials removed by it for sale. It was agreed that Tidewater was to render Oliver a statement of all materials sold at the end of each month and was to pay Oliver by the tenth of each succeeding month “for all materials sold.” It was provided that Tidewater could cancel the contract anytime it found sale of the materials unprofitable. Oliver could cancel at the'end of the two-year four-month period if he had given 90 days’ written notice and could under the same conditions of notice cancel anytime thereafter. Under the contract 250,000 tons of sand and gravel were removed and paid for, which amounted to all but about 200 tons of the usable materials in the pit. Oliver reported the proceeds of the contract as capital gains.
The question here on appeal is whether the proceeds received by Oliver were (1) ordinary income subject to the depletion allowance as the government contends, or (2) capital gain from a sale as the taxpayer contends and the district court held,
The concept of “economic interest” first appeared in Palmer v. Bender, supra, and the two-pronged test there announced now appears as a part of the Treasury Regulations:
An economic interest is possessed in every case in which the taxpayer has [1] acquired by investment any interest in mineral in place * * * and [2] secures, by any form of legal relationship, income derived from the extraction of the mineral * * *, to which he must look for a return of his capital.
Treas.Reg. § 1.611-1 (b) (1) (1960).
The first part of the test assumes importance where a taxpayer
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claims proceeds of a transaction are ordinary income thus entitling him to use the depletion deduction to recover his capital investment.
See, e. g.,
Helvering v. Bankline Oil Co.,
The economic interest concept was enunciated and refined primarily in cases dealing with gas and oil depletion allowances, but there is no readily apparent basis for formulating a different rule in hard mineral cases. Gitzinger v. United States,
The terminology used by the parties in framing their agreement does not determine whether the taxpayer retained an economic interest in the minerals in place. It is axiomatic that the tax consequences of the transaction are to be governed by substance, not form. Royalton Stone Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
Significantly, Oliver was in fact paid only for those materials which Tidewater sold. Although Oliver was not directly involved in Tidewater’s sale of the materials removed, he was interested in Tidewater finding a profitable market to insure sustained income to himself from the contract and this suggests that the arrangement between Oliver and Tidewater more resembled a lease or a licensing arrangement than an absolute sale of the minerals in place. That the agreement here did not effect an absolute sale of the materials in the pit to Tidewater is further evidenced by Oliver’s testimony before the district court that Ferrell Brothers, another contractor who had worked the pit prior to the Tidewater agi’eement, continued to work it for a short time after Tidewater had begun its operations. The only property Oliver transferred was the right to extract sand and gravel and nothing *772 more. 1 We think taxpayer did not divest himself of his economic interest in the minerals in place.
The taxpayer and the district court in its memorandum opinion rely heavily on Linehan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
“In [Linehan] the excavation company had
unconditionally
contracted to remove from the taxpayer’s land
all
the sand and gravel above a certain level,” Gitzinger v. United States,
supra,
The judgment of the district court is Reversed.
Notes
. It may be argued that Oliver transferred to Tidewater the right to mine sand and gravel in his pit to exhaustion and that this right conferred the economic interest in this transaction to Tidewater. Merritt v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
