COWDEN V. COMMISSIONER
289 F.2d 20 (5th Cir. 1961)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a dispute over the status of royalty payments and money
received on assignment of those payments. Cowden (D) appealed the determination of the tax
court to tax a contractual right to receive bonus payments in two subsequent years, on the
full value of those payments, at ordinary income rates, in the year of their agreement and
assignment.
FACTS: The Cowden family (D) made an oil, gas and mineral lease with Stanolind. The lease
was on lands in Texas. Stanolind agreed to pay advance royalties of $511,192.50. On November
30, 1951, Ds assigned the payments due from Stanolind in 1951 to First National Bank.
Assignment of payments due in 1953 were made in 1952. The face values of the payments were
discounted. Ds reported the amounts received on the assignments as long term capital gains.
The IRS ruled that the contractual obligation of Stanolind to pay the monies in future years
represented ordinary income subject to depletion to the extent of fair market value of the
obligations which were not interest bearing by a deduction of 4%. The 1951 cash value was
thus $487,647.46 and that sum was taxable as ordinary income in 1951. The tax court agreed
that the payments were not only readily but immediately convertible to cash and were the
equivalent of cash and had a fair market value equal to their face value and that Stanolind
was willing to pay the full amount all at once but only deferred the payments based on the
desires of Ds. The tax court decided that no discount was due and that the entire
$511,192.50 was taxable as income in 1951.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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