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Further, when payment is to a resident agent and<br />

the author’s status is unknown to the publisher the<br />

duty of withholding devolves upon the agent. I.T.<br />

2524 superseded. §§1.861-5, 1.871-2, 1.1441-2,<br />

1.6851-2. (Secs. 861, 871, 1441, 6851; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 70-468, 1970-2 C.B. 171.<br />

446.34 Nonresident alien; bank as tax agent;<br />

withholding. A domestic corporation is not<br />

relieved from the requirement to withhold tax at<br />

the rate of 30 percent from royalties paid to a nonresident<br />

alien by reason of the fact that the alien<br />

has appointed a domestic bank to act as his agent<br />

for purposes of paying his taxes in the U.S. O.D.<br />

1087 superseded. §§1.871–1, 1.1441-4. (Secs.<br />

871, 1441; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 69-655, 1969-2 C.B. 168.<br />

446.35 Nonresident alien; books and stories<br />

published in U.S. Payment received by a nonresident<br />

alien author from a domestic corporation<br />

under a contract granting the corporation the first<br />

American serial rights in his exclusive output of<br />

both long and short stories and the right to publish<br />

in the U.S. all his new books, but not prescribing<br />

in any manner what or when he is to write, are royalties<br />

from sources within the U.S. subject to withholding<br />

at the 30 percent tax rate. §1.871-1. (Sec.<br />

871, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 76-555, 1974-2 C.B. 202; Rev. Rul.<br />

76-283, 1976-2 C.B. 222.<br />

446.36 Nonresident alien; books printed in<br />

U.S.; withholding. Royalty payments made by a<br />

domestic corporation to a nonresident alien for<br />

books printed in the U.S. by the corporation and<br />

sold exclusively in a foreign country under that<br />

country’s copyrights are not taxable as income<br />

from sources within the U.S. and, therefore, are<br />

not subject to income tax withholding. I.T. 3296<br />

superseded. §§1.861-5, 1.862-1, 1.1441-2.<br />

(Secs. 861, 862, 1441; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 72–232, 1972-1 C.B. 276.<br />

446.37 Oil and gas; information returns.<br />

Information return, Form 1099, required to be<br />

filed by the payers of oil and gas royalties, with<br />

respect to royalty payments aggregating $600 or<br />

more for a calendar year, must show the gross<br />

amounts due the royalty interest owners rather<br />

than the net amounts paid to such owners after<br />

withholding for various taxes levied by states.<br />

§1.6041-1. (Sec. 6041, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 66-198, 1966-2 C.B. 488.<br />

446.38 Oil and gas in place. If a royalty interest<br />

in oil and gas in place is used by the owner in his<br />

trade or business, it is not a capital asset but will<br />

be subject to the provisions of section 1231 if held<br />

for more than six months; if the royalty is held for<br />

investment, gain or loss on its sale is a capital gain<br />

or loss; and if the royalty is held for sale in the ordinary<br />

course of business, gain or loss on its sale is<br />

ordinary gain or loss. Rev. Rul. 55–526 superseded.<br />

§§1.1221–1, 1.1222–1, 1.1231–1. (Secs.<br />

1221, 1222, 1231; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 73-428, 1973-2 C.B. 303.<br />

446.39 Oil and gas lease; interest received for<br />

service. A corporate promoter, an attorney, and an<br />

employee of a closely held corporation, receive<br />

overriding royalty interests for services provided<br />

in connection with the acquisition/development of<br />

oil and gas leases. Each has received a property<br />

interest, the fair market value of which is includible<br />

in gross income under section 83. §1.83–1.<br />

(Sec. 83, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 83-46, 1983-1 C.B. 16.<br />

446.40 Oil and gas lease; irrevocable trust for<br />

minors. Royalty income attributable to an undivided<br />

one-half of one-eighth nonparticipating royalty<br />

interest in an oil and gas lease, transferred to<br />

an irrevocable trust by a husband and wife for the<br />

benefit of their minor children, is includable in the<br />

trust’s gross income. However, any of the trust<br />

income used for the support or maintenance of the<br />

minors is included in the grantor’s gross income.<br />

§§1.61-1, 1.671-1. (Secs. 61, 671; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 71-130, 1971-1 C.B. 28.<br />

446.41 Oil and gas lease; royalty transferred<br />

in trust. The donative assignment to a trust, established<br />

for the benefit of a college, of an overriding<br />

royalty interest created from an oil and gas leasehold<br />

presently owned and retained by the grantor,<br />

is not an anticipatory assignment of income. The<br />

trust income will not be taxable to the grantor even<br />

though the term of the trust is less than the economic<br />

life of the overriding royalty, providing the<br />

grantor is not considered the owner of the trust.<br />

§1.671-1. (Sec. 671, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 67-118, 1967-1 C.B. 163.<br />

446.42 Oil and gas lease; undivided interest.<br />

No part of the royalty payments received by the<br />

lessor of an undivided interest in oil and gas producing<br />

properties, under a lease agreement providing<br />

that, from month to month, the royalty percentages<br />

could decrease or increase based on<br />

average daily gross production for the previous<br />

three consecutive month periods, is a production<br />

payment. §1.636-3. (Sec. 636, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 76-34, 1976-1 C.B. 177.<br />

446.43 Patent; paid majority stockholderpresident.<br />

A royalty paid by a corporation to its<br />

majority stockholder-president for the use of a patent<br />

on an article manufactured by the corporation<br />

is deductible as a business expense, if the amount<br />

is reasonable. O.D. 440 superseded. §1.162–11.<br />

(Sec. 162, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 69-513, 1969-2 C.B. 29.<br />

446.44 Patent; paid to nonresident alien by<br />

foreign corporation. An individual who is a citizen<br />

and resident of a foreign country with which<br />

the U.S. has no income tax convention licensed the<br />

U.S. rights on a patent to a Netherlands corporation<br />

that relicensed the rights to a U.S. corporation<br />

for use in the U.S. The patent royalties paid to the<br />

individual are subject to U.S. tax, and the Netherlands<br />

corporation is required to withhold the tax<br />

from the royalties. §§1.861-5, 1.871-7, 1.1441-1.<br />

(Secs. 861, 871, 1441; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 80-362, 1980-2 C.B. 208.<br />

446.45 Patent; rights assigned to wife. A husband<br />

paid Federal gift taxes on an absolute assignment<br />

to his wife of his right to receive royalties<br />

under a patent sales contract. Held, the transaction<br />

was a transfer of ownership, not an assignment of<br />

income, and the husband was not taxable on the<br />

income received by the wife. (Sec. 22(a), ’39<br />

Code; Sec. 61, ’86 Code.)<br />

Franklin A. Reece, 24 T.C. 187, Acq., 1960-2<br />

C.B. 6.<br />

446.46 Patent; rights to trusts. The taxpayer<br />

transferred to irrevocable trusts, created for his<br />

wife and minor childern, the exclusive right, title,<br />

and interest in and to a patent application, receiving<br />

from the trusts a license to make, use, and sell<br />

the article covered in the application at a graduated<br />

royalty rate. The trusts were to continue until the<br />

children reached majority. The taxpayer retained<br />

no power to change the beneficiaries, direct the<br />

accumulation or withholding of income, or change<br />

trustees. Held, the trust income was not taxable to<br />

the taxpayer, and he could deduct the royalties<br />

paid under the license agreement as a business<br />

expense. (Secs. 22(a), 23(a), ’39 Code; Secs. 61,<br />

162, ’86 Code.)<br />

John T. Potter, 27 T.C. 200, Acq., 1957-2 C.B.<br />

6.<br />

446.47 Patent; transfer; retention of interest.<br />

The mere retention of an interest resembling a royalty<br />

by an assignor or transferor of a patent, in a<br />

transaction which otherwise has the characteristics<br />

of a sale but does not come within the purview<br />

of section 1235, will not, in and of itself, prevent<br />

capital gains treatment. Mim. 6490 and Rev. Rul.<br />

55-58 revoked. §§1.61-1, 1.1222-1, 1.1235-1.<br />

(Secs. 22(a), 117(a), ’39 Code; Secs. 61, 1222,<br />

1235, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 58-353, 1958-2 C.B. 408; Edward C.<br />

Myers, 6 T.C. 258, Roy J. Champayne, 26 T.C.<br />

634, Leonard Coplan, 28 T.C. 1189, Acqs.,<br />

1958-2 C.B. 4, 6.<br />

446.48 Personal holding company; oil and<br />

gas lease. Amounts received by a personal holding<br />

company under a lease agreement with a drilling<br />

company providing for the delivery to the lessor of<br />

a one-eighth part of the oil and gas produced and<br />

for the sale of such oil and gas to the lessee for a<br />

stipulated price are royalties for purposes of computing<br />

personal holding company income.<br />

§1.543-1. (Sec. 543, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 73-332, 1973-2 C.B. 195.<br />

446.49 Personal holding company; sub-processing<br />

contract; secret formula. Payments<br />

received by a corporation from a partnership<br />

whose three partners are equal owners of the corporation’s<br />

stock pursuant to a sub-processing contract<br />

containing a secret formula are royalty payments<br />

includable as personal holding company<br />

income. 1.543–1. (Sec. 543, ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 71-596, 1971–2 C.B. 242.<br />

446.50 Publishers and literary agents;<br />

information returns. A publisher making royalty<br />

payments directly to an author, aggregating $600<br />

or more in a calendar year, must file information<br />

returns showing the payments made to the author<br />

and the author’s identifying number. If payment is<br />

made directly to a literary agent in behalf of the<br />

author it must be reported as such, with the agent’s<br />

identifying number. In the latter case the agent<br />

must file information returns for the royalties<br />

received from the publisher showing the gross<br />

amount received, commission retained, and net<br />

amount paid over to the author, together with the<br />

author’s identifying number. Modified to provide<br />

that literary agents must report the gross amount<br />

or royalties received prior to the deduction of fees,<br />

commissions, and expenses. §§1.6041-1,<br />

1.6109-1. (Secs. 6041, 6109; ’86 Code.)<br />

Rev. Rul. 65–129, 1965–1 C.B. 519; Rev. Rul.<br />

67-197, 1967-1 C.B. 319.<br />

446.51 Swedish convention; right to distribute<br />

motion picture films. A payment to a Swedish<br />

resident, corporation, or other entity for the<br />

right to distribute motion picture films in the U.S.<br />

is considered a royalty under Article VI of the<br />

U.S.-Sweden Income Tax Convention for Federal<br />

income tax purposes.<br />

Rev. Rul. 70-134, 1970-1 C.B. 359.<br />

446.52 Swiss convention; net profits interest<br />

in oil and gas mineral property. Payments<br />

received by a Swiss corporation from its net profits<br />

interest in oil and gas mineral property located<br />

in the U.S. are not industrial and commercial profits<br />

within the meaning of Article II(1)(h) of the<br />

U.S.-Swiss Confederation Income Tax Convention<br />

but are rents or royalties taxable by the U.S.<br />

pursuant to Article IX(1) of the Convention.<br />

Rev. Rul. 73-419, 1973-2 C.B. 436.<br />

446.53 Unpatented invention. Percentage payments<br />

the taxpayer received from a corporation to<br />

which he had transferred complete ownership of a<br />

perfected but unpatented invention were part of its<br />

purchase price and reportable as long-term capital<br />

gain, not ordinary income. (Sec. 117, ’39 Code;<br />

Sec. 1231, ’86 Code.)<br />

Franklin S. Speicher, 28 T.C. 938, Acq., 1958-2<br />

C.B. 7.

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