[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.272-1]

[Page 598-600]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.272-1  Expenditures relating to disposal of coal or domestic iron ore.

    (a) Introduction. Section 272 provides special treatment for certain 
expenditures paid or incurred by a taxpayer in connection with a 
contract (hereafter sometimes referred to as a ``coal royalty contract'' 
or ``iron ore royalty contract'') for the disposal of coal or iron ore 
the gain or loss from which is treated under section 631(c) as a section 
1231 gain or loss on the sale of coal or iron ore. See paragraph (e) of 
Sec. 1.631-3 for special rules relating to iron ore. The expenditures 
covered by section 272 are those which are attributable to the making 
and administering of such a contract or to the preservation of the 
economic interest retained under the contract. For examples of such 
expenditures, see paragraph (d) of this section. For a taxable year in 
which gross royalty income is realized under the contract of disposal, 
such expenditures shall not be allowed as a deduction. Instead, they are 
to be added to the adjusted depletion basis of the coal or iron ore 
disposed of in the taxable year in computing gain or loss under section 
631(c). However, where no gross royalty income is realized under the 
contract of disposal in a particular taxable year, such expenditure 
shall be treated without regard to section 272.
    (b) In general. (1) Where the disposal of coal or iron ore is 
covered by section 631(c), the provisions of section 272 and this 
section shall be applicable for a taxable year in which there is income 
under the contract of disposal. (For purposes of section 272 and this 
section, the term income means gross amounts received or accrued which 
are royalties or bonuses in connection with a contract to which section 
631(c) applies.) All expenditures paid or incurred by the taxpayer 
during the taxable year which are attributable to the making and 
administering of the contract disposing of the coal or iron ore and all 
expenditures paid or incurred during the taxable year in order to 
preserve the owner's economic interest retained under the contract shall 
be disallowed as deductions in computing taxable income for the taxable 
year. The sum of such expenditures and the adjusted depletion basis of 
the coal or iron ore disposed of in the taxable year shall be used in 
determining the amount of gain or loss with respect to the disposal. See 
Sec. 1.631-3. For special rule in case of loss, see paragraph (c) of 
this section. Section 272 and this section do not apply to capital 
expenditures, and such expenditures are not taken into account in 
computing gain or loss under section 631(c) except to the extent they 
are

[[Page 599]]

properly part of the depletable basis of the coal or iron ore.
    (2) The expenditures covered under section 272 and this section are 
disallowed as a deduction only with respect to a taxable year in which 
income is realized under the coal royalty contract (or iron ore royalty 
contract) to which such expenditures are attributable. Where no income 
is realized under the contract in a taxable year, these expenditures 
shall be deducted as expenses for the production of income, or as a 
business expense, or they may be treated under section 266 (relating to 
taxes and carrying charges) if applicable.
    (3) The provisions of section 272 and this section apply to a 
taxable year in which income from the disposal by the owner of coal or 
iron ore held by him for more than 1 year (6 months for taxable years 
beginning before 1977; 9 months for taxable years beginning in 1977) is 
subject to the provisions of section 631(c) even though the actual 
mining of coal or iron ore under the coal royalty contract (or iron ore 
royalty contract) does not take place during the taxable year. Where the 
right under the contract to mine coal or iron ore for which advance 
payment has been made expires, terminates, or is abandoned before the 
coal or iron ore is mined, and paragraph (c) of Sec. 1.631-3 requires 
the owner to recompute his tax with respect to such payment, the 
recomputation must be made without applying the provisions of section 
272 and this section.
    (c) Losses. If, in any taxable year, the expenditures referred to in 
section 272 and this section plus the adjusted depletion basis (as 
defined in paragraph (b)(2) of Sec. 1.631-3) of the coal or iron ore 
disposed of during the taxable year exceed the amount realized under the 
contract which is subject to section 631(c) during the taxable year, 
such excess shall be considered under section 1231 as a loss from the 
sale of property used in the trade or business and, to the extent not 
availed of as a reduction of gain under that section, shall be a loss 
deductible under section 165(a) (relating to the deduction of losses 
generally).
    (d) Examples of expenditures. (1) The expenditures referred to in 
section 272 include, but are not limited to, the following items, if 
such items are attributable to the making or administering of the 
contract or preserving the economic interest therein: Ad valorem taxes 
imposed by State or local authorities, costs of fire protection, costs 
of insurance (other than liability insurance), costs incurred in 
administering the contract (including costs of bookkeeping and technical 
supervision), interest on loans, expenses of flood control, legal and 
technical expenses, and expenses of measuring and checking quantities of 
coal or iron ore disposed of under the contract. Whether the interest on 
loans is attributable to the making or administering of the contract or 
preserving the economic interest therein will depend upon the use to 
which the borrowed monies are put.
    (2) Any expenditure referred to in this section which is applicable 
to more than one coal royalty contract or iron ore royalty contract 
shall be reasonably apportioned to each of such contracts. Furthermore, 
if an expenditure applies only in part to the making or administering of 
the contract or the preservation of the economic interest, then only 
such part shall be treated under section 272. The apportionment of the 
expenditure shall be made on a reasonable basis. For example, where a 
taxpayer has other income (such as income from oil or gas royalties, 
rentals, right of way fees, interest, or dividends) as well as income 
under section 631(c), and where the salaries of some of its employees or 
other expenses relate to both classes of income, such expenses shall be 
allocated reasonably between the income subject to section 631(c) and 
the other income. Where a taxpayer has more than one coal royalty 
contract or iron ore royalty contract, expenditures under this section 
relating to a contract from which no income has been received in the 
taxable year may not be allocated to income from another contract from 
which income has been received in the taxable year.
    (3) The taxpayer may have expenses which are not attributable even 
partly to making and administering a coal royalty contract or iron ore 
royalty contract or to the preservation of the economic interest 
retained under the

[[Page 600]]

contract and, accordingly, are not included in the expenditures 
described in section 272. These include such items as ad valorem taxes 
imposed by State or local authorities on property not covered by the 
contract, salaries, wages, or other expenses entirely incident to the 
ownership and protection of such property and depreciation of 
improvements thereon, fire insurance on such property, charitable 
contributions, and similar expenses unrelated to the making or to the 
administering of coal royalty contracts or iron ore royalty contracts or 
preserving the taxpayer's economic interest retained therein.
    (e) Nonapplication of section. For purposes of section 543, the 
provisions of section 272 shall have no application. For example, the 
taxpayer may, for the purposes of section 543(a)(3)(C) or the 
corresponding provisions of prior income tax laws, include in the sum of 
the deductions which are allowable under section 162 an amount paid to 
an attorney as compensation for legal services rendered in connection 
with the making of a coal royalty contract or iron ore royalty contract 
(assuming the expenditure otherwise qualifies under section 162 as an 
ordinary and necessary expense incurred in the taxpayer's trade or 
business), even though such expenditure is disallowed as a deduction 
under section 272.

[T.D. 6841, 30 FR 9304, July 27, 1965, as amended by T.D. 7728, 45 FR 
72650, Nov. 3, 1980]