File No. 312.115/211.

Special Agent Silliman to the Secretary of State.

Sir: I have the honor to transmit herewith a memorandum handed me today by the representative of the Mexican Petroleum Company, the American company which has large interests at Ebano.

[Page 999]

The manager states the present conditions and brings to the Department’s attention a question which often becomes necessary to be decided by American interests and individuals; that is, whether foreigners should pay or decline to pay forced contributions to one or the other of the contending factions. If payment is made to one, by compulsion or for expediency, if the other party comes into possession, such payments are held to be unfriendly and improper by the last arrivals.

I have [etc.]

John R. Silliman.
[Inclosure.]

Memorandum on conditions in oil fields.

At present all important oil wells in Mexico are in the hands of forces professing to be commanded by General Villa. All tanks except those at the wells are in the hands of the Carrancistas, who also control all shipping points.

The Villista commanders having control of the country at the wells are in a position to do untold and irreparable damage to the producing wells, most of which cannot be entirely shut in, and some of which must be allowed to run at least 20,000 barrels per day. Any attempt to close in these wells would result in their breaking through the ground and forming craters, like Dos Bocas, wasting the whole underground oil-measures. The Villa officers, through their control of the field, demand the payment of “taxes” or advance payments of taxes in large sums, and on refusal to make payment stop the pumps which are necessary to take the oil away from the wells. The Constitutionalist Government continues to collect the production tax, which legally is nothing today, since the tax law passed by the Madero Government was operative only for one year, to July 1, 1913, and the Huerta law, operative to July 1, 1914, was declared void.

On their taking possession of oil termini and shipping points, the Carrancistas, by decree of July, 1914, raised the 20-centavo tax (which had expired as above stated) to 60 centavos and made this payable in gold, also by decree. This tax has no sanction of any legislative body, exists merely by virtue of a decree of a First Chief, and is enforced only by the ability of said First Chief to stop shipment and otherwise interfere with the business. The companies are naturally paying the tax.

The oil-producing companies have no objection to the payment of proper legal taxes, but are subjected to extortion by reason of the situation above noted, and would appreciate the advice of their governments as to the proper course to pursue. Refusal to pay taxes on either side will surely result in disaster which, though possibly compensated by claims in the far future, will ruin the companies’ stockholders, many of whom rely upon their income from the companies for their livelihood, and starve the companies’ laborers. Payments to either side arouse resentment of and recriminations by the other side.

A claim the value of which is at best conjectural, and the payment of which is at best, long delayed, is not to be considered against a present and immediate catastrophe which could result from a refusal to pay whatever either side demands.

The Government is respectfully requested to say whether, under the circumstances, payments to whatever party demands money should be made, or the demand refused.