Arizona Department of Revenue v. Transamerica Title Insurance

604 P.2d 1139, 124 Ariz. 428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 1, 1979
Docket1 CA-CIV 3832
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 604 P.2d 1139 (Arizona Department of Revenue v. Transamerica Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arizona Department of Revenue v. Transamerica Title Insurance, 604 P.2d 1139, 124 Ariz. 428 (Ark. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

HAIRE, Judge.

The issues raised on this appeal relate to the propriety of certain federal income tax deductions taken by the appellee corporations on their state income tax returns for the years 1969 through 1972.

The appellees are subsidiaries of Transamerica Corporation within the meaning of federal income tax law. For the years in question, and for many years prior thereto, Transamerica Corporation and all of its subsidiaries (approximately 200 in number) had filed with the federal government a consolidated federal income tax return pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §§ 1501 — 4. At the end of every calendar year, each subsidiary would prepare a separate federal income tax return calculating its own taxable income, and then apply the appropriate federal tax rate so as to arrive at the amount of federal tax that would have been payable to the federal government under a separate corporate return. The subsidiary would then forward this separately prepared federal tax return to the parent, Transamerica Corporation, along with a check payable to the parent in an amount equal to the federal income tax as calculated on the separate corporate return. Based upon the information derived from the various separate returns, the parent corporation would then prepare a consolidated return, calculate the amount of tax due on the consolidated return, and pay that amount to the federal government.

The amount of tax paid to the federal government by the parent corporation would not necessarily be equal to the sum of the amounts forwarded to the parent by the individual subsidiaries. One of the advantages inherent in the utilization of the consolidated return is that it permits the parent corporation to adjust the total income of the corporate family by immediately offsetting the losses sustained during the year by some members of the group against the gains or profits made during the same year by other members of the group. Because of this adjustment of profits and losses, the total tax actually paid by Transamerica Corporation to the federal government during each of the years here in question was considerably less than the aggregate amount of the payments that the subsidiaries had sent to Transamerica along with their separate federal tax returns. It was this difference between the amounts sent to the parent corporation by the subsidiaries, and the lesser amount actually paid by the parent to the federal government, that gave rise to the issues involved in this appeal.

A.R.S. § 43-123(c) during the years in question provided as follows:

“In computing net income [for state income tax purposes] there shall be allowed as a deduction taxes . . . paid or accrued during the taxable year. . . ”

Based upon this statutory provision the appellee corporations had always claimed as a deduction on their Arizona income tax returns 1 the full amount of the payment sent with their separate federal tax returns to the parent corporation. This practice by the appellee corporations was first questioned by the. Department'of Revenue in 1974 when it audited the appellees’ state tax returns for the years 1969 through 1972. The Department of Revenue contended that the appellee corporations were not entitled to claim the full amount of the payment made to the parent corporation as “taxes paid or accrued”. It was the department’s position that the appellees’ federal income tax deduction should be limited *430 to a pro rata portion of the tax that was actually paid by the parent to the federal government based upon the consolidated return. Specifically, the Department contends that each appellee’s share of the federal tax deduction should be computed by apportioning the total federal consolidated income tax paid by the parent corporation for each year to each appellee in the ratio that each appellee’s Arizona source of taxable income bears to the total taxable income of the profitable members of the group for that year. 2

Applying the above rationale, the Department of Revenue disallowed the method utilized by appellees in computing their federal tax deductions, and issued deficiency assessments against them for the years 1969 through 1972. After an appropriate appeal was made to the Board of Tax Appeals, the board affirmed the assessments, and thereupon appellees brought this action in the Maricopa County Superior Court pursuant to A.R.S. § 43-177(g).

In their complaint filed in the superior court the appellees urged that the deductions challenged by the Department of Revenue were properly taken as “taxes paid or accrued” and alternatively that, in any event, the deductions should have been allowed as ordinary and necessary business expenses. 3 After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court held that the appellees were entitled to the deductions claimed and that the assessments were invalid. The Department of Revenue then appealed to this Court.

The Department of Revenue frames its first question on appeal as follows:

“May a corporation that joins in the filing of a consolidated federal income tax return, base its deduction for federal income taxes on its Arizona return on the amount it would have paid to the federal government had it not joined in the filing of a consolidated federal return?”

As we have previously indicated in this opinion, a claim for a federal income tax deduction derives from the provisions in A.R.S. § 43-123(c) allowing a deduction for “taxes . . paid or accrued during the taxable year . . . .” The Department of Revenue does not dispute that the payments made by appellees to the parent corporation were in fact “paid or accrued” during the taxable years involved. Rather, the Department’s contention goes to the classification by appellees of these payments as federal income tax payments. As the Department points out, a “tax” is generally defined as an enforced contribution to the sovereign exacted pursuant to legislative authority, and not as a voluntary payment or donation. See Hunt v. Callaghan, 32 Ariz. 235, 257 P. 648 (1927). While this concept of what constitutes a tax is easily expressed as a general principle, its application to the facts here involved gives rise to considerable difficulty. Appellees have admittedly never actually paid any income taxes directly to the federal government; nor can any specific dollar amount of the taxes paid by the parent corporation be directly traced to, or definitely determined as emanating from, these appellees. Even the Department of Revenue concedes, however, that the appellees were entitled to claim some deduction for the payment or accrual of federal income taxes for the years in question. Since it is clear that no method will determine the proper amount of a deduction with mathematical certainty, the best that can be achieved in this situation is the establishment of some standard to be utilized by the taxing authorities and the taxpayer in arriving at an amount that reasonably comports with the statutory intent.

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991 P.2d 804 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1999)
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Bluebook (online)
604 P.2d 1139, 124 Ariz. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arizona-department-of-revenue-v-transamerica-title-insurance-arizctapp-1979.