Arthur Jordan Foundation v. District of Columbia

219 F.2d 503
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1955
Docket12253_1
StatusPublished

This text of 219 F.2d 503 (Arthur Jordan Foundation v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur Jordan Foundation v. District of Columbia, 219 F.2d 503 (D.C. Cir. 1955).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition to review a decision of the District of Columbia Tax Court *504 in a franchise tax case. Petitioner Foundation was created in 1928 by a trust agreement in which various common stocks and certain realty were transferred to trustees to hold and to apply the earnings to charitable, educational and similar purposes. During the taxable years here involved the trust owned real estate in Washington, where it conducted businesses directly and not as a stockholder, selling for profit musical merchandise. The principal place of business of the Foundation is Indianapolis.

For the years ended June 30, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950, the Assessor for the District of Columbia assessed franchise taxes 1 against it as a corporation. It appealed to the Tax Court upon three points, one of which is involved in the present petition to this court. Petitioner said it was not a corporation and was therefore not subject to the corporation franchise tax. The Tax Court held the Foundation not to be taxable as a corporation but to be taxable as an unincorporated business. It directed a recom-putation of the franchise tax on that basis. This action of the Tax Court is the disputed point here. Petitioner says the Tax Court, having held it not taxable as a corporation, had no further power in the proceeding.

The statute involved is in seven Articles. Article I is an “Income and Franchise Tax Act”. 2 This Article has sixteen Titles. Some of these Titles deal with various subjects common to both income and franchise taxes, such as exemptions, returns, purposes, assessment and collection, penalties, and appeals. Other Titles deal with specific taxes. The first section of Title X is headed “Purpose of Article” and provides in part:

“It is the purpose of this article to impose (1) an income tax upon the entire net income of every resident and every resident estate and trust, and (2) a franchise tax upon every corporation and unincorporated business for the privilege of carrying on or engaging in any trade or business within the District and of receiving such other income as is derived from sources within the District: * * *. The measure of the franchise tax shall be that portion of the net income of the corporation and unincorporated business as is fairly attributable to any trade or business carried on or engaged in within the District and such other net income as is derived from sources within the District; * * * ” 3

The controversy before us arises from the fact that the franchise tax on corporations and the franchise tax on unincorporated businesses are imposed by two separate Titles of this Article. Therefore, says petitioner, they are two different taxes and when one tax is appealed the Tax Court has no power to impose a different tax in lieu of the one appealed.

The two Titles involved are VII and VIII. Title VII provides a franchise tax upon corporations. Section 2 of that Title reads:

“For the privilege of carrying on or engaging in any trade or business within the District and of receiving income from sources within the District, there is hereby levied for each taxable year a tax at the rate of 5 per centum upon the taxable income of every corporation, whether domestic or foreign (except those expressly exempt under section 47-1554).” 4

Title VIII provides the franchise tax upon unincorporated businesses. Section 3 of that Title reads:

“For the privilege of carrying on or engaging in any trade or business *505 within the District and of receiving income from sources within the District, there is hereby levied for each taxable year a tax at the rate of 5 per centum upon the taxable income of every unincorporated business, whether domestic or foreign (except those expressly exempt under section 47-1554).” 5

The notice of the Assessor to the petitioner said: “It is further held that the Foundation is taxable as a corporation under the provisions of Title I, Sec. l(r) [sic] of the Act.” 6 This section, Section 4(r), is a definition of a corporation, and the term, by the definition, includes, inter alia, a trust “which is classed or should be classed as a corporation for purposes of Federal income taxation.” In the federal Internal Revenue Code “The term ‘corporation’ includes associations”. 7 The definition in the federal Code does not include trusts as such; they are not taxable under federal income tax law as corporations. 8 So far as the present controversy is concerned, the only trusts which are classed as corporations for federal income tax purposes are those which are associations. So the question as to petitioner Foundation was not whether it was incorporated but whether it was an association as distinguished from a trust as such. The Tax Court held that the Foundation was not taxable as a corporation, noting that the United States Tax Court had specifically so held for federal purposes. 9

The District of Columbia Tax Court went on in its consideration to hold that the Foundation was an unincorporated business in relation to the two musical mercantile houses which the trustees conducted in the District of Columbia and that, therefore, the Foundation was subject to the franchise tax. 10 The court held that the franchise tax upon corporations and the franchise tax upon unincorporated businesses were precisely the same, a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, and that the capacity — i. e., whether as a corporation or as an unincorporated business — in which the petitioner was taxed was immaterial, except as to specific allowances in the statute.

As will have been noted, the language by which the taxes are imposed in Titles VII and VIII is identical, except that one applies to corporations and the other to unincorporated businesses. The two impositions are of precisely the same tax. Furthermore, in the case at bar, the entity to be taxed is the same whether it be treated as an association, i. e., a corporation under the statutory definitions, or as an unincorporated business. We do not have here a case in which different taxable entities might be involved, as, for example, might be the case if an incorporated taxpayer appealed and the Tax Court sought to impose the same tax upon the stockholders as partners, or where an individual appealed and the court sought to impose the tax upon the *506 same person as a trustee. The Foundation as an entity was sought to be taxed by the Assessor as an association, not as incorporated, and the Tax Court approved the tax upon the same taxable entity, the Foundation, but as an unincorporated business.

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249 U.S. 223 (Supreme Court, 1919)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 F.2d 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-jordan-foundation-v-district-of-columbia-cadc-1955.