Barclay v. First Paris Holding Co.

42 S.W.3d 496, 344 Ark. 711, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 10, 2001
Docket00-1128
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 42 S.W.3d 496 (Barclay v. First Paris Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barclay v. First Paris Holding Co., 42 S.W.3d 496, 344 Ark. 711, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 289 (Ark. 2001).

Opinions

RAY THORNTON, Justice.

In 1979, the General Assembly adopted Act 708, allowing corporate members of an affiliated group that files a federal consolidated income tax return, to file a consolidated Arkansas tax return. Following the adoption of Act 708, First Paris Holding Company [The Holding Company] was organized on March 27, 1980. At the time of its organization, the Holding Company owned eighty-six percent of the stock of First National Bank at Paris [First National]. The Holding Company and First National formed an affiliated group that filed consolidated tax returns for the years 1980 through 1994 for both federal and state taxes. The consolidated group filed its return on the basis of federal principles that exclude intercorporate dividend distributions between members of an affiliated group in the calculation of gross income for the consolidated group.

In 1994, appellant, the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration [DFA], conducted an audit of the consolidated group’s tax returns and imposed a tax on the intercorporate dividends, asserting that the provisions of Act 570 of 1965 only permitted the exemption of dividends received from First National by the Holding Company from the gross income of the consolidated group if the Holding Company owned at least ninety-five percent' of the stock of First National. Appellant assessed appellees additional income taxes of $181,960.14, which appellees paid under protest.

The decision of the DFA was appealed to the Pulaski County Chancery Court, and the chancellor found that the provisions of Act 708 of 1979 allowed the filing of consolidated returns, and that intercompany distributions of dividends between corporate members of an affiliated group were excluded from computation of taxable income for the taxpayer, the consolidated group. It is from that decision that appellant brings this appeal, and we affirm.

This case requires us to interpret two statutes relating to the taxation of closely related corporations. The first statute was enacted as Act 570 of 1965. Act 570 did not address the filing of consolidated returns, but was effective for corporations that filed separate tax returns. Act 570 provided that dividends payable by a subsidiary corporation to its parent, were exempt from taxation if the parent owned at least ninety-five percent of the subsidiary’s capital stock.

The second statutory provision, as adopted by Act 708 of 1979, extended to Arkansas corporations the right of an affiliated group under federal tax laws to elect to consolidate tax returns for the purposes of state taxation. We are instructed by Act 708 of 1979 that “this Act is based upon the concept of filing federal consolidated income tax returns.”

Concept of consolidated tax returns

The basic federal rules for taxing corporations were enacted by Congress in 1909. A corporation, regardless of its organization into separate divisions, is taxed upon its taxable income, and in 1909 the rule was adopted that intercorporate dividends are excluded from the payee corporation’s income. The principle has been refined and limited to address perceived abuses of the exclusion, but the principle that taxable income should not bear multiple levels of corporate tax is the fundamental policy underlying the taxation of dividends received by corporations. See George Mundstock, Taxation of Intercorporate Dividends Under an Unintegrated Regime, 44 Tax L. Rev. 1 (1988). The Mundstock article also points out that the Revenue Act of 1918 provided statutory authority for consolidated returns when the corporation declaring dividends is, in effect, a part of an economic unit with the shareholder-corporation. Specifically, Mundstock states: “[N]o more tax should result than if the two corporations were one entity for tax purposes.” Id.

As expressed by John M. Pearce in a comment published in the 1989 Oregon Law Review, “the general rationale behind the dividends-received deduction is to mitigate the double taxation of corporate earnings before such earnings are paid, and taxed again, to individual shareholders.” John M. Pearce, The Intercorporate Dividends-Received Deduction: An Area of Increasing Complexity, 68 OR. L. Rev. 161 (1989). To the same effect, Boris I. Bittker and James S. Eustice, in their treatise Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders § 13.42 (Supp. 2000), note:

[T]he elimination of dividends from gross income is consistent with the theory that the group is, in effect, a single taxable enterprise and that such earnings have already been reflected in the consolidated return and taxed once to the group.

Id. To eliminate or to reduce the double taxation of earnings within a consolidated taxpayer’s return, the federal rule for filing consolidated returns specifically provides that “a dividend distributed by one member to another member during a consolidated year shall be eliminated.” 26 CFR §1.1502-14 (a). Bittker and Eustice further note that:

The basic concept underlying these provisions is that the consolidated group constitutes, in substance, a single unitary economic enterprise, despite the existence of technically distinct legal entities; as such the group’s tax liability ought to be based on its dealings with outsiders rather than on intra group transactions. This unitary enterprise concept lies at the heart of the treatment — both past and present — of intercompany transactions, which generally are ehminated in computing the group’s consolidated taxable income. In effect, the results resemble in many respects the joint-return treatment of a husband and wife.

Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders § 13.42.

It is clear that the concept of exclusion of intercompany dividends in computing taxable income of an affiliated group is central to the concept of filing federal consolidated tax returns. We next address the question whether, under Arkansas law, the Holding Company and National Bank were eligible to form an affiliated group and to file a consolidated return as provided by Act 708 of 1979, or whether they were restricted by Act 570 of 1965 from forming an affiliated group and realizing the benefits of filing a consolidated return.

Statutory Interpretation

Our standard of review of a chancery court’s decision in a tax case is de novo. Pledger v. Troll Book Club, Inc., 316 Ark. 195, 871 S.W.2d 389 (1994). We will not disturb the chancellor’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. Id. We also review issues of statutory construction de novo as it is for us to decide what a statute means. Hodges v. Huckabee, 338 Ark. 454, 995 S.W.2d 341 (1999). We are not bound by the decision of the trial court; however, in the absence of a showing that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the law, that interpretation will be accepted as correct on appeal. Id.

The basic rule of statutory construction is to give effect to the intent of the legislature. Ford v. Keith, 338 Ark. 487, 996 S.W.2d 20 (1999).

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.3d 496, 344 Ark. 711, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barclay-v-first-paris-holding-co-ark-2001.