Bigelow v. Reeves, Com'r of Revenue

149 S.W.2d 499, 285 Ky. 831, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 28, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 499 (Bigelow v. Reeves, Com'r of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigelow v. Reeves, Com'r of Revenue, 149 S.W.2d 499, 285 Ky. 831, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 461 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

*832 The appellant, Rachel M. Bigelow, was, throughout the period involved in this litigation, a citizen, resident and tax payer in Jefferson County, Kentucky; while defendants are officials, being members of the Kentucky Tax Commission. At the assessing periods for ad valorem taxes for the years 1927 to and including 1936 plaintiff owned, as a part of her entire estate, intangible property of the value of $300,000, which she omitted and failed to assess for any of those years, and she, therefore, paid no taxes on such omitted property throughout that ten year period.

Our present income tax law was passed at the Third Extra Session of 1936, c. 7, and became effective August 7th of that year. Its Section 3 (now Section 4281b-3 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes), prescribes for deductions that may be made from income received by the tax payer for the year prior to the one in which the schedule required by the income tax act is due to be made and returned, with payment of taxes due. At a later and fourth Extra Session held during the same year there was enacted Chapter 21, appearing on page 149 of the published acts for that Session, which repealed certain enumerated sections of our statute relating to revenue and taxation, and amended others relating to the same subject. A part of such amendments so enacted at that special session was and is one extending to the delinquent tax payer, who had theretofore omitted assessing his property for ad valorem taxes, the privilege of appearing before the State Revenue Department of the Commonwealth and retroactively assess his theretofore omitted property, provided it be done within four months after the effective date of that act, and to then pay the accumulated taxes due on such omitted assessments, with 6% annual interest thereon, within thirty days after making such assessment. If so done by the tax payer he thereby became relieved of all penalties and other costs then imposed by law for such refusals or omissions to assess his property, which penalty at that time was 100%.

Within the time prescribed by that statute appellant assessed her $300,000 of omitted property, which she had withheld from assessment for the preceding ten years and within the thirty days thereafter (sometime in January, 1937), she paid all back taxes due thereon, with 6% annual interest, amounting to $20,067.15. *833 Sometime before the dat§ for filing her schedule in 1938 of income for the year 1937, with legal deductions therefrom showing net income upon which her income tax was calculated, she prepared her schedule, form No. 740, in which she sought a deduction from her gross income for the preceding year of 1937 the amount of delinquent taxes which she paid in the year 1937 on the retroactive assessment for the ten year period referred to, in which she had omitted to assess her property or to pay the taxes thereon at the dates and times prescribed by law throughout that omitted period, and which amount, if allowed, reduced her net income for the year 1937 below the amount upon which income taxes are assessable, thereby making her entire net income for the year 1937 exempt from income taxes.

"When that report was filed, appellant was notified by the State Bevenue Department to appear before it and show cause why the deduction should not be stricken from her schedule as made out by her, since the Commission was of the opinion that it was not a proper deductible item under the terms of the income tax law. At that hearing the reduction was disallowed by the Bevenue Commission, and appellant appealed therefrom to the Franklin circuit court. At the hearing therein it was adjudged that she was not entitled to the deduction claimed by her and the ruling made by the Bevenue Commission was affirmed. From that judgment she prosecutes this appeal.

A part of the income tax statute (now Section 4281b-3 of Baldwin’s 1936 Bevision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes) provides for deductions to which the tax payer is entitled from his gross income during the year previous to the making of his schedule in order to ascertain the net income upon which the tax is levied and collected. Subsection (c) of that section says: “Property taxes, poll taxes, and franchise or license taxes paid to the Commonwealth of Kentucky, its taxing subdivisions, or its municipalities,- and income taxes paid to the United States.”

Appellant, therefore, insists that the contested deduction in this case was an item consisting entirely of “property taxes,” and that her right to make the deduction on her 1938 schedule is literally within the terms of the inserted subsection (c) of the statute and, therefore, the ruling of the Bevenue Commission, as well as *834 the judgment of the Franklin circuit court, are each erroneous. The appellees, in combating that contention, make three arguments: (1) That the general scheme plainly portrayed throughout the income tax statute is that its provisions shall be applied upon the annual basis, and that deductions from gross income for any of the items contained in the list of deductions means only those accruing and paid during the year for -which they are claimed, and that, since none of the deduction here insisted on accrued and became a tax obligation on the part of the tax payer within the year 1937 pursuant to the statute referred to (and which has come to be know as the “Grace Statute”), appellant is not entitled to it; (2) that the entire deduction item contended for by appellant represented taxes which she was under obligation to pay, as accruing throughout a period of years, each and all of which ante-dated the enactment of the income tax statute, and that it was not the intention of the legislature- in creating deductions in the latter statute to retroactively reach back and incorporate as a proper deduction any unpaid taxes for the years preceding the enactment of the income tax statute, but the statutes should run concurrently, and (3) that, even should insistences and arguments (1) and (2) be disregarded for any reason — either as being unsound or upon any other ground — then appellant should not be allowed the deduction she claims because it is founded and rests upon her own wrong in failing to assess her property and pay the taxes due thereon at the periods provided throughout the omitted period of ten years, and which argument is upon the ground that no one can take advantage of his own wrong, and that one coming into equity must do so with clean hands, and must also do equity.

There is an apparent contrariety of opinions among the courts before which the question has been presented with reference to insistence (1), and reasons are assigned by the courts rendering such contradictory opinion more or less sustaining the conclusion reached by the court, whether upon the one side of the question or the other. We have, therefore, concluded to pass it without expressing our conclusion upon its proper determination, and for which reason we will not refer to the cases in which the contrariety of conclusions appear.

Insistence (2) has much logic to support it. It does not appear to ever have been decided by any court, and *835 which fact is expressly admitted in briefs of respective counsel filed in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 499, 285 Ky. 831, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigelow-v-reeves-comr-of-revenue-kyctapphigh-1941.