Birch & Sons Const. Co. v. Porter

157 P.2d 777, 117 Mont. 232, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 47
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1945
Docket8547
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 777 (Birch & Sons Const. Co. v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch & Sons Const. Co. v. Porter, 157 P.2d 777, 117 Mont. 232, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 47 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment in favor of *233 plaintiff in the sum of $29,033.70 for corporation license taxes paid under protest.

To the complaint defendant interposed a general demurrer. Before the hearing on the demurrer plaintiff asked and, without objection, was granted leave to file a supplemental pleading. By agreement the demurrer was regarded as applying to the supplemental pleading. The demurrer was overruled. Defendant declined to plead further and judgment was accordingly entered for plaintiff.

The question before us is whether the complaint and supplemental pleading state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The essential allegations are these: Plaintiff is a domestic corporation engaged in a general contracting business. In 1943 it filed its license tax return for the calendar year 1942. The return disclosed income of $232,688.26 subject to tax, on which it paid $6,980.65. The State Board of Equalization demanded $46,856.26 additional tax which was paid under protest. The demand was based upon the following facts: That plaintiff during the year 1942 was a member of a joint firm designated as S. Birch & Sons Construction Co. — J. L. McLaughlin, and that the firm filed a partnership return showing that it received an income of $3,123,750.47 from war contracts with the United States and in which there was deducted the sum of $1,697,884.34 as a provision for renegotiation of the war contracts, leaving a balance of $1,425,866.36. This balance was shown by the return as having been distributed to plaintiff and to J. L. McLaughlin in equal shares of $712,933.18 each; that plaintiff’s return showed the item of $712,933.18 as a part of its gross income but in turn it deducted the whole amount as a provision for renegotiation for war contracts; that from the returns it showed that the joint venture received a total gross income of $3,123,750.74, and that plaintiff’s share was one-half thereof or a total of $1,561,875.37, which the board used as the basis upon which it arrived at the figure of $46,-856.26 as the amount due from the plaintiff, but the plaintiff, *234 on the other hand, in these returns claimed, the total amount as a provision for the renegotiation of the war contracts.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff deducted the $1,561,-875.37 in computing its net income because at the time its books were closed it recognized it would be liable to make refund under the laws relating to renegotiation, “that while liability therefor was certain, it was then impossible to know the exact amount thereof, ’ ’ and the Montana law provided for no refund to a corporation of any amount of license tax overpaid, and that the deduction “represented the best estimate that plaintiff then could make of the amount it would be called upon to pay in discharge of its liability to make refund under the terms of the laws relating to renegotiation of snch war contracts. ’ ’ The Board of Equalization, it is alleged, treats the entire amount as income and refuses to permit all or any part of it as a deduction. It is alleged that the entire proceeds with respect to which the additional tax was demanded, are proceeds received by plaintiff under war contracts, which were subject to the laws relating to renegotiation; that no part of the proceeds from war contracts constitutes income until the renegotiation is had and the amount of profit which plaintiff will be permitted to keep and retain is determined; that at the time of the demand for the additional tax and at the time of the commencement of this action renegotiation proceedings were pending but uncompleted; that plaintiff has at all times kept its books and accounts pursuant to a regular method approved by good accounting practice and that its federal income tax returns and the Montana Corporation License Tax returns for many years have been prepared, filed and approved upon this basis 'of accounting; and that by such method of accounting the deduction claimed as a provision for renegotiation of the war contracts was proper. The complaint alleges that the State Board of Equalization has proceeded erroneously in arriving at the conclusion that the deduction claimed by plaintiff is not a proper deduction.

The supplemental pleading alleges in substance that after *235 completing the renegotiations with the United States on the war contracts referred to in the complaint, of the sum of $1,-561,875.37 received by plaintiff as alleged in the complaint it was required to refund to the United States government $960,-000, leaving plaintiff a net of $601,875.37, and no more; that plaintiff thereupon prepared an amended return for the year 1942, both for the partnership and for itself showing these facts. It alleged that if the corporation license tax were computed on the sum of $601,875.37 its total tax would be $18,-056.26 instead of $46,856.26 as demanded by the board; that plaintiff should therefore be entitled to the difference or $28,-800; it further set forth an overpayment of $233.70 on its regular income aside from war contracts, which it demanded.

Defendant contends that the entire receipts of plaintiff for the year 1942 represented taxable net. income and that the amount set up as a reserve to cover liabilities upon renegotiation of the war contracts was and is not an allowable deduction; that plaintiff’s recourse is to pay the tax on the entire receipts for that year and then apply to the legislature for a refund of overpayment resulting from the renegotiation of the contracts. In effect their contention, if sustained, would accomplish the same result now attained but would do so by a different method. In other words, defendants’ contention, if upheld, would add nothing to the revenues of the state in the way of additional taxes. By Chapter 209, Laws of 1945, refund of excessive taxes is now authorized to be made by the board but that Act does not affect this case.

The question before us, reduced to its last analysis, is one of procedure, and may be stated as follows: When plaintiff, as is alleged here, would be liable to make refund under the laws relating to renegotiation and “that though liability therefor was certain” the exact amount was unknown during the taxable year, may it make an estimate of the amount it would be called upon to pay in discharge of such liability and deduct it as a liability and make adjustment after the amount is fixed and ascertained, or must it pay on the entire receipts and then *236 go to the trouble of presenting to the legislature a claim for refund!

Section 2296, Revised Codes, as amended, requires corporations to pay a license tax for carrying on business in Montana upon “the total net income received by such corporation in the preceding fiscal year. ’ ’ Under section 2299 the tax is computed upon the total net income. There is of course a difference between receipts and either gross or net income. The question is, May a liability such as the liability to refund to the government on renegotiation of war contracts be deducted from the gross receipts as a contingent liability in determining net income! The statute does not enumerate this as a proper deduction from gross income to determine the net income. (Sec. 2297, Revised Codes.) But, as before stated, total receipts do not always represent gross income.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Rice v. Mississippi Institute of Aeronautics
22 So. 2d 372 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 777, 117 Mont. 232, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-sons-const-co-v-porter-mont-1945.