PALMIERI, District Judge.
This is a suit for the refund of taxes, alleged to have been erroneously and illegally assessed and collected. Jurisdiction is vested in this Court pursuant to-28 U.S.C. § 1346(a) (1) (Supp. V).
The taxpayers, who are citizens of the United States, are shareholders of corporations which are resident in the Crown Colony of Singapore. In the years 1951, 1952, and 1953 these corporations declared dividends in favor of plaintiffs aggregating $18,855.15. Before paying these dividends to the plaintiffs, the corporations deducted sums aggregating $5,614.52 as taxes due the government of Singapore, pursuant to Crown Colony of Singapore, The Income Tax Ordinance, 1947 § 40,1 and paid this amount to the Colony. Thus, the net proceeds received by the taxpayers during the three years totalled $13,240.63.
Plaintiffs reported the gross dividends declared as dividends received on their United States income tax returns for the years in question and claimed a credit against the United States tax due in the amounts deducted by the corporations for Singapore taxes. This credit was claimed as a foreign tax paid pursuant to Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939), 26 U.S.C. § 131.2
[887]*887On April 1, 1955 the District Director of the Internal Revenue Service notified plaintiffs that there were deficiencies in the amounts of federal income taxes paid for the years in question. These deficiencies arose because of the Director’s contentions that only the net dividends received were to be reported for United •States income tax purposes and that no credit was allowable for the Singapore taxes which had been deducted by the corporations and paid by them to the Colony.
The taxpayers paid the deficiencies in April, 1955 together with additional taxes which had been imposed, and interest. A claim for a refund was filed with the District Director on August 11, 1955, based ■on taxpayers’ contentions that the gross dividends declared should be reported and that the Singapore tax deducted by the corporations should be credited against the United States tax due under Int.Rev. Code, § 131 (1939). This claim was disallowed on February 4, 1957, and this suit was instituted on June 17, 1957.
A Singapore corporation, when declaring a dividend, may choose between two bookkeeping procedures. (1) It may declare a gross dividend and deduct from it, before payment to its shareholders, the tax paid or payable by the corporation on that portion of the corporation’s income from which the dividend is paid. This is a dividend “less tax.” (2) It may declare a dividend “free of tax,” 3 that is, without deduction from the dividend of any taxes paid or payable by the corporation. Crown Colony of Singapore, the Income Tax Ordinance, 1947 § 40.4 Regardless of the accounting practice employed the corporation is required to furnish “each shareholder with a certificate setting forth the * * * amount of tax which the company has deducted or is entitled to deduct in respect of that dividend.” Id., § 40(2). If a dividend “less tax” is declared, the shareholder must report as income, under the Singapore statute, the gross dividend before deduction; if a dividend “free of tax” is declared, the shareholder must report as income “the dividend increased by an amount on account of such taxes corresponding to the extent to which the profits out of which the said dividend has been paid have been charged with such taxes.” Id., § 26.5 The shareholder then sets off against any tax which may be due on his “chargeable” (taxable) income, the amount of the tax which the company deducted or was entitled to deduct, i. e., the amount of tax paid or payable by the corporation, if the dividend is included in the shareholder’s chargeable income. Id., § 42.6 And, if the shareholder has no [888]*888chargeable income, or if his income is taxable at a lower rate than the rate at which the corporation paid tax on the income out of which the dividend was paid,7 an appropriate portion of the tax paid by the corporation is refunded to the shareholder. Id., § 89(1) .8
The plaintiffs are entitled to a credit for foreign taxes paid under Int. Rev.Code, § 131 (1939) only if the Singapore tax was levied on them as shareholders of the corporation, and not if the tax was levied on the corporation. Otis Elevator Co. v. United States, 1941, 92 Ct.Cl. 590, 36 F.Supp. 328, 331-332. In determining this question, the characterization of the tax in the Singapore ordinance is not conclusive. The shareholder will be considered to have paid the tax, for the purpose of claiming a credit under Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939), if what he “has done in conformity to [Singapore] law * * * is the substantial equivalent of paymeiit of the tax as those terms are used in our own statute.” Biddle v. Com’r, 1938, 302 U.S. 573, 579, 58 S.Ct. 379, 382, 82 L.Ed. 431. This is so whether the credit be claimed under § 131(a), Biddle v. Com’r, supra, or under § 131(h), Northwestern Mutual Fire Ass’n v. Com’r, 9 Cir., 1950, 181 F.2d 133, 134. Put another way, the shareholder may claim the credit under § 131 if the foreign tax was paid on fixed dividends owed to him; but not if it was paid on his common interest in corporate earnings. Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. United States, 1944, 322 U.S. 526, 529, 64 S.Ct. 1106, 88 L.Ed. 1434.
Turning to an examination of what has been done under the Singapore law, it may be seen that the Singapore tax was paid by the corporations on their chargeable (taxable) income. It was due whether or not dividends had been declared. These factors indicate that the tax is levied on the companies and not on their shareholders, as those concepts are understood in the American tax statutes.9
Plaintiffs argue that the Colony’s treatment of the tax after a dividend has been declared indicates that the tax is levied on the shareholders. As set forth above, the shareholders are required to report the dividend received, plus the deduction, if the dividend is “less tax” or plus the amount of tax paid or payable by the corporation in respect to the dividend, if the dividend is “free of tax.” The shareholder then deducts the tax paid or payable by the corporation from any tax which may be due on his income. Thus, the shareholder does not pay any tax on the dividend received to the extent that the corporation has paid taxes on the income from which the dividend has been [889]*889paid. If the shareholder has no chargeable income, the tax paid by the corporation is refunded to the shareholder.10 It should be noted, however, that the deduction for taxes paid, which the corporation may make from the dividend declared, is made at the rate paid or payable by the corporation, and is “restricted to that portion of the dividend which is paid out of income on which tax is paid or payable by the company.” See note 1, supra.
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PALMIERI, District Judge.
This is a suit for the refund of taxes, alleged to have been erroneously and illegally assessed and collected. Jurisdiction is vested in this Court pursuant to-28 U.S.C. § 1346(a) (1) (Supp. V).
The taxpayers, who are citizens of the United States, are shareholders of corporations which are resident in the Crown Colony of Singapore. In the years 1951, 1952, and 1953 these corporations declared dividends in favor of plaintiffs aggregating $18,855.15. Before paying these dividends to the plaintiffs, the corporations deducted sums aggregating $5,614.52 as taxes due the government of Singapore, pursuant to Crown Colony of Singapore, The Income Tax Ordinance, 1947 § 40,1 and paid this amount to the Colony. Thus, the net proceeds received by the taxpayers during the three years totalled $13,240.63.
Plaintiffs reported the gross dividends declared as dividends received on their United States income tax returns for the years in question and claimed a credit against the United States tax due in the amounts deducted by the corporations for Singapore taxes. This credit was claimed as a foreign tax paid pursuant to Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939), 26 U.S.C. § 131.2
[887]*887On April 1, 1955 the District Director of the Internal Revenue Service notified plaintiffs that there were deficiencies in the amounts of federal income taxes paid for the years in question. These deficiencies arose because of the Director’s contentions that only the net dividends received were to be reported for United •States income tax purposes and that no credit was allowable for the Singapore taxes which had been deducted by the corporations and paid by them to the Colony.
The taxpayers paid the deficiencies in April, 1955 together with additional taxes which had been imposed, and interest. A claim for a refund was filed with the District Director on August 11, 1955, based ■on taxpayers’ contentions that the gross dividends declared should be reported and that the Singapore tax deducted by the corporations should be credited against the United States tax due under Int.Rev. Code, § 131 (1939). This claim was disallowed on February 4, 1957, and this suit was instituted on June 17, 1957.
A Singapore corporation, when declaring a dividend, may choose between two bookkeeping procedures. (1) It may declare a gross dividend and deduct from it, before payment to its shareholders, the tax paid or payable by the corporation on that portion of the corporation’s income from which the dividend is paid. This is a dividend “less tax.” (2) It may declare a dividend “free of tax,” 3 that is, without deduction from the dividend of any taxes paid or payable by the corporation. Crown Colony of Singapore, the Income Tax Ordinance, 1947 § 40.4 Regardless of the accounting practice employed the corporation is required to furnish “each shareholder with a certificate setting forth the * * * amount of tax which the company has deducted or is entitled to deduct in respect of that dividend.” Id., § 40(2). If a dividend “less tax” is declared, the shareholder must report as income, under the Singapore statute, the gross dividend before deduction; if a dividend “free of tax” is declared, the shareholder must report as income “the dividend increased by an amount on account of such taxes corresponding to the extent to which the profits out of which the said dividend has been paid have been charged with such taxes.” Id., § 26.5 The shareholder then sets off against any tax which may be due on his “chargeable” (taxable) income, the amount of the tax which the company deducted or was entitled to deduct, i. e., the amount of tax paid or payable by the corporation, if the dividend is included in the shareholder’s chargeable income. Id., § 42.6 And, if the shareholder has no [888]*888chargeable income, or if his income is taxable at a lower rate than the rate at which the corporation paid tax on the income out of which the dividend was paid,7 an appropriate portion of the tax paid by the corporation is refunded to the shareholder. Id., § 89(1) .8
The plaintiffs are entitled to a credit for foreign taxes paid under Int. Rev.Code, § 131 (1939) only if the Singapore tax was levied on them as shareholders of the corporation, and not if the tax was levied on the corporation. Otis Elevator Co. v. United States, 1941, 92 Ct.Cl. 590, 36 F.Supp. 328, 331-332. In determining this question, the characterization of the tax in the Singapore ordinance is not conclusive. The shareholder will be considered to have paid the tax, for the purpose of claiming a credit under Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939), if what he “has done in conformity to [Singapore] law * * * is the substantial equivalent of paymeiit of the tax as those terms are used in our own statute.” Biddle v. Com’r, 1938, 302 U.S. 573, 579, 58 S.Ct. 379, 382, 82 L.Ed. 431. This is so whether the credit be claimed under § 131(a), Biddle v. Com’r, supra, or under § 131(h), Northwestern Mutual Fire Ass’n v. Com’r, 9 Cir., 1950, 181 F.2d 133, 134. Put another way, the shareholder may claim the credit under § 131 if the foreign tax was paid on fixed dividends owed to him; but not if it was paid on his common interest in corporate earnings. Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. United States, 1944, 322 U.S. 526, 529, 64 S.Ct. 1106, 88 L.Ed. 1434.
Turning to an examination of what has been done under the Singapore law, it may be seen that the Singapore tax was paid by the corporations on their chargeable (taxable) income. It was due whether or not dividends had been declared. These factors indicate that the tax is levied on the companies and not on their shareholders, as those concepts are understood in the American tax statutes.9
Plaintiffs argue that the Colony’s treatment of the tax after a dividend has been declared indicates that the tax is levied on the shareholders. As set forth above, the shareholders are required to report the dividend received, plus the deduction, if the dividend is “less tax” or plus the amount of tax paid or payable by the corporation in respect to the dividend, if the dividend is “free of tax.” The shareholder then deducts the tax paid or payable by the corporation from any tax which may be due on his income. Thus, the shareholder does not pay any tax on the dividend received to the extent that the corporation has paid taxes on the income from which the dividend has been [889]*889paid. If the shareholder has no chargeable income, the tax paid by the corporation is refunded to the shareholder.10 It should be noted, however, that the deduction for taxes paid, which the corporation may make from the dividend declared, is made at the rate paid or payable by the corporation, and is “restricted to that portion of the dividend which is paid out of income on which tax is paid or payable by the company.” See note 1, supra. These latter provisions might indicate that the amount deducted from the dividend is, even under the Singapore statute, not considered as a tax upon the dividend but upon the corporate income from which the dividend is paid.
The Singapore taxing statute, however, may be said to treat the shareholder as paying the corporate tax for the limited purposes of determining whether any refund is due the shareholder, and of preventing the shareholder from paying a tax on the same income, when paid to him in the form of a dividend, as that on which the corporation has already paid a tax. These purposes, which do not affect the assessment or the payment of the tax, and which are not recognized in the American tax statute,11 do not make the Singapore tax one paid by the plaintiffs within the meaning of Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939). Biddle v. Com’r, 1938, 302 U.S. 573, 580-582, 58 S.Ct. 379, 82 L.Ed. 431. Indeed, one of the purposes of the Singapore tax statute is to relieve the shareholder from the burden of paying any tax on the dividend, to the extent that the corporation has paid a tax on the income from which the dividend is declared. Nor do the purposes for which the Singapore statute treats the shareholder as paying the tax turn the tax paid by the corporation from one on the shareholder’s interest in corporate earnings into one on the dividends owed to the shareholder. Wisconsin Gas & Electric Co. v. United States, 1944, 322 U.S. 526, 529, 64 S.Ct. 1106, 88 L.Ed. 1434. I conclude, therefore, that the credit may not be claimed by these plaintiffs.
My conclusion, which has been reached on the basis of an examination of the Singapore statute in the light of the tests set forth in Biddle v. Com’r, supra, is, of course, buttressed by the similar conclusion reached by the Court in that case in regard to the essentially similar British statute there at issue. And see I.T. 3941, 1949-1 Cum.Bull. 86.12
Plaintiffs’ grounds for distinguishing the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court in the Biddle case are without merit. The British tax there at issue was paid by the shareholders to the same extent that they may here be said to be paying the Singapore tax. 1938, 302 U.S. 573, 580-582, 58 S.Ct. 379, 82 L.Ed. 431. The British taxpayers were, contrary to plaintiffs’ suggestion, also entitled to set off the tax paid by the corporation against any individual tax they may have owed. Mary Duke Biddle, 1935, 33 B.T.A. 127, 130-131, affirmed, 2 Cir., [890]*8901936, 86 F.2d 718, affirmed, 1938, 302 U.S. 573, 58 S.Ct. 379, 82 L.Ed. 431. And, contrary to the plaintiffs’ suggestion, both the British and the Singapore shareholders may have no taxable income. Compare 302 U.S. 573, 580, 58 S.Ct. 379, 82 L.Ed. 431, with Crown Colony of Singapore, The Income Tax Ordinance, 1947, §§ 33, 34. Finally, plaintiffs point to the fact that the taxpayers, in Biddle, were liable for a surtax on the dividends received, while there is no surtax provision in the Singapore law. This difference is not a ground for holding that the Singapore tax was paid by the plaintiffs. The point is that both the British tax at issue in Biddle and the Singapore tax here are considered for certain purposes, by the foreign authorities, to be paid by the taxpayers; but that these purposes are not sufficient to lead to the conclusion that the taxes have been paid by the taxpayers within the meaning of Int.Rev. Code, § 131 (1939). It is of no consequence that there are differing circumstances behind the foreign authorities’ determinations that the shareholders pay the tax.13
Plaintiffs’ claim that Biddle was “superseded” or “overruled” by a tax treaty entered into between the United States and the United Kingdom,14 misconceives the effect of the treaty and the use of the Biddle decision as a precedent in this case. The treaty, which it is admitted does not cover this case,15 provides that, under certain circumstances, “the recipient of a dividend paid by a corporation which is a resident of the United Kingdom shall be deemed to have paid the United Kingdom income tax appropriate to such dividend * * Art. XIII (1), 60 Stat. 1384 (1946). The treaty leaves unimpaired the Supreme Court’s interpretation, in Biddle, of Int.Rev.Code, § 131 (1939); and that interpretation is still the basis of determining whether a foreign tax is paid by the American taxpayer who claims the credit therefor. It is only circumstance that the standards set forth in Biddle for interpreting Int. Rev.Code, § 131 (1939) led to a conclusion that the shareholders of the British corporation had not paid the tax. The standards would still be the guide for interpreting that section, even if they had compelled a contrary result in Biddle. The treaty relieves American shareholders of United Kingdom corporations of the consequences of the fact that they are not to be considered as having paid the British tax within the meaning of Int. Rev.Code, § 131 (1939). It does not affect the standards set forth in Biddle for interpreting that section and it does not provide that American shareholders in other than United Kingdom corporations shall be considered as having paid the tax. .
The defendant is, therefore, entitled to judgment dismissing the complaint.
[891]*891This opinion shall constitute the 'Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions •of Law under Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), 28 U.S.C.
Settle order and judgment on notice in ■accordance herewith.