Burroughs Adding MacHine Co. v. Tax Commission

297 N.W. 574, 237 Wis. 423, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 214
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 297 N.W. 574 (Burroughs Adding MacHine Co. v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burroughs Adding MacHine Co. v. Tax Commission, 297 N.W. 574, 237 Wis. 423, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 214 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

Appellant is a Missouri corporation, duly qualified to transact business in the state of Wisconsin, the capital stock of which is wholly owned by Burroughs Adding •Machine Company, a Michigan corporation. Appellant is • engaged in selling throughout the United States, Alaska, and Hawaii various adding, calculating, and bookkeeping machines manufactured by the parent company. The latter transacts no business in Wisconsin and has no property here. In addition to appellant, the parent corporation owns the stock of twenty-five other subsidiaries engaged in selling and servicing machines produced by it. The officers of appellant and the parent company were the same, and there were several directors common to both companies.

■In 1921 appellant and the parent corporation entered into a contract by the terms of which appellant agreed to purchase from the parent all of the products manufactured by it. It was agreed that for these products appellant would pay to the parent all sums received by it except such a sum as would permit appellant to earn annually twenty-four per cent of the par. value of appellant’s capital stock. The corporations oper *426 ated under this contract until 1934, and during the period of its operation appellant’s books annually disclosed a net income of twenty-four per cent of $150,000, or $36,000 per year. In 1926 the Tax Commission demanded consolidated statements of the income of appellant and the parent company, but appellant refused the demand, whereupon a doomage assessment on $100,000 of income was proposed by the Tax Commission under sec. 71.09 (6), Stats., and sustained upon a subsequent hearing. Suit for an injunction was then brought by appellant in the district court of the United States, Eastern district of Wisconsin, the assessment being attacked upon various constitutional and statutory grounds. Relief was denied by the federal court. On November 10, 1930, the Tax Commission again demanded consolidated statements, but permitted appellant pending a field audit to file returns which stated its income as actually received and accounted for on its books, but adjusted by a restatement of the cost of the products it sold and certain items of expense. Thereafter, such returns were made by appellant for the years 1929 to 1933, inclusive. On January 1, 1934, a new contract was entered into' between appellant and its parent. This provided for the sale by the parent to appellant at a fifty per cent discount from list prices and the allocation to appellant of a ninety per cent of sales and advertising expenses as well as a proportion of general expenses (principally incurred for jointly used offices). This contract established on a contractual basis the same discount, costs, and expenses as appellant had used in computing and restating its income for the years .1929 to 1933, inclusive, except that the apportionment of general expenses under the new arrangement was somewhat more favorable to appellant and tO' that extent increased the latter’s income. On conclusion of the field audit in 1935, the auditor concluded that the income tax returns by appellant for the years 1929 to 1934, inclusive, did not reflect the proper amount of income derived from business transacted by appellant in Wisconsin, *427 He therefore consolidated the income of appellant with that of its parent, and to arrive at appellant’s Wisconsin income applied to such consolidated income a percentage determined by taking the arithmetical average of three ratios similar to those established by sec. 71.02 (3) (d), Stats., for computing the income of a taxpayer doing business within and without the state of Wisconsin. The ratios were, (1) appellant’s tangible property in Wisconsin to' the total consolidated tangible property everywhere; (2) appellant’s sales in Wisconsin to the total consolidated sales everywhere; and (3) appellant’s manufacturing costs in Wisconsin to the total consolidated manufacturing costs everywhere. Instead of comparing, as in cases under sec. 71.02 (3) (d)a single taxpayer’s property, sales and costs in Wisconsin to those everywhere, the parent and subsidiaries were treated as a unit and a ratio between appellant’s property, sales, and costs in Wisconsin to those of the parent and all its subsidiaries everywhere was established. Since appellant was the only one of the affiliated companies to do business in Wisconsin, this allocated to appellant all of the income of the affiliated companies from activities in this state. The result of this computation was to‘ apportion to appellant $80,348.04 more income than appellant had reported in the last returns made by it for the years 1929 to 1934, and an additional assessment on the basis of this additional income amounting to $5,475.56 was made and notice thereof given appellant December 20, 1935. On March 20, 1938, the Tax Commission made its decision confirming the additional assessment, and upon appeal the circuit court for Dane county confirmed the additional assessment and entered the judgment from which this appeal is taken.

The question here is whether there is any authority in the Tax Commission under the provisions of sec. 71.25, Stats., to require a consolidated return of the income of a parent and all subsidiaries, and then to compute the tax apportionable to Wisconsin in accordance with the factors set up in sec. 71.02 *428 (3) (d). Appellant asserts that sec. 71.25 furnishes no authority for disregarding the corporate entity, and apportioning the tax on the basis of a section of the statute which in terms applies only to single taxpayers doing business within and without the state. It is claimed that this proposition was established by the case of Curtis Companies, Inc., v. Tax Comm. 214 Wis. 85, 251 N. W. 497. Appellant asserts that the Tax Commission is limited under sec. 71.25 to ascertaining what appellant’s profits would have been except for the contract of 1921 between the parent and appellant, which it concedes had the effect of diverting income from Wisconsin, and that the employment of the ratios used by the commission to determine appellant’s income tax does not disclose these profits.

The state contends that since the contract of 1921 was con-cededly unfair in that it tended arbitrarily to limit the profits of appellant and to divert income from the state of Wisconsin, the original returns based upon it for years 1929 to 1933 were properly disregarded under sub. (1) of sec. 71.25, Stats., and a consolidated return required under the provisions of sub. (2) of sec. 71.25; that while sec. 71.02 (3) (d) only applies to- single taxpayers, and the commission cannot rely upon it as an express authority to use the ratios there set up in cases under sec. 71.25, nevertheless, the application of these ratios in the present situation accurately and fairly determines the amount of appellant’s income, especially in view of the fact that appellant is the only one of the interrelated companies owning property or doing business in Wisconsin.

Sec. 71.25, Stats., reads:

“ (1) When any corporation liable to taxation under this act conducts its business in such a manner as either directly or indirectly to benefit the members or stockholders thereof or any person interested in such business, by selling its products or the goods or commodities in which it deals at less than the fair price which might be obtained therefor, or where a corpo *429

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 N.W. 574, 237 Wis. 423, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burroughs-adding-machine-co-v-tax-commission-wis-1941.