Burton E. Green Investment Co. v. McColgan

140 P.2d 451, 60 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 510
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 1943
DocketCiv. 14073
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 140 P.2d 451 (Burton E. Green Investment Co. v. McColgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton E. Green Investment Co. v. McColgan, 140 P.2d 451, 60 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 510 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

The question for decision is whether a dividend paid by a California corporation, producing its oil only in this state, which reported all of its revenues as gross income for franchise tax purposes and which was allowed a deduction for percentage depletion for franchise tax purposes in excess of its depletion computed on the basis of cost, is deductible by the recipient corporation.

This action involved the obligation of the plaintiff under the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act, (Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 8488) hereinafter referred to as “the Act.” Plaintiff, as a California corporation, duly filed its franchise tax return for the year 1938. As required the return was based upon plaintiff’s income for 1937, the gross thereof being reported at $598,673.56. Of this amount plaintiff listed $465,000 as a dividend paid to it in 1937 by Belridge Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as Belridge. Plaintiff deducted this Belridge dividend from its return to the Franchise Tax Commissioner in 1938, because it was the dividend of a domestic corporation, earned, declared, and paid in California (sec. 4, subd. (3)). The remainder of its 1937 income was excluded as not proper items to be reported for assessment for franchise tax purposes. They are not involved in this discussion. Since none of its income was reported as the basis for computing its franchise tax, plaintiff paid a tax of $25, on its 1938 return.

In due season defendant served notices on plaintiff of his intention to assess additional taxes on its franchise for 1938. The aggregate of the two additional sums to be assessed was *227 $6,373.28 and the interest charged on the two items was $934.38 *

Plaintiff protested the proposed assessments but paid them with interest under protest in October, 1940, after which this action followed to recover the $7,307.66 so assessed, charged, and collected by defendant. Inasmuch as plaintiff’s exclusion from its 1938 return of the Belridge dividend brought on the additional assessments by defendant, in order fairly to appraise the factors of the controversy, we now expose to view the franchise tax return filed by Belridge in 1938 which also reported its income of 1937 as the basis for computing its franchise tax for 1938.

Belridge’s gross income for 1937 was reported as $7,190,-232.47 (all of which was from oil except $71,677.40) with deductions of $4,207,961.85 leaving a net income for franchise tax purposes of $2,982,270.62. Included among its deductions for 1937 was the sum of $1,760,242.27 for depletion claimed under section 8, subdivision (g) of the Act which authorizes a deduction for depletion at the rate of 27% per cent of the gross income from oil and gas wells. Such percentage of depletion was allowed Belridge by defendant in computing its franchise tax for 1938. The depletion sustained by Belridge for the year computed on the basis of cost was only $74,901.03 which was $1,685,341.24 less than 27% per cent of the gross income of Belridge for 1937. The Belridge return for 1938 for franchise tax purposes shows that this corporation deducted for depletion in 1937 the sum of $1,760,242.27, or 27% per cent of its gross income for that year. Also it discloses that the franchise tax assessed to Belridge for the same year computed on the basis of a deduction of 27% per cent of its gross income for depletion was paid *228 by, Belridge. This deduction by Belridge was apparently not an error but was computed as correct, for none of the numerous disbursements for federal income tax, federal excess profits tax, and franchise tax charges was taken as a deduction for franchise tax purposes. It declared and paid dividends that year in the amount of $2,400,000 out of which came the $465,000 dividend paid plaintiff.

It was stipulated that in computing the additional amount of franchise tax to be paid by plaintiff for 1938, defendant concluded that only 62.968 per cent of the Belridge dividend paid during 1937 had been included in the measure of the tax imposed by the Act on Belridge. In deriving this percentage the commissioner used two factors. Factor A resulted from deducting the Belridge franchise tax of 1937, to wit: $116,499.55 from its net income of the same year, namely, $2,982,270.62, leaving $2,865,771.07. Factor B resulted from adding to such net income for 1937 the portion of deduction for depletion ($1,685,341.24) allowable to Belridge for franchise tax purposes for 1937 by which the depletion allowed Belridge exceeds the depletion sustained computed on the cost basis. From the sum resulting from such addition, take the franchise tax expense of 1937, to wit: $116,499.55 leaving as factor B $4,551,112.31. By dividing factor A by factor B the commissioner obtained the percentage of dividends paid by Belridge, in 1937 which have been included in the measure of the tax imposed by the Act on Belridge. Such percentage was 62.968 which multiplied by $465,000 determined the portion of the Belridge dividend of 1937 included in the measure of the tax was $292,801.20. This product was determined by the commissioner to be deductible under section 8 (h). No attempt is made in the stipulation of facts to demonstrate the correctness of the calculation or of the percentage or of the formula.

Since plaintiff contends that the entire dividend was deductible for franchise tax purposes as having been declared by Belridge from income “included in the measure of the tax” imposed by the Act on Belridge it appears that the determination of plaintiff’s liability for the additional taxes assessed and collected by defendant must be determined by a construction of the language of the Act..

Section 4a provides for a franchise tax to be fixed at a percentage of the total net income for the next preceding *229 calendar year “according to or measured by such net income. ’ ’

Section 4 (3) requires that every corporation doing business within this state and not expressly exempted from taxation by the constitution shall annually pay, for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchise, “a tax according to or measured by its net income” to be computed at the rate of four per centum “upon the basis of its net income” for the next preceding year.

By section 7 “net income” is defined to be the gross income less deductions allowed. By section 8 the allowable deductions are defined. Among the items listed as deductible is “depletion” which is treated in subdivision (g) as follows:

“Depletion. (1) In the case of mines, oil and gas wells, other natural deposits and timber, a reasonable allowance for depletion and for depreciation of improvements according to the peculiar conditions in each instance, such reasonable allowance in all eases to be made under the rules and regulations to be prescribed by the commissioner.”

Computation of depletion. “In the case of leases the deduction shall be equitably apportioned between the lessor and the lessee.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P.2d 451, 60 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-e-green-investment-co-v-mccolgan-calctapp-1943.