Cities Service Gas Co. v. McDonald

466 P.2d 277, 204 Kan. 705, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 404
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 7, 1970
Docket45,554
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 466 P.2d 277 (Cities Service Gas Co. v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cities Service Gas Co. v. McDonald, 466 P.2d 277, 204 Kan. 705, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 404 (kan 1970).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

O’Connor, J.:

The director of revenue has appealed from a judgment of the district court of Sedgwick county abating and setting aside an order of the Board of Tax Appeals sustaining an assessment against Cities Service Gas Company (hereinafter referred to as Gas Company) for additional corporate state income tax for the year 1958 in the amount of $128,462.67, plus interest. The additional assessment came about because of the director’s disallowance *706 of a federal income tax deduction of $6,367,534 claimed on Gas Company’s 1958 Kansas return.

The over-all question is whether Gas Company, in computing its net income for the year in question, was entitled to take a deduction for federal income tax paid, accrued or incurred, based on its computation of what the company owed the federal government on a separate-return basis when, in fact, it joined with other wholly owned subsidiaries of the parent company, Cities Service Company, in the filing of a consolidated federal income tax return showing no tax due.

Under applicable provisions of the internal revenue code, all corporations whose voting stock is owned 80% or more by a parent company must join in the filing of a consolidated federal income tax return. When a consolidated return is filed, a separate return must be prepared for each company. The separate returns are transmitted to the Internal Revenue Service, together with the consolidated return in which the losses of any company, or companies, in the consolidation are offset against the taxable income of other companies in the group. In addition, losses can be carried back for three years or carried forward for five years, and can be offset against taxable income for those years.

A résumé of the factual background to this controversy will focus the decisive issue before us.

Gas Company is engaged in the unitary gas pipeline business of purchasing, transporting and selling natural gas. It purchases gas in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, and transmits it by means of a continuous, interconnected network of pipelines for marketing in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. Since its organization in 1922, and until August 1, 1963, the company was directly or indirectly a wholly owned subsidiary of Cities Service Company. In addition, the parent company was also the 100% owner of 34 other subsidiary corporations which are engaged in the unitary petroleum business.

For the year 1958 Gas Company prepared its individual corporate federal income tax return, reflecting net income of $12,256,412 from its five-state unitary gas pipeline business and federal income tax due thereon of $6,367,534. This return was forwarded by Gas Company to die parent, Cities Service Company, along with Gas Company’s four separate checks totaling $6,367,534, payable to the parent company. Each check was accompanied by a voucher *707 stating, in essence, that the check was in payment of an installment of Gas Company’s federal income tax for the calendar year 1958.

In similar fashion the 34 other subsidiaries engaged in the unitary petroleum business also prepared and delivered to the parent company their 1958 federal income tax returns on a separate-return basis. Those subsidiaries showing a profit on their individual returns paid the parent company a total of $10,415,212 for federal income taxes, as reflected in their separate returns, thus making a grand total of $16,782,746 received by the parent from all its profit subsidiaries, including Gas Company. These payments were exactly equal to the amount the subsidiaries would have paid to the federal government had their federal income tax returns been filed independent of the consolidated return.

After receiving the individual federal income tax returns from each of its subsidiaries, the Cities Service Company prepared a consolidated federal retrun to which was attached the separate returns of the subsidiary corporations. Gas Company’s net income of $12,-256,412 was reported to the federal government and was included in the consolidated return.

Exclusive of the profit shown by Gas Company from its unitary gas pipeline business, the unitary petroleum business conducted by Cities Service Company through its 34 subsidiary corporations sustained a net loss for the year 1958 in the amount of $19,401,983. Under provisions of the internal revenue code, the unitary petroleum business was entitled to carry back the net loss to the year 1955 and offset it against net taxable income for that year of $23,-286,129 on which it had paid the federal government $12,533,020 in taxes. By reason of the net loss sustained in 1958, the unitary petroluem business would have been entitled to a refund of $10,-224,666 on the tax it had paid in 1955. But, because of the inclusion of Gas Company’s 1958 taxable income in the 1958 consolidated return, the refund received by the unitary petroleum business from the federal government was reduced by $6,367,534 (the exact amount of tax payable upon Gas Company’s taxable income), to $3,857,132.

Under established accounting procedures used by Cities Service Company and its subsidiaries, the $3,857,132 refund received by the parent company in 1958 from the federal government, plus the $16,782,746 received by the parent company in 1958 from its *708 profit subsidiaries (including Gas Company), was paid by the parent company to those subsidiaries reporting losses in 1958. Thus, the sum, totaling $20,639,878, was not retained by the parent company but was paid to the loss subsidiaries on the theory their losses had been utilized on the consolidated return and had thereby reduced the tax that would otherwise have been due. Gas Company, having had taxable income for the year in question, received no portion of the $20,639,878 distributed by Cities Service Company to its loss subsidiaries.

There was undisputed testimony in district court by the retired senior vice president of Cities Service Company that the method of accounting employed by the companies in allocating federal income tax liability on a consolidated-return basis had been recognized and approved by the Internal Revenue Service for many years. (See § 1552 Int. Rev. Code of 1954, 26 U. S. C. A. § 1552.) This particular method contemplates compensating payments to loss subsidiaries for the benefits derived from the use of their operating losses in the consolidated return and is an accepted accounting procedure.

Gas Company has been filing Kansas income tax returns each year since the Kansas Income Tax Act was enacted in 1933. On its Kansas return for 1958 Gas Company reported net income from its five-state operation as $12,256,412 (the same as shown on the federal return), and claimed as a deduction for federal income tax paid the amount of $6,367,534. Under the allocation formula as provided in G. S. 1949, 79-3218, Gas Company allocated 57.-55187% of its five-state net income to the State of Kansas. As reflected by the Kansas return, Gas Company owed tax to the State of Kansas of $121,714.85, which it paid.

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Bluebook (online)
466 P.2d 277, 204 Kan. 705, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cities-service-gas-co-v-mcdonald-kan-1970.