City of Philadelphia v. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.

55 Pa. D. & C. 343, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedSeptember 6, 1945
Docketno. 1201
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Pa. D. & C. 343 (City of Philadelphia v. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Philadelphia v. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co., 55 Pa. D. & C. 343, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Gordon, Jr., P. J.,

This bill in equity is brought by the City of Philadelphia for a mandatory injunction to compel defendant, the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, to comply with the provisions of the so-called Wage Tax Ordinance of December 13, 1939 (Ordinances of 1939, page 656), and its [345]*345amendments, which provides for the collection of the tax at the source (section 4, page 660) by requiring employers to deduct the tax from the taxable wages of their employes, and to pay it over to the city as it becomes due. The bill also prays, in the alternative, that defendant be directed to furnish to plaintiff, by way of discovery, information with respect to the names, addresses, wages, etc., of certain of their taxable employes, so as to enable the city to bring proceedings for the collection of the tax directly against those taxables who have not themselves heretofore returned and paid the tax as required by the ordinance. The case was tried, for convenience, together with two others which involve the same fundamental questions (City v. Baldwin Locomotive Works, C. P. No. 2, December term, 1944, no. 1103, and City v. Scott Paper Co., C. P. No. 2, December term, 1944, no. 1282) and in rendering our decision in the latter cases, we will merely note such factual differences as may exist between them and the instant case, and incorporate by reference in them our present discussion of the questions common to all the cases.

The controlling facts are few, and are not in serious dispute between the parties. The Wage Tax Ordinance of 1939, supra, imposes a tax of 1% percent (now one percent) upon the wages or salaries, wherever earned, of residents of the city, and also upon all salaries or wages earned within the city limits regardless of the place of residence of the person whose wage is taxed. The validity of the tax imposed by this ordinance is not challenged in the present proceedings, since that question has already been considered, and the power of the city to impose the tax sustained, by our Supreme Court in Dole v. Philadelphia et al., 337 Pa. 375, and Butcher v. Philadelphia et al., 333 Pa. 497. Section 4 of the same ordinance provides for the collection of the tax at the source; and it is the failure and refusal of defendant company, which employs at its various plants, lo[346]*346cated both in and outside the city, a large number of persons subject to the tax, to deduct and pay the tax over to the city in the case of residents employed by it beyond the city limits which has given rise to this litigation. The principal questions presented for our consideration are first, whether those who employ outside of the city persons liable for the tax are required by section 4 of the ordinance to act as tax collectors of it at the source, and second, whether, if the section does require such taxes to be so collected by the employer, defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation, whose “home” or “main office” is in Pittsburgh, is, because of the business it does and the organization it maintains in Philadelphia, to be considered as present and subject to the jurisdiction of council and amenable to the ordinance as a piece of local municipal legislation. From the pleadings, testimony and stipulations of counsel we make the following findings of fact in the case:

Findings of fact

1. Plaintiff is a municipal corporation of the first class of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

2. Defendant, Westinghouse Electric Corporation, is a Pennsylvania corporation.

3. From January 1, 1940, to the present time defendant, in the course of its business, has occupied an entire building at Thirtieth and Walnut Streets in the City of Philadelphia, where it maintains a district sales office, and performs repair work to small apparatus brought in for repairs, and also maintains a warehouse, where it keeps many of its trucks used in connection with its operations at Thirtieth and Walnut Streets aforesaid. In addition, defendant occupies an entire building at Forty-ninth Street and Gray’s Ferry Road in the City of Philadelphia, where, for more than four years, it has manufactured switchboards. The defendant also owns, and for more than 12 years has operated, a subsidiary known as “Westinghouse Electric [347]*347Supply Company” at Tenth and Race Streets in the City of Philadelphia, where it maintains a warehouse for the supply organization, supplying small apparatus to its Middle Atlantic sales districts, which comprise the States of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland. Defendant also maintains bank accounts in the City of Philadelphia.

4. In its operation of the aforementioned places of business in the City of Philadelphia defendant employs approximately 1,400 persons. With respect to said employes defendant has, since the passage of the City Wage Tax Ordinance of December 13, 1939, and in obedience thereto, regularly deducted the city wage tax from the wages or compensation paid to said employes and has returned and paid the same over to the receiver of taxes of said city, as required by the said ordinance and the rules and regulations promulgated by the receiver under authority thereof.

5. Defendant also operates a plant in Lester, Delaware County, Pa., where it employs approximately six thousand persons who are residents of the City of Philadelphia, and whose wages, earned at the said plant in Lester, are subject to the city wage tax ordinance aforesaid. No payroll records of employes of defendant who work at its plant at Lester, Delaware County, Pa., are kept within the County of Philadelphia, and all such employes are paid in cash at Lester.

6. The Philadelphia Wage Tax Ordinance of December 13, 1939 (Ordinances of 1939, page 660), and its amendments, provides in section 4 thereof as follows:

“Sect. 4. Collection at Source. Each employer within the City of Philadelphia who employs one or more persons on a salary, wage, commission or other compensation basis shall deduct, monthly or more often than monthly, at the time of the payment thereof, the tax of one and one-half per centum of salaries, wages, commissions or other compensation due by the said em[348]*348ployer to the said employee and shall, on or before the fifteenth day of the month next following the said deduction make a return and pay to the Receiver of Taxes the amount of tax so deducted. Said return shall be on a form or forms furnished by or obtainable from the said Receiver of Taxes and shall set forth the names and residence of each employee of said employer during all or any part of the preceding month, the amounts of salaries, wages, commissions or other compensation earned during such preceding month by each of such employees, together with such other pertinent information as the Receiver of Taxes may require: Provided, however, That the failure or omission by any employer, either residing within or outside of the City, to make such return and/or pay such tax, shall not relieve the employee from the payment of such tax and the compliance with such regulations, with respect to making returns and payment thereof, as may be fixed in this ordinance or established by the Receiver of Taxes.”

7. Section 6(A) of the same ordinance (page 661) empowers the receiver of taxes to promulgate and enforce rules and regulations for the enforcement of said ordinance in the following language:

“Sect. 6. Enforcement; Rules and Regulations; Inquisitorial Powers of the Receiver of Taxes.
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. D. & C. 343, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-philadelphia-v-westinghouse-electric-manufacturing-co-pactcomplphilad-1945.