Comet Co. v. Department of Taxation

9 N.W.2d 620, 243 Wis. 117, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 82
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 9 N.W.2d 620 (Comet Co. v. Department of Taxation) 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
Comet Co. v. Department of Taxation, 9 N.W.2d 620, 243 Wis. 117, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 82 (Wis. 1943).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

For the purpose of passing upon the appeal of plaintiff, Comet Company (hereinafter called “Comet”), from the judgment confirming the order of the Wisconsin board of'tax appeals, which affirmed an assessment of $25,735.51 as privilege dividend taxes on dividends declared and paid by Comet in 1935, 1936, and 1937, it suffices to note the following matters. Comet is a Wisconsin corporation. Its assets consisted almost entirely of stock in Premier Pabst Corporation of Delaware (hereinafter called “Premier”) ; and Comet’s principal business and income were the receipt of dividends on that stock and redistribution of this income as dividends to its own stockholders. The portions of Premier’s income attributed to Wisconsin in the years 1933 to 1937 varied from about thirty-six per cent in 1935 to forty-four per cent in 1933. As these portions of income were less than fifty per cent of Premier’s total income, Comet had to pay, in the years 1935 to 1937, $109,320.55 as Wisconsin income and surtax taxes on the income which it received as dividends from Premier, without the allowance of any deduction therefrom under sec. 71.03, Stats., because under *119 sub. (5) thereof the allowance of the deduction of income, which consists of dividends paid by a corporation if its principal business is attributable to Wisconsin, can be considered so attributable only “if fifty per cent or more of the entire net income or loss . . . after adjustment for tax purposes (for the year preceding the payment of such dividends) was used in computing the average taxable income provided by chapter 71.” In the years 1933 to 1936 the portions of the dividends paid by Premier, which were attributable to income derived by it from property located and business transacted in Wisconsin, were: 45.4829 per cent in 1933, 35.8153 per cent in 1934, 34.5384 per cent in 1935, and 36.9175 per cent in 1936. Because of the portions of its income so derived by Premier in Wisconsin and the provision in sub. (4) of sec. 3 of ch. 552, Laws of 1935, that,—

“In the case of corporations doing business within and without the state of Wisconsin” the privilege dividend tax “shall apply only to dividends declared and paid out of income derived from business transacted and property located within the state of Wisconsin.”

Premier in paying dividends to Comet deducted therefrom as such privilege dividend taxes $1,136.93 in 1935, $8,286.38 in 1936, and $5,621.16 in 1937. But Comet, upon using the income received as dividends from Premier (together with $16,801.68 of income derived from other sources), in declaring and paying dividends to its stockholders in 1935, 1936, and 1937, did not withhold or deduct from the dividends which Comet paid any privilege dividend tax, under ch. 552, Laws of 1935 (now sec. 71.60, Stats. 1941).

The Wisconsin Department of Taxation contends that because to the extent that parts of the dividends received by Comet from Premier were not attributable to income derived from property located or business transacted by the latter in Wisconsin, no privilege dividend tax was deducted on such *120 parts by Premier from the dividends received by Comet, — ■ the parts of such dividends from which no such deduction has been made are not within the exemption provided in sub. (6) of sec. 3 of ch. 552, Laws of 1935, which-reads, — -

“The provisions of this section shall not apply tO' dividends declared and paid by a Wisconsin corporation out of its income which it has reported for taxation under the provisions of chapter 71, to the extent that the business of such corporation consists in the receipts of dividends from which a privilege dividend tax has been deducted and withheld and the distribution thereof to its stockholders.”

In accordance with that contention the privilege taxes were assessed against Comet in the sum of $25,315.57. This assessment is in dispute herein. (Assessments of $419.94 on dividends paid out of the income of $16,801.68 derived from other sources are not in dispute.)

On the other hand, Comet contends that because Premier, in paying dividends to Comet, had deducted the privilege dividend tax on that part of the dividend attributable to income derived by Premier from property located or business transacted in Wisconsin, no part of the dividends declared and paid by Comet out of income which it received as dividends from Premier is subject to the privilege dividend tax, even though parts of the dividends so received from Premier were attributable to- income derived by the latter from property located or business transacted elsewhere than in Wisconsin.

Comet’s contention might have been sustainable if the legislature had permitted sub. (6) to continue as it was originally enacted in ch. 505, Laws of 1935, when it provided that the provisions imposing the privilege dividend tax—

“shall not apply to dividends declared and paid by a Wisconsin corporation out of its income which it has reported for taxation under the provisions of chapter 71, if the business of *121 such corporation consists in the receipt of dividends and the distribution thereof to its stockholders.”

This provision in sub. (6) was superseded, however, by an amendment by ch. 552, Laws of 1935, enacted only twelve days later, which changed that exemption by providing that the privilege dividend tax law—

“shall not apply to dividends declared and paid by a Wisconsin corporation out of its income which it has reported for taxation under the provisions of chapter 71, to, the extent that the business of such corporation consists in the receipts of dividends from which a privilege dividend tax has been deducted and withheld and the distribution thereof to its stockholders.”

Although, under the original clause (in sub. (6) of ch. 505, Laws of 1935) which read, “if the business of such corporation consists in the receipt of dividends and the distribution thereof to its stockholders,” all dividends declared by Comet out of income received by it as dividends from Premier might have been exempt from the privilege dividend tax law, that exemption was eliminated by the amendment of sub. (6) by ch. 552, Laws of 1935, which substituted in lieu of the original clause the new provision under which the exemption of dividends declared by a Wisconsin corporation from the tax was limited “to the extent that the business of such corporation consists in the receipts of dividends from which a privilege dividend tax has been deducted and withheld.” These words are plain, clear,-and unambiguous, and have a common and well-understood meaning and usage. There is no room or occasion for any doubt or uncertainty as to the extent or scope of the intended exemption unless it is endeavored to give the provision the forced, highly technical application for which the appellant contends. As the learned circuit judge said,—

*122

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.W.2d 620, 243 Wis. 117, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comet-co-v-department-of-taxation-wis-1943.