Commonwealth v. AMERICAN T. & T. CO.

115 A.2d 373, 382 Pa. 509, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 115 A.2d 373 (Commonwealth v. AMERICAN T. & T. CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. AMERICAN T. & T. CO., 115 A.2d 373, 382 Pa. 509, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 429 (Pa. 1955).

Opinion

382 Pa. 509 (1955)

Commonwealth, Appellant,
v.
American Telephone and Telegraph Company.

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued May 23, 1955.
June 27, 1955.

*510 Before STERN, C.J., STEARNE, JONES, BELL, CHIDSEY, MUSMANNO and ARNOLD, JJ.

George W. Keitel, Deputy Attorney General, with him Ralph S. Snyder, Deputy Attorney General and Herbert B. Cohen, Attorney General, for appellant.

Roy J. Keefer, with him Leon D. Metzger and William H. Wood, for appellee.

OPINION BY MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HORACE STERN, June 27, 1955:

The question on this appeal concerns the proper application for the year 1950 of the corporate net income tax of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.

The activities of the Company are conducted by two separate and unrelated units, one of which, the General Department, operates wholly outside of Pennsylvania, the other, the Long Lines Department, both within and without Pennsylvania. Through its Long Lines Department it operates a comprehensive national system of *511 long distance telephone lines for interstate communication; the revenues thus derived arise partly from the portion of the system located in Pennsylvania; the lines passing through Pennsylvania constitute its only property in this Commonwealth. The Long Lines Department has its own administrative and operating forces, its own accounts and its own records. All the activities in connection with the General Department are those of a holding company and are carried on from the Company's office in New York. The principal items of gross income derived from the activities of the General Department are dividends, interest, royalties and payments under license contract arrangements. The Company holds stocks of associated corporations which own and operate lines furnishing telephone services in their respective territories and it makes advances to those corporations as their needs require.

The Corporate Net Income Tax Act of May 16, 1935, P.L. 208, as amended up to the year 1950, defined "net income" as being the net income of the corporation for the calendar year or fiscal year as returned to and ascertained by the Federal Government, with an allowance, however, of deductions from net income on account of dividends received from any other corporation. Prior to 1950 the American Telephone and Telegraph Company reported its corporate net income tax on the basis of all its activities, those of its Long Lines Department and General Department alike, and settlements were made accordingly. In 1950 it followed the same practice and reported its total net income as $310,031,478.01. From this it deducted the dividends it received from other corporations amounting to $292,517,811.39, and also interest on certain obligations of the United States (Commonwealth v. Curtis Publishing Co., 363 Pa. 299, 69 A. 2d 410) of $3,772,114.60, *512 leaving a net income for allocation of $13,741,552.02. It then determined the allocating percentage according to the three fractions prescribed in the statute: (1) the value of the corporation's tangible property in Pennsylvania over the value of its tangible property wherever situated; (2) its expenditures for wages, salaries and commissions to employes assignable to Pennsylvania over its total expenditures for wages, salaries and commissions to employes; and (3) the amount of its gross receipts from business assignable to Pennsylvania over the amount of its gross receipts from all its business. For 1950 these fractions were as follows:

   Average value of tangible property in Pa. $  9,303,111
1. _______________________________________   ____________ = .016063
   Average value of all tangible property     579,159,592
   Wages, salaries, etc., assignable to Pa.     8,187,353
2. _______________________________________   ____________ = .086140
   Total wages, salaries, etc.                 95,046,603
   Gross receipts assignable to Pa.            17,687,158
3. ________________________________          ____________ = .032076
   Gross receipts from all business           551,408,957
                                                            _______
                                                       3)   .134279
                                                            _______
                                                            .044759

When this allocating percentage of .044759 was applied to the net income for allocation it established the net income allocated to Pennsylvania as $615,058.13, on which the tax amounted to $24,602.33.

The Commonwealth admitted that all the figures employed in this calculation were correct, but it objected to the use of the unitary basis of the Company's activities on which it was made, that is, to the use of the total net income of the Company and the deduction therefrom of the dividends and United States obligations, and to the use in the denominators of the allocation fractions of the tangible property, wages *513 and gross receipts of the Company as a whole. The Department of Revenue and the Department of the Auditor General, and, on appeal, the Board of Finance and Revenue, adopted the contention of the Commonwealth and assessed a tax against the Company on a multiform basis of its activities, employing a calculation based on the operations only of its Long Lines Department and excluding those of its General Department. The tax thus imposed amounted to $237,756.83, which figure was obtained as follows: The net income of the Long Lines Department was $58,634,159.64. The statutory allocation fractions, using as the denominators only the tangible property, wages and gross receipts from the Company's operations in its Long Lines Department, were:

                                  104,485,199[1]
Tangible property fraction        ___________      = .116489
                                  896,954,568[1]
                                    8,187,353
Wages and salaries fraction       ___________      = .099094
                                   82,621,805
                                   17,687,158
Gross Receipts fraction           ___________      = .088536
                                  199,772,668
                                                    ________
                                             3)      .304119
                                                    ________
                                                     .101373

Applying this allocating percentage of .101373 to the net income of the Long Lines Department the net income allocated to Pennsylvania was found to be $5,943,920.67 and the tax thereon $237,756.83. The Company appealed from this assessment to the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, which sustained *514 its contention and fixed the tax at $24,602.33. The Commonwealth now appeals from that decision.

The controversy hinges on the sole question whether the corporate net income tax should be applied against the Company on a unitary or on a multiform basis, by the latter being meant the recognition of its two distinct activities, the one its operations in its Long Lines Department, and the other its operations as a holding company unrelated to any activities in Pennsylvania. The Corporate Net Income Tax Act itself makes no reference to, or provision for, any division of a corporation into different departmental units.

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115 A.2d 373, 382 Pa. 509, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-american-t-t-co-pa-1955.