Commonwealth v. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society

6 A.2d 840, 335 Pa. 406, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 1939
DocketAppeal, 41
StatusPublished

This text of 6 A.2d 840 (Commonwealth v. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society) 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. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society, 6 A.2d 840, 335 Pa. 406, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 447 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

The matter before us on this appeal by The Philadelphia Saving Fund Society is whether it may deduct from gross income certain losses which it sustained, in order to arrive at the “net earnings or income” made liable to a state tax of three per cent, under Section 27 of the Act of June 1, 1889, P. L. 420, as amended by the Act of April 25, 1929, P. L. 668, 72 PS Sec. 2241. The court below decided the losses were not deductible, and entered judgment against appellant for $86,296.31,

*408 The section of the act reads as follows: “From and after the passage of this act every incorporated company or limited partnership whatever, whether the same be incorporated, formed or organized under the laws of this or any other State or Territory, and doing business within this Commonwealth, and liable to taxation therein, which is not subject to the taxes imposed by the twenty-first or twenty-fourth sections of this act, except incorporated banks and savings institutions having capital stock, and foreign insurance companies, shall annually, upon the fifteenth day of March of each year, make report to the Department of Revenue setting forth the entire amount of net earnings or income received by said company or limited partnership from all sources during the preceding year, and such other information as the Department may require; and upon such net earnings or income, the said company, association or limited partnership, as the case may be, shall pay into the State Treasury, through the Department of Revenue, for the use of the Commonwealth, within the time prescribed by law for the payment of State taxes settled by the Department of Revenue, three per centum upon such annual net earnings or income, in addition to any taxes on personal property to which it may be subject under the first section of this act. The penalty for failure to make such report shall be as provided by law: Provided, That this section shall not apply to corporations and limited partnerships chartered or organized for manufacturing purposes.”

The essential facts are these: During the banking crisis in 1931, when “runs” were taking place on the banking institutions in Philadelphia, the four mutual saving fund societies therein, other than the First Penny Savings Bank, were subjected to withdrawals in the month of October amounting to |34,000,000 more than they had received. Prior to that time, the First Penny had been subjected to large withdrawals. It had almost 100,000 depositors, many of whom had accounts in the *409 other savings banks. The four other mutual savings institutions in the city decided,- after investigating the First Penny, that it was in danger of failing. If its doors were closed, there was grave danger that a panic would result among the depositors in the other savings banks, and that the others would suffer great losses from a compulsory sale of securities in order to meet depositors’ demands. It was decided that the four other institutions would take over the First Penny and assume its deposits, irrespective of whether its assets were sufficient in value to accomplish the desired result: .They did not guarantee* anything or operate the First Penny: They took it over, closed it, assumed its liabilities and liquidated it. This purpose was affected by an agreement under which all of the assets of the First Penny were transferred to the Western Saving Fund Society, as liquidating trustee- for the institutions concerned, which agreed to assume all the deposit and other liabilities of the First Penny, the resulting losses, .if any, to be shared in proportion to the total assets of each of the four, the percentages being, for the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society 69.4%, Western Saving Fund Society 15.7%, Beneficial Saving Fund Society 8.6% and Saving Fund Society of Germantown 6.3%. The plan was approved by the Secretary of Banking. The result of the carrying out of the plan was a loss to the four institutions in excess of $3,500,000. Appellant’s share of this was almost $2,500,000. It paid in cash to the Western at the end of 1934 in liquidation of this loss $2,493,536.30.

That which is taxable under the act is the “annual net earnings or income” of appellant. The court below determined that in arriving at annual net earnings or income, the deductions claimed were not allowable, basing its conclusion upon three cases 'decided by us, in which under prior acts “net earnings or. income” had to be determined: Com. v. Ocean Oil Co., 59 Pa. 61; Com. v. Penn Gas Coal Co., 62 Pa. 241; Philadelphia *410 Contributionship for Insurance v. Com., 98 Pa. 48. These cases are not controlling of the present controversy. In the Ocean Oil case, we decided that the depletion of the capital of the oil company by the production of oil could not be charged as an expense of operation, that it was a capital loss, particularly in view of the fact that the company had paid dividends to its stockholders, without taking account of the depletion of its oil reserves as an operating cost. In the Penn Gas Coal case, the rule of the Ocean Oil case was applied by denying the right to deduct capital depletion by coal mined, from gross income, and in the Contributionship case, we refused the right to deduct the premium paid on government bonds when they were purchased, as an allowance against gross income in the year when they were called at par. In that case, it was said (p. 50): “the premiums paid for the bonds should have been deducted when the investment was made, and might properly have been accounted for and taken from the gross receipts.” None of the situations in these cases bears an analogy to what is now before us. The court below took the view, as does the Commonwealth, that the loss was a capital one and not an earning or . income loss. Passing the question whether or not mutual savings banks, which have no capital stock, have assets which can be considered in two aspects, one of them as capital and the other not, we think it obvious that the loss sustained was a loss of earnings and income, just as it would be clear that if a profit had been made, the profit would have been one of earnings or income.

It is obvious that the four institutions did not take over the First Penny as a capital asset. All of the assets were taken over by the four for the purpose of saving themselves from possible disaster. We are unable to see any difference between what was actually done, and the situation which would have existed, if the four institutions, which are mutual concerns with *411 out capital stock, had purchased the assets of the First Penny and sold them at a loss. It is not conceivable that, if they had come out of the transaction with a profit, such gain would not have been treated by the Commonwealth as part of income; the mere fact that a loss was sustained does not alter the situation. No question can arise that the loss was made because it was paid in cash during the year in which the deduction is claimed. Appellant received nothing for the payment which it made. It was entirely out of pocket. Paid exclusively in performance of an agréement of indemnity, it, therefore, cannot be a capital loss.

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6 A.2d 840, 335 Pa. 406, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-philadelphia-saving-fund-society-pa-1939.