Continental Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Oklahoma Tax Commission

601 P.2d 743
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 25, 1979
Docket51970
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 601 P.2d 743 (Continental Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Oklahoma Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, 601 P.2d 743 (Okla. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

A taxpayer, Continental Federal Savings and Loan Association, appeals from an order of the Oklahoma Tax Commission denying a refund of income taxes paid in 1972 and 1973. Taxpayer claims that its right to the refund resulted from its carryback of a 1975 federal net operating loss. The question presented for review involves an interpretative application of the 1971 state revenue code.

I

The facts are not in dispute. Continental is an Oklahoma corporation deriving all of its income from within this state. In its 1972 and 1973 state and federal income tax returns Continental deducted, as interest expense, the money it distributed to its depositors for the use of their funds. In 1974 the Oklahoma Supreme Court decided, in Chickasha Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, Okl., 528 P.2d 1384 (1974), that such payments to depositors were not interest payments but dividends and consequently, unlike under the federal income tax law, were not deductible under Oklahoma income tax law. As a result, Continental, in March 1975, filed amended Oklahoma returns for 1972 and 1973 showing a substantial increase in tax liability. Then, in 1976, Continental reported for 1975 a taxable income in Oklahoma of $11,169,170 — due to its inability to deduct $14,641,393 paid to depositors as “dividends” — based on a federally reported net operating loss of $2,331,067.

Through amended federal returns Continental carried the loss back to more profitable years — 1972 and 1973. Then having, by the carryback, established lower federal taxable income figures for those years, taxpayer amended its state returns for the same years to reflect a lower Oklahoma taxable income based on the newly adjusted federal figures. In both federal and state amended returns Continental sought refunds.

The Internal Revenue Service allowed the requested refunds. The Oklahoma Tax Commission, however, did not on the *745 ground that Continental, after reducing its 1975 Oklahoma taxable income to the extent of the full $2 million federal loss, was attempting, in effect, to carry back the same federal loss and deduct it a second time against its 1972 and 1973 state income. According to the commission there could be no such loss carry back under 68 O.S.1971, § 2358(A)(3)(d) unless taxpayer sustained an “Oklahoma net operating loss” in the two prior years. Whether or not the commission is correct, then, is the nuclear issue dividing the parties.

II

We hold the commission misinterpreted the meaning and thrust of § 2358(A)(3)(d) 1 and as a result misapplied the statute when it concluded the provision pertained to taxpayers, like Continental, whose net income or loss is derived from business activity carried on solely within this state. When the poorly written and ambiguous provisions of § 2358(A)(3)(d) are read in their entirety, it becomes obvious that subparagraph (A)(3) is an “allocation” statute aimed at establishing a fair formula for allocating to this state the portion attributable to Oklahoma-related activity of the total net income or loss realized by a taxpayer carrying on a multistate business. 2 The section does not, therefore, relate to non-allocable situations and consequently cannot affect the Oklahoma net operating income or loss of a taxpayer, such as Continental, who engages only in intrastate business. Obviously, since all of Continental’s federal net operating loss was incurred in Oklahoma there exists nothing allocable as between this and some other distributive jurisdiction.

Ill

It remains to be determined, however, whether or not taxpayer may have Oklahoma taxable income and still have what amounts to a net operating loss carry back deduction on the two previous annual returns in question. The commission argues it may not because of two requirements set forth in Getty Oil Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, Okl., 563 P.2d 627 (1977) which must be met before a taxpayer can sustain a state net operating loss deduction; namely, a taxpayer must (1) suffer an Oklahoma net operating loss as well as a federal one and (2) show the deduction was allowed by the federal government. The commission concludes that because Continental did not *746 establish an “Oklahoma net operating loss” it cannot take the deduction.

Taxpayer rips into the commission’s theory by charging that the state agency conjured up the concept of an “Oklahoma net operating loss” as an expedient means of plugging a statutory loophole. In response the commission concedes it had to do a little inventing but justifies the contrivance as a means of avoiding the absurd result of an Oklahoma taxpayer being able to have an Oklahoma net profit and operating loss at the same time.

The problem has become complex, we think, because the state has attempted to becloud the primary issue with an untenable loophole plugging theory. As we analyze the relevant tax statutes of this state in force in 1975, they neither refer to nor require an “Oklahoma net operating loss” as a prerequisite to amending earlier returns to bring them in line with adjusted federal taxable income. And, although the result seems a bit absurd, the letter of the 1971 state tax laws allows Continental to do just what it did.

First of all, “taxable income” and “adjusted gross income” in Oklahoma are as defined in the federal code, and “Oklahoma taxable income” means taxable income reported to the federal government. Similarly, “Oklahoma adjusted gross income” means adjusted gross income reported to federal government as “adjusted further as hereinafter provided.” 68 O.S.1971 § 2353 (12)(13).

The “hereinafter provided” adjustments referred to are set out in 68 O.S.1971 § 2358 and include a deduction for tax-exempt U.S. obligation interest income (§ 2358(A) (2)), the allocation adjustment (§ 2358(A)(3) (d)) — which we determined earlier to be irrelevant to the issue involved here — and another provision of the statute that is relevant, namely § 2358(B)(4), which reads:

“In the case of savings and loan associations located in Oklahoma, there shall be added to taxable income the amount of any dividend or distribution of earnings to shareholders, members or certificate holders of such associations deducted in arriving at taxable income for such taxable year.”

When the plain and unambiguous terms of §§ 2353(12) and (13), 2358(A)(2) and 2358(B)(4) are applied to the facts here, there can be no doubt that Continental’s Oklahoma taxable income for 1975 (as adjusted in 1976) was $11,169,170. That figure is achieved by starting with what was reported to the federal government (a loss of $2,331,067) as required by § 2353(12) & (13), and adding dividends paid to depositors ($14,641,393) as required by § 2358(B)(4) and Chickasha, and then deducting tax-exempt interest received by Continental from U.S. obligations as authorized by § 2358(A)(2).

Had taxpayer stopped at this point there might have been no problem. But it did not. Through amended returns it carried back its 1975 federal loss so as to offset income reported to the I.R.S. in 1972 and 1973.

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Bluebook (online)
601 P.2d 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-federal-savings-loan-assn-v-oklahoma-tax-commission-oklacivapp-1979.