Corporation of America v. Johnson

60 P.2d 417, 7 Cal. 2d 295, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 634
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1936
DocketSac. 4910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 417 (Corporation of America v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corporation of America v. Johnson, 60 P.2d 417, 7 Cal. 2d 295, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 634 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This action was instituted by the three plaintiffs named therein to collect from the defendant as treasurer of the state, taxes paid under protest which the plaintiffs claim were illegally collected.

The three plaintiffs are corporations organized under the laws of this state, and during all of the times mentioned herein, the plaintiff Corporation of America was doing business in this state, and during all the times mentioned herein since the first day of November, 1930, the plaintiff Bankameriea Company was doing business in this state, and during all of said times since the twenty-eighth day of July, 1930, the plaintiff Associated American Distributors (Inc.) was doing business in this state. Said last-named plaintiff was organized on the fifth day of May, 1930, under the name of the Intercoast Sales Corporation, but on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1932, it changed its name to the Associated American Distributors (Inc.)

The original claim of the plaintiff Corporation of America was made up of three separate items as follows:

(1) $30,251.02, which said plaintiff contends it was illegally compelled to pay under “Dividends received from foreign corporations, resulting from business done” in this state;
(2) $12,690.55, which it was illegally compelled to pay by reason of the tax commissioner’s refusal to permit it to deduct from its taxable income federal income taxes which it alleges had accrued during the year covered by its tax return; and
(3) $25,425.48, which it alleges it was compelled to pay to defendant by reason of the tax commissioner’s computation of its “Income earned during the year of organization [by *298 its two affiliated corporations] forming basis for tax for succeeding year”.

The claims of the other two plaintiffs are for $726.20 and $190.46, respectively, and are based upon the alleged erroneous computation by the tax commissioner of their “Income earned during the year of organization, forming the basis for tax for succeeding year”. As the basis of these claims is the same as that upon which claim (3) of the Corporation of America is predicated, whatever discussion concerning this latter claim is made in this opinion will be applicable to the claims of these two plaintiffs, and will be decisive of their validity without any specific reference to either of them. The first two claims of the plaintiff are all based upon alleged overpayments of taxes for thé taxable year ending December 31, 1930, the last upon an alleged overpayment for the year 1931.

The trial of this action before the superior court resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff Corporation of America on its claim for $30,251.02 and in favor of the defendant as to all of the other claims of each of the three plaintiffs. The defendant has appealed from the judgment in favor of the plaintiff Corporation of America on its claim for $30,251.02, and the three plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment disallowing their respective claims. The two appeals have been consolidated and are before us upon a single record. Whenever we refer to the plaintiff without designating which of the three plaintiffs is meant, the reference will be considered as made to the Corporation of America.

We will first consider the appeal of the defendant against the judgment in favor of the Corporation of America upon its claim of $30,251.02. The Corporation of America,a California corporation, is the owner of all the capital stock of the Bankitaly Company of America, a Delaware corporation. The Bankitaly Company, during the taxable year 1930, was the owner of capital stock in various corporations transacting business in the state of California, and during that year received the sum of $756,275.40 as income derived from said corporations from business transacted entirely within the state of California. The tax on this income of $756,275.40 would amount to the sum of $30,251.02. The Corporation of America claimed before both the tax com *299 missioner and at the trial of this action in the superior court, and now claims, that' dividends received by it from the Bankitaly Company, which latter company had in turn received said dividends from corporations doing business in California on business transacted in this state were exempt from taxation under the provisions of section 8 (h) of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act of this state. (3 Deering’s Gen. Laws, p. 4767; Stats. 1929, p. 19.) This section so far as is necessary for our present purpose, and as it read prior to its amendment in 1933, is as follows: “In computing ‘net income’ the following deductions shall be allowed: Dividends received during the taxable year from income arising out of business done in this state, but if the income out of which the dividends are declared is derived from business done within and without this state, then so much of the dividends shall be allowed as a deduction as the amount of the income from business done within this state bears to the total business done. The burden shall be on the taxpayer to show that the amount of dividends claimed as a deduction has been received from income arising out of business done in this state.”

The defendant contends that this section of the act applied only to corporations doing business in this state who in turn owned stock on which they received dividends from corporations doing business in this state. He points out that the Corporation of America, while it is a California corporation and does business in this state, owns no stock in the California corporations doing business in this state which earned said dividends in the first instance. The only stock owned by it was stock in the Bankitaly Company, a corporation organized in the state of Delaware, which did no business in this state during the taxable year 1930. While the plaintiff, Corporation of America, did not directly receive any dividends from corporations doing business in this state, it did through its ownership of the stock of the Bankitaly Company at least indirectly receive the dividends paid to the Bankitaly Company on its stock in California computed on business done in this state. The result is the same, in so far as the net income of the plaintiff, Corporation of America, is concerned. The tax on the income so received by the Corporation of America had already been paid by the California corporations earning the same. To require *300 the Corporation of America to again pay this • tax would be double taxation which the act as then in force clearly intended to avoid. The fact that this income was received through one or more intermediary corporations, some of which may have been foreign corporations, did not in any manner change the situation. The whole question was governed by the terms of section 8 (h) which were clear and unambiguous. This section as it then read made no requirement . that the dividends which might be deducted must have arisen out of business done in this state by the corporation which paid said dividends. On the other hand, it expressly provided that dividends arising from business done in this state might be deducted when computing the net income of the corporation receiving such dividends. This language is all-inclusive, and included all such dividends.

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 417, 7 Cal. 2d 295, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-of-america-v-johnson-cal-1936.