Department of Revenue v. Gibson

544 P.2d 851, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 259
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1975
DocketNo. 2477
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 544 P.2d 851 (Department of Revenue v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Revenue v. Gibson, 544 P.2d 851, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 259 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Chief Justice.

The State of Alaska appeals from a judgment of the superior court which held that the limitation on the federal rate of tax on earned income of 50 percent specified by Sec. 1348(a) of the Internal Revenue Code enacted in 1969 was applicable in computing the Alaska income tax. The Alaska income tax, at the times here relevant, was based on a percentage of the federal tax as those rates existed in 1963.

Initially, the Gibsons paid their 1972 Alaska income tax utilizing the 50 percent maximum rate on earned income authorized by Sec. 1348(a) of the federal code. The tax was recalculated by the State Department of Revenue on the basis that the federal maximum rate on earned income was not available to the taxpayers for the purpose of computing the Alaska tax. A hearing was held, and a decision rendered confirming the Department’s position. The Gibsons appealed to the superior court on behalf of themselves and all other similarly situated taxpayers.1 The superior court’s decision reversed the administrative determination of the Alaska Department of Revenue that the taxpayers, the Gibsons, were not entitled to use the 50 percent maximum rate.

We are thus confronted with an involved question of statutory interpretation pertaining to both the Alaska and federal income tax laws, neither of which is a model of clarity. To place the issues in proper perspective, it is necessary to review briefly the history of the Alaska income tax act. As the culmination of a political battle of many years duration, the Alaska territorial legislature enacted an income tax law in 1949.2 The Alaska tax was based on a percentage of the total income tax that would be payable for the same taxable year to the United States, and adopted by reference the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code then in effect or as thereafter might be amended. The new act withstood a challenge to its constitutionality. Alaska Steamship Co. v. Mullaney, 180 F.2d 805, 12 Alaska 594 (9th Cir. 1950). It was' hoped that the adoption by reference of the federal act would afford a simplified means of calculating the Alaska tax by utilization of federal laws and regulations. This method of determining the Alaska income tax worked reasonably well through various changes of the federal law, most of which involved increases in amounts of tax payable. In 1964, however, Congress changed direction and substantially reduced the tax rates for individuals and corporations. It was apparent that this reduction would have a substantial effect on Alaska’s revenues, and, to remedy that problem, the 1965 Alaska legislature changed the Alaska law so as to tie the Alaska rates to the 1963 federal provisions. AS 43.20.010(a) was amended to read as follows:

There is levied and there shall be collected and paid for each taxable year upon the net income of every resident and nonresident individual and fiduciary that is required to make a return and pay a tax under the federal income tax law a tax equal to 16 percent of the total income tax that would be payable for the same taxable year to the United States at the federal tax rates in effect on De[853]*853cember 31, 1963, under the provisions of chapter 1 of subtitle A of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code, Public Law 591, 83rd Congress, 2nd Session, as amended, upon all income derived from sources within the state, (emphasis added)

The general rule, originally enacted in 1949 and codified as AS 43.20.300(a), provides that:

The provisions of the Internal Revenue Code as now in effect or hereafter amended mentioned in this chapter are incorporated in this chapter by reference and have effect as though fully set out in this chapter.

Thus, unless a change in the Internal Revenue Code affected the “federal tax rates in effect on December 31, 1963, under the provisions of chapter 1 of subtitle A of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code”, it would become incorporated in the Alaska law. For example, a change in the amount allowed for exemptions was considered by the Alaska Department of Revenue not to be a change in the tax rates and thus became applicable in computing the Alaska tax.3

In 1969, Congress enacted a federal tax reform act which, among other changes, provided that for taxable years beginning in 1971, the maximum rate of tax on earned income of individuals would be 60 percent, and for taxable years thereafter, the maximum would be 50 percent [sec. 1348(a), Internal Revenue Code 1954 as amended].4 We are confronted with the specific question as to whether this provision limiting the maximum rate of tax constitutes a change in the federal tax rates in effect on December 31, 1963 under the provisions of chapter 1 of subtitle A of the Internal Revenue Code, in which event the federal amendment would not apply to Alaska because of the 1965 act freezing the Alaska tax rates at the 1963 federal rates. If, on the other hand, the 1969 federal enactment of Sec. 1348(a) is not a change in federal tax rates, it would be incorporated in the Alaska law. We hold that Sec. 1348(a) does constitute a change in the federal tax rates in effect on December 31, 1963 under the provisions of chapter 1, subtitle A. Sec. 1348 is a portion of subchapter Q of chapter 1 of subtitle A. It, therefore, is a portion of chapter 1 of subtitle A referred to in AS 43.20.010(a). Since Sec. 1348(b) specifically applies to the tax rate on earned income by limiting that rate to 50 percent, it alters the 1963 federal tax rate, which has no such limitation and provides for a maximum tax of 91 percent.

Although it seems obvious to us that the 1969 federal law, Sec. 1348(a) affected the federal tax rates in effect on December 31, 1963, that conclusion is further bolstered by the history of the 1969 federal enactment. As pointed out in the Alaska Department of Revenue decision, the House Report on the Tax Reform Act of 1969 provides:

Subsection (a) of section 802 [804] of the bill adds a new section 1348 to part [854]*854VI of subchapter Q of Chapter 1 of the Code (relating to other limitations). In general, the new section 1348 provides a 50 percent limitation, under certain circumstances, on the rate of tax applicable in computing tax in respect of earned taxable income. (Ways and Means Committee, Tax Reform Act of 1969, H. R. Rep No. 91-413, 91st Cong., 1st Sess A-379 (1969)) (emphasis added)

Moreover, Sec. 1348 has been so construed by United States Treasury Regulation Sec. 121-1 (h) which provides in part:

The addition to the code of section 1348 (relating to 50 percent maximum rate on earned income) is a change in rate to which section 21(a) is applicable.

In fact, the Gibsons, in their brief submitted to this court, recognized that literally the Alaska act must be so construed. Their convoluted argument involving a study of the history of the 1965 Alaska amendment particularly relates to a prior attempt to meet the same problem by a 1964 act.5 In their brief, they state:

From viewing both enactments by the Legislature it must be concluded that the words “chapter 1 of subtitle A” in both the 1964 and 1965 Acts in fact are meant to mean “subchapter A of chapter 1 of subtitle A.”

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Related

Stevenson v. Burgess
570 P.2d 728 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1977)

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544 P.2d 851, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-gibson-alaska-1975.