Department of Revenue v. Wisconsin Telephone Co.

240 N.W.2d 411, 72 Wis. 2d 259, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1404
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1976
Docket690 (1974)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 240 N.W.2d 411 (Department of Revenue v. Wisconsin Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin 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. Wisconsin Telephone Co., 240 N.W.2d 411, 72 Wis. 2d 259, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1404 (Wis. 1976).

Opinion

Robert W. Hansen, J.

Is Wisconsin Telephone entitled to change its method of treating amounts received from Western Electric for purposes of computing depreciation expense deductions allowable under the Wisconsin corporate franchise tax law ?

In the years in question, 1966 through 1969, Wisconsin Telephone determined the cost of the items purchased from Western Electric by subtracting the amount received from Western Electric (representing tax savings by consolidation for tax treatment) from the initially recorded book cost of the items. Wisconsin Telephone now seeks to use the initially recorded book cost as the basis, and credit the amount received from Western Electric to a reserve for deferred federal income taxes. The revenue department denied the Wisconsin Telephone claim for refund, asserting the telephone company cannot make such change for tax purposes.

Both parties agree that depreciation is to be calculated on the basis of “cost,” more particularly the “Wisconsin income tax cost” of the property involved. 1 The primary argument of the revenue department is not that the proposed method of calculating depreciation is improper, but rather that the Wisconsin Telephone Company cannot treat its accounts one way for regulatory purposes and another way for tax purposes. The department sees its position as mandated by a recent case, Milwaukee *264 Gas Light Co. v. Dept. of Taxation. 2 There the public utility involved was subject to the regulatory jurisdiction of the state public service commission as to its income, depreciation charges, accounting and rates charged. In 1940, the PSC had ordered straight-line depreciation rates. Beginning in 1954, the utility, for federal income tax purposes, depreciated its income-producing property under the sum-of-the-digits method. In 1956, the utility filed an application with the PSC seeking an order as to how to treat the income tax savings under the new method of computing depreciation.

The PSC authorized the utility to include certain amounts as depreciation. The tax department disallowed such basis for computation of depreciation for tax purposes. Our court allowed the utility to follow the procedure for tax purposes that had been established by the PSC for regulatory purposes. Finding the amount of a depreciation charge “one peculiarly within the province of the PSC,” our court held that: “[A]ny amounts which PSC properly orders to be deducted as a depreciation expense and which it orders to be included in a utility’s depreciation reserve, are ordinary and necessary business expenses of such utility.” 3 The revenue department sees this case as establishing that the method of treating depreciation as approved by the FCC and PSC, must be followed by Wisconsin Telephone for all purposes, tax purposes included.

There is an obvious difference between the Milwaukee Gas Light Case and the case now before us. In Milwaukee Gas Light, the PSC had ordered the utility to use a specific method of accounting and no other. 4 Here, as *265 the circuit judge on review pointed out, there is .. . only a requirement by the F. C. C. (with no indication of an independent affirmative requirement imposed by the P. S. C.) that it approve a change between two equally acceptable alternative bookkeeping methods.” With two alternative methods of accounting here found reasonable and usable, we find no requirement, either judicial or legislative, that only one method of accounting is appropriate for any purposes, tax purposes included. 5

The revenue department puts a second arrow to its bow, arguing that, depreciation in this state being based on cost, the actual cost of the items involved is book cost minus the amount received from Western Electric and distributed by AT&T. This latter amount, the department contends, should be considered to be a “rebate” for tax purposes. The logic behind this contention is that Western Electric benefited from the consolidation (for tax purposes) by not declaring a profit on sales to other members of the group, and such profits were also eliminated from the basis of the assets purchased by other members, thus reducing depreciation and increasing federal income taxes. Therefore, the department concludes, with Western Electric required to make cash payments to operating companies to reimburse them for added federal taxes due to reduced depreciation, the cost basis of the depreciable assets were reduced by such payments. 6

*266 However, in finding this method of computation one of two reasonable under the circumstances, the FCC said of it: “The other method commonly used is for the operating telephone company to credit a reserve for deferred taxes with the amount of the taxes deferred and to amortize such amount to operating taxes over the estimated life of the plant which amount offsets the annual increase in income tax expense.” Respondent argues that immediate tax savings to Western Electric here result in higher taxes paid by Wisconsin Telephone spread over the life of the asset. Regardless of that, we do not see the result as properly described as a “rebate.” The payments under this method of accounting are only indirectly related to the assets involved. Whatever imperfections there may be as to either of the two methods of accounting approved for regulatory purposes by the FCC, we do not see the word “rebate” as appropriately applied to any aspect of either of the two methods of accounting authorized. A “rebate” has been defined as: “A deduction or drawback from a stipulated payment, charge, or rate, . . . not taken out in advance of payment, but handed back to the payer after he has paid the full stipulated sum.” 7 We do not see any aspect of the situation here before us to fall into that or any other definition of the word “rebate.”

The revenue department seeks to put a third arrow to its bow, claiming that, if the payments made are not to be taxed as denied claims for depreciation, they should be taxed as income in the year of receipt. Such claim of right to offset was not raised before the tax appeals commission nor before the circuit court. It is raised for *267 the first time on the appeal to this court. Ordinarily our court does not consider issues raised on appeal for the first time. 8 This is certainly the rule for a claim in the nature of a setoff or recoupment. 9 Nonetheless, the revenue department contends that we could and should reach the issue that is here belatedly raised. We agree that we could, but do not agree that we should. In presenting its case to the tax appeals commission and to circuit courts for review, the department has the advice and counsel of a full crew of staff members and attorneys skilled and experienced in matters of tax law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 N.W.2d 411, 72 Wis. 2d 259, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-revenue-v-wisconsin-telephone-co-wis-1976.