Dickinson v. James

197 S.E. 633, 120 W. Va. 222, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1938
DocketCC 592
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 S.E. 633 (Dickinson v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. James, 197 S.E. 633, 120 W. Va. 222, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

The petition in this proceeding is filed under the provisions of Section 54, Chapter 89, Acts of the Legisla *223 ture, 1935, Code, 11-13B-54. The petitioner contends that the defendant Tax Commissioner, acting under the “Personal Income Tax Act”, Chapter 89 of the Acts; of the Legislature of 1935, as amended by Chapter 111, Acts 1937, and especially through the application of section 30 thereof, required of him the payment of taxes to the extent of $250.77 in excess of the amount property chargeable against him in the calendar year 1937, for which he made his return. He paid said sum under protest, and then, under section 53 of article 13B, applied to the Tax Commissioner for the refund of said amount and was refused. He then filed his petition in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County against the Tax Commissioner, asking that the correct amount of his tax liability be ascertained and that any excess paid by him beyond that properly chargeable be refunded. The demurrer of the Tax Commissioner to the petition was overruled, and upon the joint application of the parties, the trial court certifies the questions involved, to this Court.

The claim of the petitioner is based upon two separate transactions which may be briefly stated: (1) In the year 1930, he purchased 200 shares of the stock of a corporation at the price of $7,350.00; on January 1, 1935, the fair market value of this stock wasi $400.00; in the year 1937, he sold said stock for the sum of $5,301.71, thus showing a profit of $4,901.71 over the value of the stock on January 1, 1935, but suffering an actual loss in the transaction of $2,048.29. As to this transaction, he was required to pay taxes on $4,901.71. (2) In the year 1934, he purchased 100 shares of the stock of another corporation at the price of $5,867.50; on January 1, 1935, the fair market value of this stock was $4,500.00; it was sold in 1937 for $8,620.82, thus showing a profit over its 1935 value of $4,120.82, while the actual profit realized from the transaction was $2,753.32. He was required to pay taxes on $4,120.82, instead of his actual gain. The two amounts; on which the tax rate of four per cent was imposed unlawfully, as contended by peti *224 tioner, were $4,901.71 in the first transaction and $1,-367.50 in the second, an aggregate of $6,269.21.

The provision of the constitution under which the income tax was imposed grants to the legislature power “to tax privileges, franchises, and incomes of persons and corporations and to classify and graduate the tax on all incomes according to the amount thereof and to exempt from taxation, incomes below a minimum to1 be fixed from time to time * * * .” Constitution, Article X, section 1. The act imposing the tax defines gross income as “gains, profits', and income” derived from certain specified activities, including “the transaction of any1 business, carried on for gain or profit,” and also including “gain, profit or income derived through estates or trusts * * * .” Code, 11-13B-21, 24. Net income is defined as gross income less certain permitted deductions set out in section 25 of the act. It will be noted that the words “gain, profit or income”, are used to describe what is intended to be taxed. It will be noted, also, that the tax is controlled by the provision in the section of the constitution cited that “Subject to the exceptions in this section contained, taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State * * * .” The exceptions a;re those with respect to classification of property, certain exemptions, and the power to1 classify and graduate the tax on all incomes according to the amount thereof. They are limited to those specified in the constitution, and but for the exceptions so noted do not infringe upon Section 1, Article X of the Constitution before the so-called Tax Limitation Amendment, adopted in 1932. It i,s assumed, therefore', that the legislature, in enacting the income tax statute had in mind to conform to the constitutional provision with respect to the equality and uniformity in taxation, and it seems clear that once a tax is imposed, under whatever classification it falls, it must be applied with equality and uniformity to all persons and corporations subject thereto.

The personal net income tax statute was first enacted by the legislature at its regular1 session in 1935, and was *225 made to apply to incomes received during the calendar year of 1935. Chapter 89, Acts 1935. The dispute before us involves a construction of sub-section 1 of section 30 of that act, as the same was amended by Chapter 111 of the Acts of 1937. The pertinent part of section 30„ as enacted in 1935, reads: “The basis for determining the gain or loss from the sale nr other disposition of property, real or personal or mixed, shall be, in the case of property: 1. Acquired before January first, one thousand nine hundred thirty-five, the fair market price or value as of that date, if the price or value exceeds the original cost, and in all other cases the cost.” And as amended,by the Act of 1937, sub-section 1 reads: “Acquired before January first, one thousand nine hundred thirty-five, the fair market price as of that date; and if acauired after January first, one thousand nine hundred thirty-five, the actual cost.” It will be observed that the words “or value” and “if the price or value exceeds the original cost”, appearing in the 1935 act have been eliminated by the later enactment. The words last quoted made it clear that under the 1935 act, the January 1, 1935. date could only be used in cases where the value, as of that date, exceeded the original cost. Under that act, the taxpayer would not be held to the arbitrary date, because the value of the stock was not more but less than the original cost. By the elimination of these words, the restriction was removed, and giving the statute, as amended, a literal interpretation, the same was made to apply to all cases where property was purchased before January 1, 1935, regardless of whether the property was of greater or less value on that date, as compared with the date of its purchase, and the specified date fixed as the time from which profits or losses must be determined, even though the application thereof might in some cases, as in the case at bar, show an income where there was an actual loss, or show a greater income than that actually received. It may be contended that the legislature intentionally made the change 'in the statute to effect this result, and it is for us to determine whether *226 it was s.o intended, and if so, whether, under the constitution, it had the power to impose an income tax on anything other than actual profit or gain.

We see nothing in the constitution, or the statutes enacted thereunder, supporting the theory that it was ever intended to impose a tax on anything other than incomes actually received during the year for which a return is made. The constitution speaks of “incomes”. By the statute, gross income is. defined as “gains, profits and income”, and the amount of taxable net income is determined by gross income less certain permitted deductions. We do not believe that the legislature had the power, under the constitution, to make anything other than actual gain, profit or income realized during the tax year the basis for the tax; nor that it intended to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.E. 633, 120 W. Va. 222, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-james-wva-1938.