First Union National Bank v. Commonwealth

867 A.2d 711, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 47
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 867 A.2d 711 (First Union National Bank v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Union National Bank v. Commonwealth, 867 A.2d 711, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 47 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*712 OPINION BY

Judge COHN JUBELIRER.

This case involves the tax ramifications following the merger of three banks — two with significant Pennsylvania tax contacts and one with no Pennsylvania tax contacts — relevant to what is colloquially known as the Bank and Trust Company Shares Tax (Shares Tax), 1 which computes an institution’s tax liability based on a moving six-year average value. First Union National Bank (Petitioner) argues that the Department of Revenue (Department) should not use a six-year average value to compute the Shares Tax for the value of shares attained through merger with non-Pennsylvania banks that had no pre-merger tax contacts with Pennsylvania. Petitioner appeals an order of the Board of Finance and Review, which upheld the Department’s denial of its petition for tax refund.

The parties have stipulated to the following facts. There are three banks relevant to this appeal: “First Union National Bank” (North Bank), which possessed continuous tax contacts with Pennsylvania for the entire period relevant to this appeal; “CoreStates Bank, N.A.” (CoreStates), which engaged in business in Pennsylvania for the entire period relevant to this appeal; and, “First Union National Bank (South)” (South Bank), which was only engaged in business in North Carolina. 2 These banks were all owned by a holding company, First Union Corporation (the “Holding Company”). South Bank, prior to 1998 and its merger with North Bank, was the surviving entity of multiple mergers of other small southern banks. 3 South Bank and the southern banks were all managed separately and independently from the North Bank and CoreStates. In 1998, CoreStates and South Bank both merged into the North Bank, with North Bank as the surviving entity. CoreStates and North Bank, before their mergers, separately and independently conducted business in and paid taxes to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. South Bank, however, was a North Carolina entity, which had no tax contacts with and paid no taxes to Pennsylvania. Consequently, South Bank was never independently subject to the Shares Tax.

Sections 701 4 and 701.1 5 of the Shares Tax govern the computation of the Shares *713 Tax. Section 701 outlines what and when entities are required to pay the Shares Tax:

Every institution shall make to the Department of Revenue a report in writing setting forth the full number of shares of the capital stock subscribed for or issued, as of the preceding January 1, by such institution, and the taxable amount of such shares of capital stock determined pursuant to section 701.1.

Section 701.5 of the Shares Tax 6 defines “institution” as: a “bank operating as such and having capital stock which is ... located within this Commonwealth.” (Emphasis added.) The statutory mechanism for the actual computation is found in Section 701.1(a), which requires the adding together of the taxable amount of shares from that taxable year with the taxable amount of shares from the preceding five year’s and dividing that sum by six. Section 701.1(b) of the Shares Tax 7 bases the “average value” on the values reported by the institution on its quarterly Reports of Condition filed with federal bank regulators over the preceding six years. However, where there is a merger of two “institutions,” under Section 701.1(c) of the Shares Tax 8 (the “combination provision”), the value of the combined “institutions” is the combined historical book values of the two separate institutions — the surviving and merged “institutions” — for the entire six-year period, divided by six. Pursuant to Section 701, the last step in the compu *714 tation of the Shares Tax requires the multiplication of an institution’s total Shares Tax liability at 1.25 percent of its six-year average. 72 P.S. § 7701.

At issue in this case is the Shares Tax paid by North Bank in 1999, which was based on its average value for the years 1993 through 1998. Throughout this six— year period, North Bank was required to pay Shares Tax because it was engaged in business in Pennsylvania and, thus, was an “institution” as defined by Section 701.5 of the Shares Tax. 9 In computing that average, North Bank combined its own six-year average value, with the six-year average value of CoreStates, and the post— merger value of South Bank. North Bank computed its Shares Tax liability and made its payment to the State Treasurer. Thereafter, the Department audited North Bank’s tax report and recomputed North Bank’s Shares Tax liability based on an inclusion of the pre — merger, six-year average value of South Bank. That recom-putation resulted in an increase in North Bank’s Shares Tax from $12,533,261 to $23,461,115.

North Bank paid that assessment 10 “under protest” and timely filed a petition for refund with the Department’s Board of Appeals, which, subsequently, denied that petition. North Bank then appealed to the Board of Finance and Revenue repeating its argument that, under the provisions of the Shares Tax and the United States Constitution, the pre-merger book values of the South Bank and the small southern banks were improperly included in North Bank’s Shares Tax base. The Board of Finance and Revenue upheld the Board of Appeals’ decision and North Bank, thereafter, filed the instant petition for review. 11

North Bank’s central argument is that South Bank was never an “institution” as defined by Section 701.5 of the Shares Tax, because it never engaged in business in Pennsylvania and, therefore, the “combination provision” does not apply to it. Consequently, it argues that the pre-merger, six-year average of South Bank’s value was improperly included in the six-year measure of its Shares Tax. North Bank contends that the language of Section 701.1. of the Shares Tax, which specifically limits liability for the Shares Tax only to an “institution,” is clear and unambiguous, so it must be followed.

North Bank asserts that the legislative history of the “combination provision” found in Section 701.1(c) of the Shares Tax buttresses its argument. Prior to 1994, the “combination provision” applied to the merger of all “banks.” It was not until 1994 that the General Assembly amended the statute removing the term “banks” and replacing it with the term “institutions.” North Bank posits that if the General Assembly intended the “combination provision” to continue to apply to all bank mergers, as the Commonwealth suggests, it would not have removed the term “banks” from the provision and replaced it with “institutions.”

The Commonwealth counters that “[t]he [combination provision] 12

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Bluebook (online)
867 A.2d 711, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-union-national-bank-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-2005.