Good Will Distributors (Northern), Inc. v. Shaw

100 S.E.2d 334, 247 N.C. 157, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 20, 1957
Docket167
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 S.E.2d 334 (Good Will Distributors (Northern), Inc. v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Good Will Distributors (Northern), Inc. v. Shaw, 100 S.E.2d 334, 247 N.C. 157, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 560 (N.C. 1957).

Opinion

Rodman, J.

This case requires a construction of G.S. 105-147 (6d) which permits, under certain conditions, a deduction of a prior economic loss from current gross income to determine taxable income. We must apply “legislative intent” to a factual situation which we feel certain was not contemplated when the statute was enacted. Hence to determine the proper application of that statute to the facts of this case, we do not confine ourselves to that particular section of the tax law but look at all other statutory provisions which may assist in finding an answer to the question presented.

Express statutory authority is given domestic corporations to merge, G.S. 55-165. When the merger is consummated, one corporation survives and the corporate existence of the other parties to the merger ceases. The surviving corporation becomes vested with “all the rights, privileges, powers and franchises . . . of each of said constituent corporations . . . and (they) shall be thereafter as effectually the property of the surviving corporation as they were of the several and respective constituent corporations. . . .” G.S. 55-166.

The language is clear and specific. The surviving corporation, plaintiff here, is vested with all of the rights which each party to the merger could exercise but only those rights. A merger does not create new or additional rights. Having ascertained that plaintiff has all of the rights which the parties to the mer *160 ger could exercise and only those rights, we turn to the statutory provisions relating to the computation and assessment of income taxes.

We find every domestic corporation is required to pay a tax on its net income received during the income year, G.S. 105-134. Net income is gross income less allowable deductions, G.S. 105-140. Gross income is defined in G.S. 105-141. No question with respect to gross income is presented by this case.

What deductions may plaintiff, the survivor, take to determine its net income? May it, as it asserts and the court adjudged, deduct from its gross income an economic loss sustained prior to the merger by another party thereto?

Ever since the adoption of our first income tax statute a taxpayer has been permitted to deduct certain losses in computing his net income. Prior to 1943 a loss could only be deducted in the income year in which the loss was sustained. The 1943 Legislature broadened the statute and permitted the taxpayer to carry forward certain kinds of losses as a deduction against income accruing in either of the two succeeding tax years. S.L. 1943, Ch. 400. The 1945 Legislature rewrote that portion of the Act dealing with the deduction of loses. See Sec. 4, Ch. 708, S.L. 1945. The Act is substantially the law today and is applicable to the facts of this case.

Statutory provision permitting exemption from tax liability should be so construed as to bring within the exemption onljr those clearly entitled to its provisions. Sabine v. Gill, 229 N.C. 599, 51 S.E. 2d 1; Henderson v. Gill, 229 N.C. 313, 49 S.E. 2d 754; White v. U. S., 305 U.S. 281, 83 L. ed. 172, 59 S.C. 179. Applying this principle to this very provision, it was said by Denny, J., in Rubber Co. v. Shaw, 244 N.C. 170, 92 S.E. 2d 799: “Our Legislature was under no constitutional or other legal compulsion to allow any carry-over to be deducted from taxable income in a future year. It enacted the carry-over provisions purely as a matter of grace, gratuitously conferring a benefit but limiting such benefit to the net economic loss of the taxpayer after deducting therefrom the allocable portion of such taxpayer’s nontaxable income.”

Most of the cases involving the right of one corporation to claim as a deduction from its income a loss sustained by another corporation have arisen under Federal income or excess profits acts. The right of a successor corporation taking by conveyance, or a corporation resulting from a consolidation of corporations, or a corporation surviving as the result of a merger, to claim a loss sustained by another corporation, party to the consolidation or merger, has been repeatedly denied on the ground that the corporation claiming the deduction was not the taxpayer *161 within the meaning of the statute. See New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering, 292 U.S. 435, 78 L. ed. 1348, 54 S.C. 788; Shreveport Producing & Refining Co. v. Commissioner of Int. Revenue, 71 F. 2d 972; Brandon Corporation v. Commissioner of Int. Revenue, 71 F. 2d 762; Pennsylvania Co. Etc. v. Commissioner of Internal Rev., 75 F. 2d 719; Weber Flour Mills Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 82 F. 2d 764; Standard Paving Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Rev., 190 F. 2d 330.

On the other hand, the right to deduct has been allowed where the transaction was a mere matter of form and the new or surviving corporation was for all practical purposes the same as the old, continuing the business of its predecessor. Industrial Cotton Mills Co. v. Commissioner of Int. Rev., 61 F. 2d 291; Helvering v. Metropolitan Edison Co., 306 U.S. 522, 83 L. ed. 957, 59 S.C. 634; Stanton Brewery v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 176 F. 2d 573; Newmarket Manufacturing Company v. U. S., 233 F. 2d 493. These cases emphasize the necessity of a continuing business of the kind and character conducted by the corporation whose loss is claimed as a deduction from income earned by another.

The right of a corporation surviving a merger to claim losses sustained by another member of the merger was presented to the Supreme Court of the United States in Lisbon Shops v. Koehler, decided in May of this year, 353 U.S. 382, 1 L. ed. 2d 924, 77 S.C. 990. The Court said: “The issue before us is whether, under Secs. 23 (s) and 122 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, as amended, a corporation resulting from a merger of 16 separate incorporated businesses, which had filed separate income tax returns, may carry over and deduct the pre-merger net operating losses of three of its constituent corporations from the post-merger income attributable to the other businesses. We hold that such a carry-over and deduction is not permissible.”

We think the reason there assigned for denying the right to deduct is sound and is applicable to the facts of this case.

Here the right to deduct was adjudged to exist on the facts alleged in the complaint. The facts alleged are important in determining the right, but of equal or greater importance to that right are facts not alleged. The complaint alleges the merger on 1 July 1954 of three domestic corporations whose fiscal year terminated 31 October. One of these corporations had an economic loss for the year ending 31 October 1953. That corporation had a net income to the date of the merger.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E.2d 334, 247 N.C. 157, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/good-will-distributors-northern-inc-v-shaw-nc-1957.