Gordon v. State Tax Commission

140 N.E.2d 453, 335 Mass. 431, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 521
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 140 N.E.2d 453 (Gordon v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. State Tax Commission, 140 N.E.2d 453, 335 Mass. 431, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 521 (Mass. 1957).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The taxpayers constitute a partnership (hereinafter called the appellant) engaged in the business of financing the purchase of automobiles under conditional sale arrangements. In each transaction, the appellant purchases from an automobile dealer a conditional sale contract and an instalment note signed by a purchaser, and then proceeds to collect the instalments. The conditional sale agreement shows on one line the cash purchase price, the finance charge including insurance premiums on another line, and the "total time price” on a third line. The accompanying note is stated in the conditional sale agreement not to constitute "payments by the purchaser, but only evidence of the amounts to become due.” The note itself is payable to "Bearer or order” and provides for the payment of a fixed sum in consecutive monthly instalments of a fixed amount each "and after maturity with interest at the rate of six per cent per year” (emphasis supplied). The note contains an acceleration provision.

A person buying an automobile negotiates with the dealer the cash price and also, in the case of a "time” purchase, the finance charge, down payment and amount of each instalment payment. The dealer, if he does not wish to keep the arrangement himself, then negotiates for its sale (at a price determined by such negotiation) and assigns to the finance company, without recourse or indorsement, the dealer’s "right title and interest in and to the . . . contract . . . and the motor vehicle covered thereby.” In some few cases the dealer undertakes, in the event of default, to repurchase the automobile at the cost of the transaction to [433]*433the finance company less payments collected by it and (in some instances at least) less also all finance costs.

The appellant seasonably filed a 1954 Massachusetts partnership income tax return, reporting income received during the calendar year of 1953, including as gross interest income for taxation at six per cent (plus surtaxes) under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 1 (a),1 certain profits derived from the conduct of its business described above. The appellant paid the tax based on the return. Subsequently the appellant seasonably filed an application for the abatement of a portion of this tax, asserting that it should have treated its profits as business income, taxable at two and one half per cent (including temporary additional tax of one per cent under St. 1953, c. 246, § 2), plus surtaxes, under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 5 (b), as appearing in St. 1939, c. 486, § l,2 rather than as interest income. With its application for abatement, the appellant filed an amended return of its 1953 income. The State tax commission failed to act upon this application within three months and it was treated as denied.3

The appellant filed a petition to the Appellate Tax Board which refused the appellant’s request for a ruling that the income here in issue was taxable under § 5 (b) as amended and found that the appellant “has failed to prove that the [434]*434income in question constitutes income derived ‘from professions, employments, trade or business’ within the meaning of those words as . . . used in . . . § 5 (b).” From the decision of the Appellate Tax Board in favor of the State tax commission, the appellant appealed to this court. The facts are not in dispute. The issue is whether upon these facts the action of the board, in ruling in effect that the profits of the appellant were “interest” taxable under § 1 (a) rather than business income taxable under § 5 (b), is correct as a matter of law.

1. The appellant’s business, in its essential character, is closely similar to the business considered in Hayes v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 261 Mass. 134. In that case, the taxpayers were engaged in selling merchandise, mostly clothing, by the use of credit orders. Customers, who signed conditional sale agreements, were given written orders on retail stores. The taxpayers were to pay the storekeeper. The clothing remained the property of the taxpayers until paid for and the customer was to pay interest on all money not paid when due. The taxpayers received from the storekeepers a discount of fifteen per cent from regular retail prices and added ten per cent to the regular store price as a charge to the customers, thus getting both a fifteen per cent discount and a ten per cent additional charge. The commissioner of corporations and taxation there in effect conceded that the discount was business income taxable under § 5 (b) but claimed that the ten per cent charge was interest taxable under § 1 (a). This court said (at page 136) that the ten per cent charge was “a part of the credit price at which the clothing was sold .... The principal of the debt was the price which the customers agreed to pay the . . . [taxpayers]; no part of this was interest.” The court (at page 137) went on to state that it assumed that the commissioner “could analyze the income from trade and business, and tax so much of it as was interest . . . under . . . § 1” and further said, “Facts may exist showing that a part of the so called price is in reality interest and taxable as such . . . but there is nothing in the reported [435]*435facts from which, in our opinion, it can be inferred that the ten per cent advance was income from interest under . . . § 1 (a).” In reversing the decision of the trial judge in that case, the court pointed out (at page 136) that a “tax statute is to be strictly construed. The right to tax must be found within the letter of the law; it is not to be extended by implication beyond the clear meaning of the language used.” See also Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Aetna Life Ins. Co. 328 Mass. 404, 408, and cases cited; Harry Alan Gregg, Jr. Family Foundation, Inc. v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 330 Mass. 538, 544-545.

Examination of the original papers in the Hayes case shows that there are various differences between the facts in the Hayes case and the arrangements in the present case. For example, in the Hayes case, the arrangement with the taxpayers for a conditional sale preceded the purchase order given to the storekeeper, whereas, in the present case, the appellant ordinarily does not negotiate with the customer directly but purchases a transaction already arranged between the customer and the automobile dealer. In the Hayes case the fifteen per cent discount given to the taxpayer by the storekeeper took the form of a reduction in the price of the merchandise, while in the present case any discount is given in the form of a sale of the transaction by the dealer to the appellant at less than face value.1 The documents used in the Hayes case were simpler than those employed by the appellant, possibly because the amounts involved were smaller. All these differences are formal rather than substantive. In essence, the taxpayers in the Hayes case were, and the appellant in the present case is, engaged in a business which is closely related to, if not a part of, the business of selling merchandise. In both cases, the purpose is to [436]*436relieve a storekeeper or dealer, where a customer wishes to purchase merchandise or an automobile by instalment payments, of the credit risk involved and of the very considerable administrative work involved in collecting the instal-ments, arranging for enforcement of the sale agreement, and repossessing the item sold in the event of default.1

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Bluebook (online)
140 N.E.2d 453, 335 Mass. 431, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-state-tax-commission-mass-1957.