In re Assessment of Income Taxes, Honolulu Rapid Transit & Land Co.

18 Haw. 15, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Haw. 15 (In re Assessment of Income Taxes, Honolulu Rapid Transit & Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Assessment of Income Taxes, Honolulu Rapid Transit & Land Co., 18 Haw. 15, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1906).

Opinion

ORAL OPINION.

The first of these cases relates to the income taxes for the latter half of the year 1905 of the Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Company, which conducts an electric street railway in .Honolulu and whose franchise expires in 1928. The company returned its gross income for the half year at $169,296.82 and deductions at $180,822.67 leaving no net income for taxation. Among the deductions was an item of $40,925.43 under the head of “losses otherwise actually incurred” as having been written off at the end of the year for depreciation of property during the entire year due to climatic and other conditions of wear and tear and not included in “necessary expenses actually incurred” in carrying on the business or for repairs, etc. The assessor disallowed this item, thereby leaving a net income of $29,409.58 for taxation, and the company appealed. Since this item was for depreciation during the entire year and since half of it if allowed for the half year in question would still leave a net income, the company endeavored to show before the tax appeal court that the actual depreciation for the year amounted to $57,827, which was the aggregate of various percentages estimated as depreciation on different portions of the property. It contended also that it was entitled to deduct $45,510.68 as “sinking fund,” although it had not actually set aside that as sinking fund or claimed any such deduction in its return. This contention was based on section 17 of its franchise act (Rev. Laws, Sec. 851), which provides that the company may charge upon its income (1) operating expenses, etc., (2) dividends not exceeding 8 per cent., (3) a sinking fund for the redemption of bonds or other record debt'and the capital upon the expiration of the franchise, (4) the excess of income to be divided equally between the Territory and the stockholders, (5) a quarterly account to be rendered by the corpora[17]*17tion. The contention was that it would be a. violation of the franchise not to allow a deduction for a sinking fund for the purposes of taxation. The tax appeal court sustained the. assessor and the company appealed to this_ court.

The second of these cases relates to the property taxes of tho* same company assessable as of January 1, 1906. The company returned its property as separate items aggregating in value-$752,912.58, less an exemption amounting to $8,930.81, leaving, a net valuation of $744,041.77 for taxation. It made no return of its property as a whole valued as property combined and made the basis of an enterprise for profit. The assessor added' new items not returned and increased the values of certain items-returned separately, the only change of much consequence being' the addition of an item of $500,000 for the franchise of the corporation, and then assessed the entire property as a whole at $1,831,000, which was the amount of the company’s stock and bonds less $9,000 exemption. ITe contended that he was-required to do this by section 1216 of the Revised Laws as., amended by Act 88 of the Laws of 1905, which provides that, the combined property of a corporation of this class shall be assessed at not less than the total amount of the “par value of. the capital issues emitted” by it, the contention contra being, that “capital issues” within the meaning of this statute does not include bonds and also that whether it includes bonds or. not the statute is unconstitutional as placing an arbitrary valuation upon the property and making unreasonable discrimina-tions. The tax appeal court held that capital issues did not. include bonds and reduced the valuation below the assessment and the assessor appealed to this court. The tax court did not pass on the validity of the act, in case capital issues should be held to include stock, because it placed the valuation of the property at an amount greater than the capital stock of the; company.

On the question of aetual value, that is, aside from the provisions of the act just referred to, the assessor at the hearing; before the tax court introduced evidence of new items and; [18]*18increased valuations of old items, the result of which showed a total valuation of $1,458,000, and showed further that practically the same result would be reached by taking the aggregate of the stock and bonds less the exemption, namely, $350,000 of preferred stock at the market value of $101.50 per share, $800,000 of common stock at $66 less ten per cent., and the bonds, $690,000, at their par value, their market value being greater, and deducting the exemptions of about $9000, and referred to the decision of this court in 16 Iiaw. 802, rendered last year affirming an assessment of $1,351,015.95. The company contended, among other things, that the franchise was not taxable under the provisions of the franchise act, particularly section 17 above referred to, and section 30 (Rev. Laws, Sec. 865), which provides that the company’s property shall not be liable to internal taxation while the railway is under construction provided that as fast as completed the completed portions shall become liable to such taxation; and also that the franchise was not taxable by the Territory for the reason that it was a federal franchise, inasmuch as the original franchise act, though enacted by the legislature of the Republic of Hawaii, was void because not approved by the president of Hawaii until the day, July 7, 1898, on which congress passed the joint resolution annexing these islands to the Hnited States, and was validated only by the provision made by congress in section 73 of the organic act of the Territory ratifying, subject to the approval of the president, all dispositions of the public domain and all franchises granted by the Hawaiian government in conformity with the laws of Hawaii between July 7, 1898, and September 28, 1899, and by the approval of the president in pursuance of that provision. The tax appeal court held that the franchise was taxable and fixed the several items of the company’s property at such values as to aggregate $1,360,473.77, and found also that the value of the property taken as a whole would be not far from that amount and accordingly fixed the valuation at $1,360,000. The company appealed to this court for a reduction from this amount on the grounds urged by it before the [19]*19tax court, and contends further that the tax court, upon a proper construction of its decision, based its ultimate finding ■solely upon the valuations of the property regarded as separate items, and that this court cannot now base its decision, upon the valuation of the property as a whole.

The foregoing statement of the case was prepared by the •chief justice, who, at the close of the argument, the court not ■calling upon the assessor on the company’s appeal in the second ■case, rendered the opinion of the court orally as follows:

Fkeah, C. J.

There are two cases before the court, one involving the income tax and the other the property tax of the Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Co., there being cross appeals in the latter case.

In the first case two questions are raised,. One is whether the company may write off a certain amount annually for depreciation in its property — in cases in which repairs cannot be made annually, as where certain portions of the property are used for a number of years before it completely wears out and requires replacing. In the opinion of this court this cannot be done. Such depreciation does not come under “losses actually sustained or otherwise actually incurred during the year,” within the meaning of the statute on income taxes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lacy v. Turner
E.D. California, 2024
W.N. v. S.M..
143 Haw. 128 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2018)
Honolulu Rapid Transit Co. v. Wilder
30 Haw. 795 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1929)
Territory v. Honolulu Rapid Transit & Land Co.
23 Haw. 387 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1916)
In re Assessment of Income Taxes, Ewa Plantation Co.
18 Haw. 530 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Haw. 15, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-assessment-of-income-taxes-honolulu-rapid-transit-land-co-haw-1906.