In Re the Excise Tax of Robert Hind, Ltd.

34 Haw. 40, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 3
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1936
DocketNo. 2259.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 Haw. 40 (In Re the Excise Tax of Robert Hind, Ltd.) 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 the Excise Tax of Robert Hind, Ltd., 34 Haw. 40, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 3 (haw 1936).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

This is an appeal by the taxpayer, Robert Hind, Limited, from a decision of the tax appeal court.

*41 Pursuant to Act 42, 2d Sp. S. L. 1932, chapter 63, R. L. 1935 (later repealed by Act 119, L. 1935), the taxpayer, which operates a dairy business in Honolulu, filed a business excise tax return covering its operations for the calendar year 1933.

Section 1 of said Act 42 imposed an annual excise tax upon each person doing business within the Territory. Section 3 of said Act provided that the tax be measured by “(1) the net taxable income, if any, of such person obtained in doing business within the Territory for the preceding taxable year, and (2) the operating costs of such person in doing business within the Territory for the preceding taxable year; if, however, doing business in the preceding taxable year has resulted in a net loss, the amount of such net loss shall be deducted from the amount of such operating costs.”

Section 4 of said Act provided among other things that “in computing operating costs, there shall be included the following: * * * 8. All ordinary and necessary expenses paid or accrued for payment for business operations actually conducted within the Territory, provided, however, that the following items shall be excluded from the computation of such expenses: * * * (c) When the business includes the purchase and sale or dealing in or with goods and products, the purchase price of the goods and products so purchased and sold, or the purchase price of merchandise and/or materials purchased, and incorporated and remaining in such goods or products.”

In its return the taxpayer claimed as an exclusion from its operating costs the cost of feed and molasses used in its business in the amount of $68,465.55, which sum it contends fell within the meaning of the clause “purchase price of merchandise and/or materials purchased, and incorporated and remaining in such goods or products [sold]” as used in said Act.

*42 The tax commissioner did not allow the amount claimed as an exclusion from operating costs in computing the tax, and assessed the taxpayer an additional tax in the amount of $1369.31. Upon appeal by the taxpayer the board of review allowed the taxpayer’s claim whereupon the tax commissioner appealed to the tax appeal court which refused its alloAvance. It is from this decision that the instant appeal is taken.

The tax in question is measured in part by operating costs which the statute provides shall include “all ordinary and necessary expenses paid or accrued for payment for business operations actually conducted Avithin the Territory.”

It is not contended that the cost of feed and molasses used in feeding its cows is not an ordinary and necessary expense of the business of the taxpayer. Therefore unless the feed and molasses referred to are incorporated in and remain in the products dealt in or with by the taxpayer then the cost of such feed and molasses cannot be excluded in computing the tax.

Appellant has cited Gould v. Gould, 245 U. S. 151, and Frear v. Wilder, 25 Haw. 603, in support of its contention that taxing statutes are to be strictly construed in favor of taxpayers and against the government. This principle the court recognizes. It is also clear however that exemptions from taxation are strictly construed; in other words that taxation is the rule and exemption the exception. (Bishop v. Gulick, 7 Haw. 627, 630 ; Oahu R. & L. Co. v. Shaw, 12 Haw. 76; Tax Assessor v. Wood, 18 Haw. 485.)

Appellant cites Cooley on Taxation (2d ed.) p. 174; Florer v. Sheridan, 36 N. E. (Ind.) 365, 369; and State v. Smith, 63 N. E. (Ind.) 25, 29, in support of its contention that the exclusion from operating costs in question is not an exemption but a deduction, and that therefore the principle governing exemptions is inapplicable. With this con *43 tention we cannot agree. The precedents cited by appellant involve constructions of the meaning of constitutional provisions governing exemptions from taxation designed to equalize taxation among all classes of taxpayers. In Standard Life Ins. Co. v. City of Atlanta, 106 S. E. (Ga.) 110, it was held that a deduction of insurance reserves in the ascertainment of personal property tax was an unconstitutional exemption within the meaning of the constitutional provision there involved. In our opinion these cases have no bearing on the case at bar and it would serve no useful purpose to attempt to reconcile them.

The statute in question here imposed a tax measured in part by operating costs of the taxpayer. Operating costs are defined as including all ordinary and necessary expenses for business operations. The Act then provides for the exclusion of certain ordinary and necessary business expenses from such operating costs. When a tax is measured by all operating costs and certain specific operating costs are excluded (to prevent double taxation or for other purposes) such items excluded from the measure are exemptions. (Commonwealth v. McGrady-Bodgers Co., 174 Atl. [Pa.] 395; Nashville Tobacco Works v. City of Nashville, 260 S. W. [Tenn.] 449.) It follows that for the taxpayer to succeed on this appeal it must show that the amount of the exclusion claimed was the purchase price of material actually incorporated and remaining in the products which it dealt in.

It is contended by the taxpayer that the feed and molasses, the cost of Avhich is claimed as an exclusion, are special foods generally designated as concentrates; that these foods contain proteins and vitamins which when fed to the cows became incorporated and remained in the milk sold to the consumers; and therefore under the law the cost of these concentrates should be excluded in calculating the tax.

*44 It is a matter of common knowledge that all food consumed by cows is not incorporated in milk. Portions of it-are converted into flesh and other portions are converted into fecal matter which is discharged from the cow by natural processes and of course add nothing to the quantity and quality of the milk. Whether the ascertainment of the amount or kind of feed that eventually becomes incorporated in and remains a part of the milk is possible or not it is obvious that the burden of showing to what extent, if any, such feed does enter into the milk should not fall on the government. To require the government to undertake an analysis of the organic changes of the concentrates within the mechanism of the cow would require the tax commissioner, in order to assure the enforcement of this tax law, to employ a staff of experts in dairying. The number of experts necessary in each of the other types of businesses carried on in the Territory in order to administer the tax law intelligently would be very large.

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34 Haw. 40, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-excise-tax-of-robert-hind-ltd-haw-1936.