Johnson v. State Tax Commission

411 P.2d 831, 17 Utah 2d 337, 1966 Utah LEXIS 471
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1966
Docket10555
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 411 P.2d 831 (Johnson v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. State Tax Commission, 411 P.2d 831, 17 Utah 2d 337, 1966 Utah LEXIS 471 (Utah 1966).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

Plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment that: (1) she and other taxpayers who filed their tax returns for 1965 before January 1, 1966, were not subject to increases in state income taxes enacted by Chapter 125, S.L.U.1965 1 ; and (2) that this results in unequal and discriminatory taxation which renders that taxing statute unconstitutional and void. From a judgment of the District Court sustaining plaintiff’s position as to *339 proposition (1), the Tax Commission appeals; and from that court’s rejection of proposition number (2), the plaintiff cross-appeals.

The plaintiff bases her contention on Sec. 5 of that chapter:

The tax rates provided for herein shall apply to all returns filed on or after January 1, 1966 for taxable years commencing on or after January 1, 196S.

The fundamental consideration which transcends all others in regard to the interpretation and application of a statute is: What was the intent of the legislature ? 2 All other rules of statutory construction are subordinate to it and are helpful only insofar as they assist in attaining that objective. In determining that intent the statute should be considered in the light of the purpose it was designed to serve and so applied as to carry out that purpose if that can be done consistent with its language. It is plainly evident here that the primary purpose of the legislature was to put into effect an increase in state income taxes from and after January 1, 196S-. 3 As will appear below, upon an analysis of the language of the quoted section, we can see nothing to indicate that it intended any such unequal and discriminatory application of the new tax as contended for by the plaintiff.

It is of the utmost importance to bear in mind that this is a tax on income earned during a taxable year and not upon returns. The production of the income is. the thing upon which the tax is based; whereas the return is merely a compilation of data giving information as to the amount of tax due. It is thus the documentary evidence of the amount of the tax, but the document itself is not the subject of the tax. The taxes would become due and collectible even if no return were filed. Keeping the foregoing in mind, the reasonable interpretation of Sec. 5 quoted above is that the new tax rates should apply to income for taxable years commencing on or after January 1, 1965, and the reference to when the returns are filed is an incidental recital which is not controlling and should not be used to defeat the purpose of the statute. This conclusion is further borne out by other considerations we mention presently.

The legislature could and undoubtedly did envision this tax as applying to incomes for taxable years commencing on or after January 1, 1965, as is stated; and to returns therefor filed in the normal course of events and in conformity with law. A read *340 ing of our income tax statute without reaching for a preconceived conclusion, as do plaintiff and her advocates, reveals with ample clarity that it is contemplated that income tax returns for the calendar year shall he filed between January 1 and April IS of the following year. Sec. 59-14 — 19 provides that taxes for the preceding calendar year, “shall be paid on the 15th day of April following the close of [that] year.” And Sec. 59-14-17 requires that returns based on calendar year income “shall be made * * * on or before the 15th day of April in each year * * This can only mean between January 1 and April 15. There is thus no authorization for filing a return before the end of the year for calendar year taxpayers such as plaintiff and those similarly situated; and there is nothing in the law to suggest that such early filings ar.e provided for or that they are reasonably to be anticipated. 4

There is another practical reason why a taxpayer normally does not file his return and pay his taxes before the end of the year and why it is not to be expected that he will do so. Until that time it is virtually impossible to tell what his net income will be. It may for some unforeseen reason increase. For example, he may receive a bonus from his employer; a business transaction may materialize; or he may fortuitously get income from some other source. Conversely, his income may unexpectedly diminish. He may become disabled; or even die. Or he may incur unexpected deductible expenses.

For these reasons: that such early filing is not provided for by law; 5 that the income cannot be exactly ascertained; and because of the well known fact that people generally are not so anxious to pay taxes that they rush in and pay them early, it is most reasonable to believe that the legislature, in enacting a tax on “taxable years commencing on and after January, 1965” properly assumed and recited ' that this would be “on returns filed on or after January 1, 1966” which is in accordance with both the law and the custom.

The soundness of the foregoing assumption is corroborated by information furnished us by counsel: that in other years a mere handful, less than 100 out of a total of over 330,000 taxpayers, normally filed before the end of the preceding year. It is *341 of some significance that for the year in question, when in December, 1965, there was some publicity concerning possible uncertainty in this statute, the plaintiff and about five thousand taxpayers followed the unusual procedure of filing early.

Would it may he thought that these people were prompted by altruistic motives, anxious to get their taxes paid as early as possible and bear their share of supporting the state government. But no such conclusion is warranted. That this early filing was an irregular procedure, not authorized by law, in an effort to escape the effect of the increased tax rate is obvious. Perhaps this should be neither surprising, nor particularly censurable. We suppose most everyone would like to escape or ease the admittedly too heavy burden of taxes. But the matter of imposition of this tax is for the legislature. It is our duty to ascribe to it the correct motive of attempting to make the application of the tax fair and equal unless the language of the statute is clearly to the contrary. And where its language would permit of two possible applications, one will be chosen which makes it apply fairly and equally to all similarly situated rather than a construction which would render it unequal and discriminatory and therefore unconstitutional. 6 The latter would be the result of giving the plaintiff and other persons who filed before the end of the year the advantage of the old rates.

We decide as we have herein in awareness of another well known rule; that in case of uncertainty as to the'proper application of a tax statute it generally should be construed favorably to the taxpayer.

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Bluebook (online)
411 P.2d 831, 17 Utah 2d 337, 1966 Utah LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-state-tax-commission-utah-1966.