Lloyd v. Director of Revenue

851 S.W.2d 519, 1993 Mo. LEXIS 40, 1993 WL 122270
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 20, 1993
DocketNo. 75179
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 851 S.W.2d 519 (Lloyd v. Director of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lloyd v. Director of Revenue, 851 S.W.2d 519, 1993 Mo. LEXIS 40, 1993 WL 122270 (Mo. 1993).

Opinions

HOLSTEIN, Judge.

In 1987, 1988 and 1989 Harry J. Lloyd and Patricia A. Lloyd filed Missouri individual income tax returns in which they apportioned income taxable to them as a result of the activity of five S corporations.1 Following a 1990 audit of those tax returns, the apportionment was disallowed and a notice of deficiency was issued. The Lloyds protested the director of revenue’s decision, but to no avail. The Lloyds then deposited the deficiency with the director and sought review of the decision before the circuit court of Cole County. § 143.-841.5, RSMo Supp.1992.2 The Lloyds appealed the circuit court’s denial of relief. This Court has jurisdiction of the appeal because the case involves the construction of revenue laws. Mo. Const, art. V, § 3. The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part.

The Lloyds moved to Missouri in 1987 and have been residents here since that time. They claim that a primary purpose for their move here was their reading of Missouri’s apportionment law and their perception that they would have lower state income taxes in Missouri. As they understood §§ 143.441 and 143.451, every corporation, including S corporations, had the right to apportion income if part of the corporate income was from non-Missouri sources. The income of their corporations had been attributable to sources both in Missouri and elsewhere. They argue here that (1) they had both a constitutional and statutory right to reduce their individual income by an apportionment formula based upon income from S corporations attributable to non-Missouri sources, (2) the court should not apply any decision to deny the apportionment of S corporation income in prior tax years, and (3) the assessment of penalties is not justified under § 143.751.

I.

In Wolff v. Director of Revenue, 791 S.W.2d 390 (Mo. banc 1990), this Court decided the precise issue presented in the first point adversely to the Lloyds. There, four resident shareholders of an S corporation sought refunds for taxes paid on undistributed income of an S corporation. The Court reviewed the language of §§ 143.411, 143.451, and 143.471. It concluded that an S corporation is treated as a partnership for income tax purposes, not as [521]*521a corporation. The net income of a partnership is treated as income of the individual partners. Missouri’s policy is to tax the entire income of individuals, subject to credit for income tax paid to other states. However, Missouri has opted for a different policy on taxing corporations, taxing only income attributable to Missouri. The apportionment provisions of § 143.451.2 are only designed to apply to corporate taxpayers. S corporations are exempted from corporate income taxes. § 143.471.1. “It follows that there is to be no apportionment of income of resident S shareholders, just as there is no apportionment of income of resident partners.” 791 S.W.2d at 392.

A.

Nevertheless, the Lloyds argue that the plain and ordinary meaning of § 143.-441.1 defines corporation as “every corporation” and includes S corporations. They further argue that § 143.451.2 gives every corporation, including S corporations, the right to apportion income. However, the argument fails to take into account the real question in this case; that is, whether individual shareholders of an S corporation are entitled to apportion individual income tax to the extent that those shareholders have income from an S corporation doing business in interstate commerce.

Sections 143.441.1 and 143.451, read in isolation, are not so unambiguous as to not require looking at them in pari materia with surrounding sections enacted at the same time. A plain meaning argument focusing solely on those two sections must fail.

Section 143.451 provides in part:

1. Missouri taxable income of a corporation shall include all income derived from sources within Missouri.
2. A corporation described in subdivision (1) of subsection 1 of section 143.441 shall include in its Missouri taxable income all income from sources within this state. (Emphasis added).

The statute goes on to describe the single factor formula for apportioning “interstate income of a corporation having Missouri taxable income.” (Emphasis added). The “Missouri taxable income of a corporation is not defined in §§ 143.441 or 143.451. One must look elsewhere in the statutes to determine all of the elements of a corporation’s Missouri taxable income of which the apportionment formula is only a part.

Section 143.431 provides the entire formula for calculating Missouri taxable income of a corporation. It provides that “income of a corporation taxable under sections 143.011 to 143.996 shall be so much of its federal taxable income [for a given year] ... as is derived from sources within Missouri as provided in § 143.451.” (Emphasis added). Thus, § 143.451 is only part of the total formula for determining Missouri taxable income of a corporation. The statute which provides the entire formula, § 143.431, only applies to a “corporation taxable under sections 143.011 to 143.-996.” S corporations are exempt from the Missouri corporate income tax. § 143.-471.1. Reading §§ 143.441.1 and 143.451.2 in conjunction with §§ 143.431 and 143.471 removes all doubt as to whether S corporations fall within the category of a “corporation having Missouri taxable income.” Because S corporations are not corporations taxable under chapter 143, they are not entitled to apportionment.

In addition, Missouri resident shareholders are not entitled to apportion their individual income. As stated in Wolff, nothing in the statutes gives individual taxpayers who are shareholders of S corporations the right to apportion the income attributable to them as a result of the activities of S corporations.

B.

Appellants also argue that the legislative history confirms that S corporations have a right to apportion. Again, the critical question here is whether individuals to whom income is attributable due to the activity of an S corporation have a right to apportion that individual income based on the non-Missouri sources of the corporation’s income. The legislative history cited by the appellants fails to disclose any compelling evidence that the legislature meant something different than what is disclosed [522]*522by a contextual reading of the statutory language previously noted. Because the meaning of the statutes is made clear by reading all the statutes in context, there is no need to look to legislative history for further illumination.

Even assuming one resorts to the legislative history advanced by the appellants, the conclusion is the same. Before enactment of § 143.471, every corporation’s income was subject to the same Missouri corporation income tax. §§ 143.030 and 143.040, RSMo 1969. Both S and C corporations were entitled to apportion income under the single factor formula. In 1967 the three factor apportionment formula became permissible when Missouri adopted the Multi-state Tax Compact. See § 32.200. Because S corporations were then “subject to an income tax” by Missouri, they were given the benefit of apportionment under either formula. In 1972 S.B. 549 codified the current version of § 143.431 and the single factor formula in § 143.451. At the same time, S corporations were exempted from Missouri income tax by § 143.471.

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Bluebook (online)
851 S.W.2d 519, 1993 Mo. LEXIS 40, 1993 WL 122270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lloyd-v-director-of-revenue-mo-1993.