Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Department of Taxation

10 N.W.2d 176, 243 Wis. 224, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 102
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 176 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Department of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Department of Taxation, 10 N.W.2d 176, 243 Wis. 224, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 102 (Wis. 1943).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The facts are nqt in dispute. The main facts are stipulated. The validity of the privilege dividend tax law is conceded. Appellant is an Illinois'corporation, having its. principal office in Chicago, and during the period in question it conducted a general merchandising business in forty-seven states of the United States, including Wisconsin, being duly authorized to. transact such business.

Its business in Wisconsin consists of operating a number of retail general-merchandise stores. The cash receipts of each ' store, less such amounts as the local manager uses to pay certain local expenses, are deposited by him in a local bank. From time to time transfers are made from these local bank accounts to the corporation’s accounts in banks in various large and centrally located cities which are concentration accounts. From these concentration accounts transfers are made to other bank accounts of the corporation as its needs require. Dividend payments are made by drafts drawn upon the treasurer. They are paid as presented by the banks to whom they have' been indorsed and are met with such funds as the treasurer may have on hand at the time. The dividends are not paid by check drawn upon any particular bank account.

Separate accounts are kept of each store’s operations. There is no separate surplus account for each store. The appellant maintains a single surplus account to which -it credits all earn.ings, and against which all dividends paid are debited. There is no segregation of profits or earnings derived from property located and business transacted in Wisconsin appearing in the surplus account after certain profits or earnings have bepn credited to that account. There is no subdivision of th'e *226 single surplus account into separate accounts so that there is a separate one representing Wisconsin profits or surplus.

On October 25, 1935, the board of directors at a meeting in Chicago passed a resolution as follows :

“Resolyed, that a dividend on the Class A stock of this company is declared out of the profits of the company for the year to date exclusive of those derived from property located or business transacted in the state of Wisconsin in the amount of $1.75 a share payable January 2, 1936, to stockholders of record December 20, 1936 [1935].”

On January 2, 1936, appellant paid to its stockholders a dividend on Class A stock of $352,719.50 which was debited ta its surplus. Similar resolutions, containing same phraseology, were adopted and dividends were paid -by appellant on its Class A stock or its common stock in varying amounts per share and debited to its surplus as follows :

Date of Resolution Date of Payment Class of Stock Total ' Dividend
Jan. 24, 1936 April 1, 1936 Class A £ 352,719.50
Feb. 28, 1936 April 15, 1936 Com. 913,000.80
May 21, 1936 July 1, 1936 Class A 352,719.50
May 21, 1936 July 15, 1936 Com. 913,000.80
July 24, 1936 Oct. 1, 1936 Class A 352,719.50
July 24, 1936 Oct. 15, 1936 Com. 913,000.80
Nov. 24, 1936 Jan. 2, 1937 Class A 352,719.50
Nov. 24, 1936 Jan. 15, 1937 Com. 2,282,502.00
Nov. 24, 1936 Jan. 15, 1937 Com. 13,238,511.60
Feb. 26, 1937 April 1, 1937 Class A 352,719.50
Feb. 26, 1937 April 15,1937 Com. 2,598,660.00
May 28, 1937 July 1, 1937 Class A 352,719.50
May 28, 1937 July 15, 1937 Com. 2,605,984.00
July 30, 1937 Oct. 1, 1937 Class A 352,719.50
July 30, 1937 Oct. 15, 1937 Com. 2,608,567.00
Nov. 26,1937 Jan. 3, 1938 Class A 352,719.50
Nov. 26, 1937 Jan. 15, 1938 Com. 2,608,573.80
Feb. 25, 1938 April 1, 1938 Class A 352,719.50
Feb. 25, 1938 April 15,1938 Com. 2,608,573.50
May 24, 1938 May 24, 1938 July 1, 1938 July 15, 1938 Class A Com. 352,719.50 1,304,286.75
Aug. 26, 1938 Aug. 26,1938 Oct. 1, 1938 Oct. 15, 1938 Class A Com. 352,719.50 1,304,286.75

*227 Appellant did not report or pay any privilege dividend taxes for the years in question. On December 3, 1938, after a field audit, the Wisconsin tax commission gave appellant notice of the assessment of taxes in the sum of $21,638.34, exclusive of penalties and interest. This assessment covered the period to August 26, 1938. Thereafter, following the decision in 7. C. Penney Co. v. Tax Comm. (194,1) 238 Wis. 69, 298 N. W. 186, a recomputation of the taxes was made to conform with the decision in that case and to include the period from August 26 to October 15, 1938. On this recomputation an assessment in the sum of $14,813.93 was made against appellant, exclusive of penalties and interest. The taxes were computed by analyzing appellant’s surplus and taxing the same proportion of each dividend as the amount of surplus attributable to Wisconsin bore to the total surplus.

Between September 26, 1935, and October 15, 1938, appellant declared and paid to its stockholders dividends in the amount of $38,131,581.50. All of these dividends were declared by its board of directors meeting in Chicago and each dividend resolution contained substantially the language of the resolution quoted above. The appellant does not question the method or accuracy of the computation of the taxes. It seeks to avoid the tax by specifying in its dividend resolutions that dividends shall be declared and paid out of the profits “of the company . . . exclusive of those derived from property located and business transacted in the state of Wisconsin.”

In the Penney Case, supra, page 78, this court said:

“When the corporation declared its dividends in 1936, it drew upon its net assets in excess of its capital (surplus) as required by the law of Delaware. Its net profits for the year 1935 are to be found in its surplus at the end of the calendar year. When the company drew upon this surplus for the payment of the dividend declared, it did not draw upon 1935 income but on its entire surplus. It must be presumed, however, that when it drew upon the surplus which contained *228 Wisconsin income, it drew upon Wisconsin income to the extent of the proportion which Wisconsin income bore not to the income for the year 1935 but to the whole amount of the surplus.”

In the case of International H. Co. v. Department of Taxa tion, ante, p. 198, 10 N. W. (2d) 169, referring to the above statement from the Penney Case, supra, the court said (p. 209) :

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10 N.W.2d 176, 243 Wis. 224, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-department-of-taxation-wis-1943.