Natural Gas Pipe Line Co. of America v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation

125 P.2d 397, 155 Kan. 416, 140 A.L.R. 1341, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1942
DocketNo. 35,505
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 P.2d 397 (Natural Gas Pipe Line Co. of America v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Natural Gas Pipe Line Co. of America v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation, 125 P.2d 397, 155 Kan. 416, 140 A.L.R. 1341, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 114 (kan 1942).

Opinions

[417]*417The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment affirming an order of the state commission of revenue and taxation denying plaintiff’s claim to a deduction from its income tax assessment for 1937 a considerable sum of money which it paid as interest on that portion of its bonded indebtedness held by its stockholders.

The legal questions were developed by the pleadings and a lengthy stipulation of facts. Plaintiff is a Delaware corporation engaged in the transportation of natural gas to distributors and customers in Kansas and by pipe lines through Kansas into Nebraska, Iowa and Illinois. Its business is exclusively interstate. In 1938 it filed with the Kansas state tax commission a tentative income tax return for the calendar year 1937, and paid thereon $13,394.56" as the allegedly correct amount of the state income tax due on the Kansas allocation of its interstate business.

Sometime later plaintiff was notified by the state tax commission that there was an additional liability of $11,337.28 due the state of Kansas, predicated on an illegal deduction of the amount plaintiff had paid to its stockholders as interest on that part of its bonded debt held by them.

In correspondence between the commission and the taxpayer and on hearings before the commission the facts concerning the origin of that bonded debt were developed without dispute. It appears that plaintiff was organized in 1930 and granted a certificate to do business in Kansas the same year. The requisite money for acquiring rights of way, constructing its pipe lines and facilities, and acquiring leaseholds for an adequate supply of natural gas, and for miscellaneous expenditures incidental to the inception of its corporate business, was raised by the sale of 1,499,000 shares of no par value stock and by issuing promissory notes bearing 8-percent interest. The stockholders of the company furnished the money and received these notes which had an aggregate face value of $56,412,-236.88; and when interest thereon had accrued to the amount of $2,709,550.84, plaintiff issued to the stockholder-owners of the notes 1,499,000 additional shares of its treasury stock and $60,000,000 of its so-called gold bonds secured by a mortgage on its corporate properties. In exchange therefor the stockholder-owners of the 8-percent promissory notes surrendered them to the plaintiff.

[418]*418The stock of the plaintiff corporation is largely held by a group of affiliated corporations, and 73.36979 percent of the plaintiff’s bond issue is likewise held by them. The remainder of plaintiff’s outstanding bond issue, 26.63021 percent, is held by outside investors.

The question of present concern is whether the annual interest which plaintiff pays to its stockholder-owners of 73.36979 percent of its bond issue is a proper deduction in computing plaintiff’s proportionate net income attributable to its Kansas business under our state income tax statute. So far as here pertinent that statute reads:

“In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
“(1) All the ordinary and necessary expenses paid during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business;
“(2) All interest paid during the taxable year on indebtedness, except . . . interest paid to stockholders or shareholders, or members of their immediate families unless the interest was paid on money actually borrowed for ordinary expenditures for actually carrying on the business of the corporation; . .
(G. S. 1941 Supp. 79-3206.)

The pertinent administrative regulation promulgated by the state commission of revenue and'taxation states the same rule thus:

“Article 42: Interest. Interest paid to stockholders, 'shareholders, etc., is deductible only if the interest was paid on money actually borrowed for ordinary expenditures for actually carrying on the business of the corporation.
“Interest paid to stockholders or shareholders on money borrowed for current financing to supply the current working capital of the corporation is deductible. Interest paid to stockholders on money borrowed or used for capital expenditures to -supply the fixed assets or fixed capital of the corporation is not deductible.”

The trial court sustained the position taken by the defendant commission, and the controversy is brought here for review. Plaintiff makes two contentions, first, that the statute correctly construed authorizes the deduction of the interest paid to plaintiff’s stockholder-owners of 73.36979 percent of its bonded indebtedness; and second, if the statute correctly construed disallows such deduction in computing its net income attributable to plaintiff’s corporate business in Kansas it is unconstitutional under the fourteenth, amendment, and article XI, section 1, of the state constitution.

Plaintiff assails the position of the defendant commission and the trial court that the money originally borrowed by the corporation on its 8-percent promissory notes which were refinanced by its issue of gold bonds in exchange therefor was an expenditure of a capital nature. It asserts that it was simply “money actually borrowed for [419]*419ordinary expenditures for actually carrying on the business of the corporation” within the precise t'ext of the statute. In support of that contention counsel for plaintiff invite us to consider critically the term “expenditures” as it appears in the statute under discussion; and certain textbooks on auditing and accounting do appear to differentiate between the terms “expenditures” and “expenses.” We shall not cavil about such niceties, however, preferring as we do to rely on the time-tried authorities which have served us well in not dissimilar controversies. In Black’s Law Diet., 3d ed., 724; 15 Words & Phrases, Perm, ed., 673, 689; Webster’s New International Diet. 2d ed., and Soule’s Diet, of Synonyms, p. 197, the words “expenditures” and “expenses” are defined as synonymous terms. Both words mean an outlay of money and they will be so regarded in the case at bar. (Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co., 311 U. S. 435, 443, 444, 130 A. L. R. 1229, 1232, 1233.)

Touching the contention that the company’s original issue of 8-percent promissory notes which were refinanced into its 6-percent gold bonds was given for “money actually borrowed for ordinary expenditures for actually carrying on the business of the corporation,” we think that contention untenable. Money expended to set on foot the business of an interstate gas distributing company—its acquisition of rights of way, laying of pipe lines, construction of compressor stations, procuring large areas of gas-producing leaseholds, and all the miscellaneous expenditures incidental to the inception of the corporation as a going concern—are not ordinary expenditures of the corporation for which deduction is allowed in the income-tax statute. They are capital expenditures, which once made do not ordinarily recur. They do not have to be repeated from year to year as ordinary outlays of money for actually carrying on the business of the corporation.

In Black on Income and other Federal Taxes, 4th ed., section 138, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
125 P.2d 397, 155 Kan. 416, 140 A.L.R. 1341, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natural-gas-pipe-line-co-of-america-v-state-commission-of-revenue-kan-1942.