Northern Liberties Gas Co. v. United Gas Improvement Co.

35 A.2d 284, 348 Pa. 433, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 359
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1943
DocketAppeal, 216
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 284 (Northern Liberties Gas Co. v. United Gas Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Liberties Gas Co. v. United Gas Improvement Co., 35 A.2d 284, 348 Pa. 433, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 359 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

It is well established that a lessee will not be held liable for his lessor’s taxes unless the obligation is stated in “clear and specific terms:” Catawissa R. R. Co. v. Phila. & Reading Ry. Co., 255 Pa. 269, 271, 99 A. 807, and cases following it. A “covenant by a lessee to pay the income taxes of the iessor is not within the terms of the contracts unless the obligation is clearly and directly specified.” U. S. v. Warren Ry. Co., 127 F. 2d 134, 136 (C. C. A. 2d, 1942). “Unless the lease expressly provides for the payment of taxes on the income from rentals received under the lease, the imposition of such a burden on the lessee is not justified.” Brainard v. N. Y. C. R. R., *435 242 N. Y. 125, 132, 151 N. E. 152; see also, Young v. Illinois Athletic Club, 310 Ill. 75, 141 N. E. 369; Boston & Providence R. R. v. Old Colony R. R., 269 Mass. 190, 195, 169 N. E. 157; Illinois Central R. R. Co. v. Indianapolis Union Ry., 6 E. 2d 830, 836 (C. C. A. 7th, 1925). The application of that principle requires affirmance of the judgment.

The suit is by Northern Liberties Gas Company against United Gas Improvement Company and The Philadelphia Gas Works Company to recover $3,698.13 with interest from September 15, 1942, being an instalment of federal income and excess profits tax on that day paid by Northern Liberties Gas Company for 1941. Plaintiff alleges that the defendants had agreed to pay the tax, had defaulted, and were therefore obligated to reimburse plaintiff. There is no dispute of fact.

The first instrument executed by Northern Liberties and United Gas is dated July 2,1900. Northern Liberties was then engaged in the business of operating its gas manufacturing plant and distributing its product through its mains and pipes in a certain section of the city. The contract recited that Northern Liberties desired “to avail itself of the capital, skill, and experience of [United Gas] in the conduct of its business.” The parties agreed that United Gas should be employed as the Northern Liberties Company’s “agent to conduct and carry on its business and accomplish the purposes of” its charter. United Gas agreed “to take possession of and to operate for it . . . its gas works . . . with its mains, pipes, and all and singular the appurtenances, rights, privileges, and appliances belonging thereto, and all its corporate property, real and personal, and to manufacture, distribute, and sell gas, and to collect moneys therefor, for the full term of ninety-nine years from the 30th day of June, 1900.” It agreed “to perform said services for and during the term aforesaid, and to pay from the receipts of the said business to be carried on by it as aforesaid to [Northern Liberties], the sum of thirty- *436 eight thousand dollars ($38,000) per annum in [specified installments] and also to provide and furnish the [Northern Liberties] the money required to pay and discharge all taxes and assessments in the nature thereof, whether federal, state, or municipal, of whatsoever kind or nature which may at any time hereafter be imposed upon said property, and also all taxes which the said Northern Liberties Gas Company may be compelled to pay at any time hereafter during the continuance of this contract upon its capital stock or business of any kind or in any manner. . . and also to pay to said [Northern Liberties] the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.) per annum, . . . for the expenses of maintenance of the organization of [Northern Liberties]. And [United Gas] further agrees, in consideration of said employment for said term, that if said receipts should be less than the amount required to make said payments . . . then that it will, from its own moneys and irrespective of the receipts from the said business thereupon make up, furnish, and pay the amount requisite to cover said deficiency . . . [United Gas] hereby guaranteeing and assuming the payment of said thirty-eight thousand dollars ($38,000.) per annum, and said sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.) per annum for said expenses of organization, and said taxes and assessments in each and every year, irrespective of the receipts, and covenanting hereby to pay the same.”

For its compensation, United Gas became “entitled to appropriate to its own benefit all moneys which it shall receive from said business during said term . . . subject to the payment by [United Gas] to or for the account of [Northern Liberties] of the various sums of money specified” above. It agreed to pay the cost “of maintenance and operation of plant, manufacture and sale of products, purchase of supplies, extension of street mains, services, street lamps, additions and renewals of apparatus, improvement of plant, and every other item of expense of like character hereafter incurred . . .”

*437 Northern Liberties agreed to “pay all its debts, except as herein provided, and that during the term of this contract it will do all needful acts to maintain its corporate existence and its franchises; . . .”

At the end of the “term . . . [United Gas] shall return to [Northern Liberties] all the property, real and personal, possession whereof shall be given to it under this contract, in the same good order and condition as when received, except in so far as the same may have been changed, removed, replaced, or altered under this agreement . . .” and additions, etc., paid for by United Gas “shall be the property of [Northern Liberties] at the termination of this contract without repayment.”

By an instrument dated May 14, 1937, Northern Liberties consented to an agreement made by United Gas and The Philadelphia Gas Worts Company, and agreed that . . Philadelphia Gas shall be the agent of Northern Liberties, in place of United Gas.” This agreement provided: “United Gas guarantees full performance by Philadelphia Gas of all its obligations under the said Agreement (Exhibit A hereto) and further guarantees the full payment to Northern Liberties of the annual sums, taxes and assessments specified in Section ‘Second’ of said July 2, 1900 contract irrespective of the receipts from the Northern Liberties business.”

Very briefly stated, what happened was that Northern Liberties turned over its plant and business to United Gas for a 99-year term on United’s promise to maintain and operate it and pay the specified taxes and $39,000 a year to Northern Liberties, retaining the surplus receipts, if any.

United Gas and Philadelphia Gas paid the income and excess profits tax assessable against Northern Liberties until June 13, 1942, when they gave notice that they had been advised they “. . . were under no obligation, under the agreement dated July 2, 1900, to pay your Federal Income Tax, your Federal Corporation Excess Profits Tax and your Pennsylvania Corporate Net *438 Income Tax,” and that they would not pay the installment payable September 15, 1942. This suit followed.

It is unnecessary, for present purposes, to characterize the relations of the parties as similar to those of lessor and lessee, or otherwise, because, in any view, the covenant transferring tax liability from the party normally liable to another must be construed in the light of the familiar rule stated above.

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 284, 348 Pa. 433, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-liberties-gas-co-v-united-gas-improvement-co-pa-1943.