Norton v. State Board of Tax Appeals

45 A.2d 799, 134 N.J.L. 57, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 799 (Norton v. State Board of Tax Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. State Board of Tax Appeals, 45 A.2d 799, 134 N.J.L. 57, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 143 (N.J. 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Oliphant, J.

This is an appeal from a rule entered by the Supreme Court on certiorari, setting aside a judgment of the State Board of Tax Appeals which confirmed the franchise excise tax assessment made by the State Tax Commissioner against property of the respondent for the year 1943.

A rule was entered in the Supreme Court permitting the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company and the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company to intervene as amici curice, to participate in the argument and to file briefs.

The tax levied on railroad property had been for years continuously in litigation and large amounts of these taxes were in default. In 1941 a new method of taxing such property was enacted, Pamph. L. 1941, ch. 291. This act was amended the following year by Pamph. L. 1942, ch. 169 (R. S. 54:29A-1, et seq.). These laws in substance, provide a combination property tax and franchise excise tax computed in a given year on the basis of the net operating income of a railroad system for the preceding calendar year. As to the year 1941 the laws were held unconstitutional by the Supreme *59 Court in Jersey City v. Board of Tax Appeals et al., 133 N. J. L. 202, but constitutional as regards assessments made for 1942 and thereafter.

The new system was devised to provide some measure of tax relief for the railroads in poor earning years while providing for a greater return to the state in times of high earnings. That the new method does result in substantial reductions under certain conditions is brought out strikingly in Jersey City v. Slate Board, supra. With the result in that case, which is presently on appeal, we are not immediately concerned.

By the law under consideration a rate of three per centum is levied on all property used for railroad purposes and an annual excise tax is also levied for the railroads’ privilege of exercising their respective franchise.

The pertinent part of the statute under which the assessment of the franchise tax in question was made, Pamph. L. 1942, ch. 169, § 14, provides:

“For the purpose of this section, net railway operating income shall be computed as total railway operating revenues from all sources, including any revenue whatever derived directly or indirectly from property which is used for railroad purposes, less costs of railroad maintenance, operation and depreciation, railway tax accruals, uncollectible railway revenues, rentals (both debits and credits) for equipment leased for less than one year or interchanged, and joint facility rents (both debits and credits), and the amount remaining shall constitute the net railway operating income hereinafter mentioned. Deductions from operating revenues for depreciation, additions and betterments, and compensation for personal services shall be subject to regulation by the commissioner, as to reasonableness of amount and appropriateness of accounting distribution. Depreciation charges shall in no insta,nee, h owever, exceed the amount claimed by the railroad for depreciation in its report or reports to the Interstate Commerce Commission and fixed, or if none was claimed then as fixed, by the Interstate Commerce Commission in determining the net railway operating income of the railroad for the year ■under consideration.” (Italics added.)

*60 The omitted remainder of the section has no bearing on this controversy.

The State Tax Commissioner found the net operating income of respondent for the year ending October 31st, 1942, to be $916,411, which was the amount reported by it to the Interstate Commerce Commission and accepted as such by it. Before the Tax Commissioner the railroad claimed the right to deduct $75,366.92 for depreciation and $198,679 for tax accruals and sought to have fixed as its net operating income the sum of $642,363.67. This claim was denied and an appeal to the State Board of Tax Appeals was dismissed. On certiorari the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the State Board of Tax Appeals and held that both the item for depreciation and that with respect to tax accruals should have been allowed. As to the former it held that the railroad in its report to the Interstate Commerce Commission did not claim any deduction for depreciation on ways and structures so none was or could be fixed within the meaning of the statute, and that not being fixed there was no standard limiting the amount claimed by the prosecutor in its return to the state. As to the latter it held that the date when the tax liability became known rather than when the assessments were made governs in ascertaining the amount of net operating income on which to assess the tax; that within the meaning of the. statute railroad tax accruals are defined as when the'validity of the assessments in dispute are finally determined rather than the year when levied. In this holding both as to depreciation and tax accrual items there was error.

As hereinbefore set forth section 14 of chapter 291, laws of 1941 was amended by chapter 169, laws of 1942. The language as used in the amendment section 14, chapter 169, laws of 1942 wa.s added to paragraph 2 of section 14, of the 1941 act, and retained the recital of items entering into net railway operating income. The plain and cogent reason for this language was to set a ceiling on depreciation items. That ceiling is the amount of the item claimed in a railroad’s “net railway operating income” report to the Interstate Commerce Commission, or if none is so claimed then as fixed by that Commission. If such items appear in the report, or none *61 appearing are fixed by it, then the Tax Commissioner is under a positive duty to determine their reasonableness and the appropriateness of the accounting distribution. This last duty together with the ceiling on deductions established by the amendment provides a standard for safeguarding the revenues of the state.

It is admitted that respondent did not include this $75,366.92 for depreciation in its 1942 report to the Interstate Commerce Commission, although some items of depreciation were claimed therein. It is also true that if the charges had been included in the Interstate Commerce Commission report and allowed by it they would have been allowed by the Tax Commissioner, but, not having been claimed he rightly did not do so.

We are of the opinion that the statute, in a determination of net operating income of a railroad for a given year, limits any deduction for “depreciation” to such as is claimed in its report to the Interstate Commerce Commission and, if none is claimed, to such as fixed by that Commission. If none is claimed or fixed none can be allowed by the Tax Commissioner, and if any items of “depreciation” are claimed or fixed the Commissioner is enjoined to determine their reasonableness and appropriateness as to accounting distribution which, in any event, cannot be above the amount claimed or fixed.

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Related

In the Matter of Appeals of Port Murray Dairy Co.
71 A.2d 208 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)
Delaware, L. W.R. Co. v. Division of Tax A.
64 A.2d 881 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 799, 134 N.J.L. 57, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-state-board-of-tax-appeals-nj-1946.