Old Colony Railroad v. Commissioner

284 U.S. 552, 52 S. Ct. 211, 76 L. Ed. 484, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 894, 1932 C.B. 274, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 786, 3 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 880
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1932
Docket349
StatusPublished
Cited by575 cases

This text of 284 U.S. 552 (Old Colony Railroad v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Colony Railroad v. Commissioner, 284 U.S. 552, 52 S. Ct. 211, 76 L. Ed. 484, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 894, 1932 C.B. 274, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 786, 3 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 880 (1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Revenue Act of 1921 defines gross income as including gains, profits and income derived by the taxpayer from any source whatever, and provides that in computing net income of a corporation “all interest paid or accrued within the taxable year on its indebtedness ” is deductible from such gross income. Treasury regulations promulgated under authority of the statute state that if *555 bonds are issued by a corporation at a premium the net amount of such premium is gain or income which should be amortized over the life of the bonds. 1

In making return for 1921 the Old Colony Railroad Company deducted from gross income the full amount paid during the year as interest to holders of its bonds. These had been issued at various dates between 1895 and 1904 and the subscribers had taken them at prices in excess óf par. The total of the premiums thus paid the company was $199,528.08. At the dates of issuance of the bonds, and until 1914, the company kept its accounts on a cash basis and credited the sums so received in an account designated “ Premium on Bonds.” In the last named year the Interstate Commerce Commission ordered that they should be amortized over the periods of the respective lives of the bonds. The company complied under protest, extinguished by appropriate entries the ratable proportion of the premiums for the years prior to 1914, and thereafter reported to the Commission as income a yearly ratable proportion of the remainder of the premiums, but entered' the same on its books in the profit and loss account (a surplus account) and not as income. The proportion of the premiums attributable to 1921 and reported to the Commission as income for that year was $6,960.64, but the company did not in its tax return include this figure in gross income or deduct it from the amount of interest paid on its bonds. 2 The Commis *556 sioner, in his audit of the return, made no adjustment in the item of interest paid, but added the sum of $6,960.64 to the company’s gross income for 1921. and found a resulting deficiency in the amount of tax. Upon a petition for redetermination the Board of Tax Appeals held that the Commissioner erred in treating this amount as taxable income of the year in question. 3

The Commissioner asked reconsideration, asserting that the mere form of the calculation by which he arrived at a redetermination of the tax was immaterial and that the result was correct since the year’s proportion of amortization of bond premiums was in reality a deduction from the stipulated interest paid the bondholders. The Board adhered to its ruling. 4 ' The Circuit Court of Appeals adopted the Commissioner’s view and reversed the Board. 5 The court distinguished its earlier decision in *557 Commissioner v. Old Colony R. Co., supra, note 3, stating that its attention had not been called to the fact that the profit made in the years prior to 1913 was not being taxed, but was used only to determine the expense of the payment of interest on the bonds for the year 1921. • We granted certiorari.

The regulations state that the net amount of premium is gain or income. Necessarily, then, the premium is gain or income of the year in which it is received. The provisions of the Revenue Acts of 1918, 1921, 1924 and 1926 are the same as respects gross income of corporations and deductions therefrom. The regulations under the relevant sections of the acts of 1918, 1924 and 1926' employ substantially ,the same phraseology as that found in those issued under the 1921 Act. 6 The repeated reenactment of a statute without substantial change may amount to an implied legislative approval of a construction placed upon it by executive officers. National Lead Co. v. United States, 252 U. S. 140; United States v. Farrar, 281 U. S. 624; Poe v. Seaborn, 282 U. S. 101, 116.

There is no ambiguity in the language of the regulation, which defines a bond premium as income. As a corollary from this definition it follows that the petitioner received the income represented by the premiums here involved prior to the adoption of the Sixteenth Amendment, for these premiums could not be income for any other year ■ than that in which they were received. That income had become capital prior to the adoption of the Amendment and could not be reached by a subsequent income tax act. This conclusion is not affected by the provision of the • regulation, which allows the proration or amortization of this item over the life of the bonds, and extends to the taxpayer the privilege of treating the. premium as income *558 received in instalments instead of in a lump sum in the year of its receipt.

Nor does the fact that the regulation thus ameliorates the burden of the taxpayer authorize the use of the grant to convert income of years prior to the effective date of the Sixteenth Amendment into income assumed to have, been received thereafter.' The amortization requirement may properly be applied to premiums paid subsequent to March 1, 1913, but cannot operate to contradict the definition of a premium as gain or income.

The Government, however, insists that nothwithstanding the regulation’s designation of a premium paid by the subscriber to corporate bonds as income it is not such to the corporation, but 'is in the nature of capital loaned which must be returned to the lender during the life of the bonds. Reference is made to the practice of bond buyers in determining the amount they will- bid. It is said that a purchaser, in arriving at. the price he is willing to pay for a bond, has regard to the current rate of interest for money, and if the bond bears a stipulated rate in excess of the ruling rate he will pay a premium. He does this although he knows that at maturity he can only receive the par of the bond, but considers that he will be repaid the premium by the excess of the agreed rate of interest over the rate he is content to receive; On the other hand, where the stipulated interest is less than the going rate bond buyers will bid less than the par of the bond by such amount as is necessary to redress the difference between the agreed rate of interest and the going rate which the subscriber demands. The conclusion is that the actual return to one who pays a premium is less than the nominal interest carried by the bond, and to one who buys at a discount is greater than such nominal rate.. The argument is that although the regulations are inaptly phrased and are susceptible of the construction petitioner places upon them their real intent was to adjust the nomi *559

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Bluebook (online)
284 U.S. 552, 52 S. Ct. 211, 76 L. Ed. 484, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 894, 1932 C.B. 274, 10 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 786, 3 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-colony-railroad-v-commissioner-scotus-1932.