Orr v. Hoehn

182 S.W.2d 596, 353 Mo. 426, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1944
DocketNo. 38988.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 596 (Orr v. Hoehn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orr v. Hoehn, 182 S.W.2d 596, 353 Mo. 426, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 452 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

[1] This is an action under Sec. 11366, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 11366, to abate an assessment of an additional state income tax. The additional assessment of $17.80 was made by the assessor of St. Louis in [597] 1939, under Sec. 11363, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 11363. The trial court denied abatement and plaintiff appealed. The State Auditor is a party defendant, and jurisdiction of the appeal is in the supreme court because a state officer is a party, and also because the construction of the revenue laws [Sec. 11350, R.S. 1939] is involved. See Constitution, Art. 6, Sec. 12. *Page 428 Unless otherwise appearing, all references herein to statutes are to our 1939 Revised Statutes, and to Mo. R.S.A.

[2] Included in plaintiff's 1939 income and shown in his return was $1100 received from the St. Louis Union Trust Company as a dividend earned by the Trust Company in 1938, upon stock of said Trust Company owned by plaintiff. Sec. 11343, subdivisionsecond, fixes the corporation (The Trust Company) income tax rate at 2%. From the amount of income tax payable, as shown by his 1939 return absent any tax deduction, plaintiff deducted $22; that is, he deducted 2% of the $1100 received as dividend on said Trust Company stock. This deduction was made on the theory that the Trust Company, in 1938, had paid all the state income tax assessable against its 1938 income from which came the dividend received by plaintiff and that such deduction was authorized by Sec. 11350, when read in connection with Secs. 11343 and 11345. Plaintiff says that "the three sections are correlated and interdependent", that is, in pari materia. Defendants, however, contend that the Trust Company paid only 19.105% of the 2% on the $1100, or $4.20, hence the additional assessment of $17.80, and for such contention, defendants rely upon Sec. 11350.

The Trust Company, in its 1938 state income tax return, placed its taxable net income at $127,005.02 and paid 2% thereon, but the State Auditor, after an audit, placed the Trust Company's net income for 1938 at $664,750.43, and defendants contend that, regardless of whether or not the income that went to make up thedifference between $664,750.43 and $127,005.02 is taxable against the Trust Company, the whole of the $1100 dividend income to plaintiff derived from the total net income of the Trust Company, is taxable against him at the corporate rate of 2%, less whatever part of that 2% was actually paid by the Trust Company. The $127,005.02, the taxable net income of the Trust Company, is 19.105% of $664,750.43, net income of the Trust Company as determined by the State Auditor, hence the reason for the claim by the defendants that only 19.105% of the 2% state income tax on the $1100 dividend was paid by the Trust Company.

As appears, supra, the net income of the Trust Company for 1938, according to the State Auditor, was $664,750.43, while thetaxable net income as shown by the Trust Company's return was $127,005.02. The difference is $537,745.41. This difference is made up of the following:

(1) Dividends on stock, owned by the Trust Company, of First National Bank, St. Louis ................... $393,437.28 (2) By treating a certain transaction as a profit of $3,828.77, when, according to plaintiff, it should have been treated as a loss of $2,455.50 ............ 6,284.27

*Page 429

(3) Interest on Missouri and United States obligations and what is termed book profits in security accounts, all amounting to .................................... 116,775.41 (4) Amount of dividend due the Trust Company, but retained by St. Louis Realty Securities Co., which last named company was a subsidiary of and owned by the Trust Company ................................ 21,248.45 ___________ Total ............................................... $537,745.41

As to the Trust Company, the dividends received by it from the First National Bank on the bank stock owned by the Trust Company were not taxable as income to the Trust Company. See Sec. 10960. As to whether the $6,284.27 item was a profit depended on the facts relative thereto. The State Auditor treated it as a profit. The $116,775.41, as indicated in (3), supra, is made up, as we infer, of interest on Missouri and United States obligations, and of what is termed, according to plaintiff, mere book profits in security accounts. The interest on Missouri obligations was $1,442.71, and on United States obligations, $14,632.57. The interest items were not taxable income as to the Trust Company. See Sec. 11348. In the brief, plaintiff says that the State Auditor arrived at the $116,775.41 "by totally disregarding items properly includable in income or deductible from [598] income because such items were charged or credited direct to the profit and loss account and were not itemized in the accounts appearing in the annual report of operation which Mr. Allen (who made the audit) used in part for making his determination." So it would seem that the interest on the Missouri and United States obligations, according to plaintiff, is not included in the $116,775.41, as indicated, supra, in (3), but reasoning by a process of elimination, we can find no other place for it. However, the question is not important, as we shall presently see, nor is it important to determine as to the $6,284.27 item.

As indicated in (4) the Trust Company owned the stock of the St. Louis Realty Securities Company, and the $21,248.45 item was a dividend declared by that company, but not turned over to the Trust Company. Sec. 11345 provides that "dividends on corporate stock owned by another corporation shall not be income of the corporation receiving such dividends where the corporation declaring the dividend has paid its tax to this state on the portion of its income subject to tax by this state." There was evidence that the St. Louis Realty Securities Company paid the state income tax on the dividend retained by it, and there was no evidence to the contrary. Hence, it appears that the dividend on the bank stock, the interest on the Missouri and United States obligations, and the dividend on the St. Louis Realty Securities Company stock did not constitute taxable income as to the Trust Company. However, the question as to whether all these *Page 430 items going to make up the $537,745.41 were or were not in fact taxable income to the Trust Company is not important because the question for decision is whether nontaxable income to the Trust Company retains its nontaxable status when distributed to the stockholders. Defendants (respondents) in the brief, say:

"Respondents have not and do not contend, but in fact consider (concede) that the items complained of by appellant are not subject to corporation income tax of the distributing company (Trust Company) in Missouri, but do assert that there is no reason under our statutes why such exemption should carry on and inure to the benefit of the company (Trust Company) stockholders when such stockholders receive dividends."

Plaintiff is not complaining about paying the $17.80. His purpose is to obtain a construction of Sec. 11350. Hence, we shall assume that 80.895% of plaintiff's $1100 dividend was derived from income to the Trust Company that was nontaxable as to the Trust Company. So assuming, it is mathematically correct to say that the state received as income tax on the $1100 dividend received by plaintiff, only 19.105% of the 2%, that is, 19.105% of the $22, or $4.20. Should plaintiff pay the remaining $17.80? Defendants say he should and, as stated, rely on Sec. 11350. On the other hand, plaintiff says he should not be so required, and as stated, relies on said Sec.

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182 S.W.2d 596, 353 Mo. 426, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orr-v-hoehn-mo-1944.