Read Phosphate Co. v. South Carolina Tax Commission

168 S.E. 722, 169 S.C. 314, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 1933
Docket13605
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 168 S.E. 722 (Read Phosphate Co. v. South Carolina Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Read Phosphate Co. v. South Carolina Tax Commission, 168 S.E. 722, 169 S.C. 314, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 102 (S.C. 1933).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The respondent, who is plaintiff in this action and will be so styled in this opinion, alleges in its complaint that it filed its income tax returns to the South Carolina Tax Commission, which is defendant in this action and shall be so called herein, for the years 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, and 1930, respectively, and paid the- income taxes in accordance with the said returns, which it avers were the correct amounts of taxes for which it was liable: That in 1931 the defendant made adjustments of plaintiff’s returns and payments of taxes, alleging errors in the returns, and underpayments of taxes in the aggregate sum of $2,894.21, and demanding payment thereof; the plaintiff paid under protest the amount thus demanded, and brings this action to recover it under the provisions of the Income Tax Act of 1926 (Code 1932, § 2435 et seq.)

The defendants for answer deny those things not specifically admitted, and set up that the rules and regulations applied in this instance to determine the true and lawful income taxes due by plaintiff for the years 1926 to 1930, inclusive, have been invariably applied by defendant to all *326 persons and corporations in like plight with plaintiff since the passage by the General Assembly of the Income Tax Law of 1922 up to the present time. There is set out in some detail the method by which defendant fixed the amounts of the taxes it alleges were due by plaintiff for the years 1926 to 1930, inclusive; which methods it alleges are in conformity with the provisions of the Income Tax Act of 1926.

By consent the case was heard by Judge Grimball, without a jury, and upon an agreed statement of facts. This statement contains an admission of the correctness of the formal allegations of the pleadings, the payment of taxes as alleged in the complaint, the readjustments made by defendant, the payment under protest of the additional amount of taxes; it is further agreed, for the purposes of this suit, that the value or costs of plaintiff’s property as of March 1, 1913, was $165,453.99, and of additions since that date, as set out in a table appended to the answer and printed in the transcript at page 5, upon the value or cost of property and additions the depreciation to determine the income tax of plaintiff was based.

The statement then proceeds in this wise:

“The question to be determined is whether the plaintiff is entitled to deduct from the income earned in 1926 through 1930 depreciation sustained in the years prior to 1921.
“Plaintiff contends that the value of its property on which depreciation should be based is its value as of January 1, 1921, arrived at by the agreed value or cost as of March 1, 1913, plus the additions made since that date through the year 1920, and that the total of those amounts represents the value on which annual depreciations at 9j^% should thereafter be made except on the additions made in each previous year * * *. That the above items constitute the value or cost on which depreciation should be commenced to be made from that date and allowed annually at the above rate until the assets are exhausted.
*327 “Defendants contend that depreciation should be computed annually on the original cost of the property from the date of acquisition, as reflected in the tabulation on page 5 of the answer, until the same is exhausted by the depreciation on the agreed cost. The defendants also contend that depreciation should be computed annually on the costs of additions and improvements from the date the same were made until the cost of the additions and improvements are exhausted by reason of such depreciation.”

Judge Grimball filed his decree July 23, 1932, upholding the contentions of plaintiff that the taxes collected by defendant as set forth in the complaint were illegally collected, and the South Carolina Tax Commission was ordered to issue its order to the State treasurer to refund said taxes to Read Phosphate Company, and that the State treasurer do thereupon make such refund.

From this decree appeal by defendant comes to this Court based upon eight exceptions, and a number of subdivisions of some of these exceptions. The decree of the Circuit Judge, the exceptions, and the arguments take a wide range and discuss matters which in our judgment are not necessary to be considered in determining the cardinal issue in the case.

As stated by both parties to .the appeal, this issue is : “Pías the plaintiff the right to deduct from income earned in 1926 through 1930 depreciation sustained in years prior to 1921 ?”

In 1922 the General Assembly passed its first income tax law (Income Tax Act of 1921 [32 St. at Large, p. 896]). Up to that time those liable therefor were paying to the federal government an income tax. The Income Tax Law of 1921 of South Carolina provided that the return for income taxes under that Act should be the same as that made to the federal government and the amount of the tax paid to the State should be one-third of the amount paid to the federal government.

*328 In the year 1927, the General Assembly passed another income tax law (Income Tax Act of 1926 [35 St. at Targe, p. 1]), which repealed the Act of 1921, and which required that the taxpayer make his own return, and provided how the tax should be assessed thereon. This case turns upon the proper interpretation of the Act of 1926.

Plaintiff’s contention, as already stated, is that the Act intended to fix the value of property and additions as of January 1, 1926, as the basis upon which deductions for depreciation should be made. But plaintiff states that, in a spirit of liberality, it is willing that deductions for depreciation should be taken to begin with the year 1921.

The defendant contends that the primary purpose of the Act of 1926 was to cut away from the requirement made by the Act of 1921 that the tax be based upon the federal return and to require the taxpayer to make his own return; that the Act does not intend nor undertake to fix 1926 or 1921 as a new starting point for the beginning of deductions for depreciations; and that the Act of 1926 never intended to change the rule that the assessment of the tax and deductions for depreciation are to be based upon the cost of the property at the time of acquisition, and of additions at the times they were made.

One readily understands the rationale of each contention when one understands and applies the theory upon which the plan of deduction for depreciation is founded.

The method of such application is stated in appellant’s argument as follows: “A reasonable rate of depreciation, depending on the kind or character of property, is deducted and such rate is applied on the cost beginning on the date of the cost, that is, the date of acquisition, on the original cost of the property, and it is applied on the costs of improvements and betterments beginning op the dates the improvements or betterments are made, and continued until the property so depreciated is, by lapse of time, exhausted, or until the cost of the property is recovered.”

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.E. 722, 169 S.C. 314, 1933 S.C. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-phosphate-co-v-south-carolina-tax-commission-sc-1933.