Roger Dean Enterprises, Inc. v. Department of Rev.
This text of 371 So. 2d 101 (Roger Dean Enterprises, Inc. v. Department of Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ROGER DEAN ENTERPRISES, INC., Petitioner,
v.
The DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE of the State of Florida, Respondent.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*102 David S. Meisel of Rogers & Meisel, Palm Beach, for petitioner.
Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and E. Wilson Crump, II, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for respondent.
DOWNEY, Chief Judge.
By Petition for Writ of Certiorari we have for review an order constituting final agency action of the State Department of Revenue upholding the assessment of delinquent corporate income taxes against petitioner for the years 1972-1973.
The parties have stipulated as to the facts:[1]
"Petitioner is a West Virginia corporation, organized under the laws of that state on January 4, 1958. Prior to June 1, 1962, it operated an automobile dealership in Huntington, West Virginia. On June 1, 1962, it exchanged the assets of its automobile dealership for fifty (50%) percent of the capital stock of Dutch Miller Chevrolet, Inc., a West Virginia corporation organized to succeed to the automobile dealership formerly operated by the Petitioner. Prior to this, in 1961, the Petitioner had acquired one hundred (100%) percent of the capital stock in Palm Beach Motors (the name of which *103 was changed on August 10, 1961 to Roger Dean Chevrolet, Inc.). Roger Dean Chevrolet, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Petitioner which operates on property owned by the Petitioner. The years involved herein are the fiscal years of the Petitioner ended December 31, 1972 and 1973, during which years the Petitioner's principal income (except for the gain involved herein) consisted of rents received from Roger Dean Chevrolet, Inc. Petitioner and its subsidiary filed consolidated returns for the years involved herein. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 1972,[2] Petitioner sold its stock in Dutch Miller Chevrolet, Inc. to an unrelated third party for a gain determined by the Respondent to be in the amount of $349,217.00, which, although the sale took place out of the State of Florida, the Respondent has determined to be taxable under the Florida Income Tax Code (Chapter 220 of the Florida Statutes).
"In the fiscal years ended December 31, 1972 and 1973, Petitioner included in Florida taxable income the amounts of $76.00 and $6,245.00, respectively, from the sale of property on April 23, 1971, such gain being reported for Federal income tax purposes on the installment method under Section 453 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
"Roger H. Dean, individually or by attribution during the years involved herein, was the owner of one hundred (100%) percent of the stock of Roger Dean Enterprises, Inc. and seventy-five (75%) percent of the stock of Florida Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. The remaining twenty-five (25%) percent of Florida Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. was owned by Robert S. Cuillo, an unrelated person. The Respondent disallowed the $5,000.00 exemption to the Petitioner in computing its Florida corporate income tax for each of the years in question on the theory that the two corporations were members of a controlled group of corporations, as defined in Section 1563, of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
"By letter of April 13, 1976, the Respondent advised Petitioner of its proposed deficiencies for the fiscal years ended December 31, 1972 and 1973, in the net respective amounts of $19,086.25 and $1,086.79."
Petitioner contends the Department erred in upholding the tax assessment in three respects:
(1) In holding that a gain from the sale of stock in a foreign corporation having no contacts with Florida is taxable under the Florida Corporate Income Tax Law.
(2) By imposing the Florida Corporate Income tax on gains realized prior to the amendment to the Florida Constitution which first permitted a corporate income tax.
(3) In finding that petitioner was a "member of a controlled group of corporations" within the meaning of Section 1563 of the Internal Revenue Code, which resulted in a denial to petitioner of the $5000 exception provided by the Florida Corporate Income Tax Law.
In support of its first designation of error, petitioner suggests that Florida may not impose corporate income taxes on corporate gains derived from transactions which take place outside the State of Florida and which involve a non-resident corporation where the non-resident corporation has no contacts with Florida. Additionally, petitioner contends that in any event it was entitled to be afforded the relief provided by Section 214.73, Florida Statutes (1973), which authorizes other methods of apportionment when the three factor formula does not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayers tax base attributable to Florida.
A taxpayer's adjusted federal income forms the tax base upon which the Florida Corporate Income Tax operates. The amount of the Florida corporate tax is the taxpayer's adjusted federal income for the year in question which is apportioned to *104 Florida.[3] The apportionment of the taxpayer's adjusted federal income tax is accomplished by utilization of a three factor formula: a property factor, a sales factor and a payroll factor.[4] Therefore, Florida's Corporate Income Tax Code is based upon the apportionment theory. Under this theory the taxpayer's tax base includes all of its adjusted federal income for the period in question regardless of where that income is produced. There is no elimination from the tax base of income produced by a foreign corporation in another jurisdiction.[5] The apportionment factors eliminate the essential unfairness of taxing income in the taxing jurisdiction which is earned elsewhere.
Because Florida is an apportionment state, there is no error in including the installment payments on the Dutch Miller Chevrolet Inc., stock in the tax base for 1972 and 1973, although neither the transaction nor the Dutch Miller Agency had any real contacts with Florida.
Furthermore, petitioner contends in its brief that "[t]he ordinary scheme of apportionment does not fairly represent the extent of petitioner's Florida tax base under the facts of this case, and under Section 214.73 F.S. an equitable apportionment would result only if the out-of-state sale were excluded from taxation in Florida." However, the exclusion of that gain would require the Department to violate the statute which requires that the gain (if includable for federal income tax purposes) be included in the petitioner's tax base for determination of the Florida Corporate Income Tax. As the Supreme Court of Vermont said in a similar factual situation in Hoosier Engineering Company v. Shea, 124 Vt. 341, 205 A.2d 821 (1964):
"It is not the application of the factor formula which creates the result complained of by plaintiff. Rather, it is the inclusion of the capital gain item as an integral part of plaintiff's net income. Subsection (b) does not apply to the facts presented by the record in this case. There is no area here for the use of discretion by the commissioner and he has no statutory authority to exclude capital gains or any other item of net income based on the federal code." Id. at 824.
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371 So. 2d 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roger-dean-enterprises-inc-v-department-of-rev-fladistctapp-1978.