Simpson Investment Co. v. Department of Revenue

141 Wash. 2d 139
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 2000
DocketNo. 67630-5
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 141 Wash. 2d 139 (Simpson Investment Co. v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson Investment Co. v. Department of Revenue, 141 Wash. 2d 139 (Wash. 2000).

Opinions

Madsen, J.

— This dispute between Simpson Investment Company (Simpson) and the State Department of Revenue (Department) presents the question of whether Simpson, a holding corporation for multiple subsidiaries, is a “financial business” for purposes of RCW 82.04.4281 (section 4281). Section 4281 provides a Business and Occupational (B&O) tax deduction for the investment income of all persons not “engaging in banking, loan, security, or other financial businesses.” RCW 82.04.4281. The Department assessed B&O taxes against Simpson, claiming it was not entitled to deduct its investment income because it is a “financial business.” Simpson contested this assessment in a refund [143]*143action, culminating in motions for summary judgment. The Thurston County Superior Court denied Simpson’s motion, granting summary judgment to the Department, and Simpson appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed, determining that Simpson is not a “financial business” and is therefore entitled to deduct its investment income in calculating its B&O tax liability. Simpson Inv. Co. v. Department of Revenue, 92 Wn. App. 905, 965 P.2d 654 (1998). We find that Simpson is a financial business and reverse the Court of Appeals.

FACTS

Simpson1 was formed in 1985 as the parent holding company of four corporations: Simpson Timber Company and its subsidiaries; Simpson Paper Company and its subsidiaries; Simpson (formerly Western Pacific) Extruded Plastics2 and its subsidiary; and Simpson Foreign Sales Company. At all relevant times, Simpson was a 100 percent stockholder in each of these corporations. Collectively, Simpson’s subsidiaries are engaged in timber production, forest products manufacturing, and plastic pipe manufacturing.

Simpson itself does not manufacture any tangible product. Instead, through its 172 employees,3 it provides a variety of shared services for its group of subsidiaries. These administrative and managerial services include: accounting/finance; credit; human resources; legal; management information services; public affairs; risk; tax; treasury; cash management; property management/real estate; land and timber; and corporate administration. Simpson [144]*144does not charge its subsidiaries for the array of services it provides. Rather, it receives the majority of its revenue in the form of subsidiary dividends, which are not subject to B&O taxation. See ROW 82.04.4281 (“In computing tax there may be deducted from the measure of tax amounts . . . derived as dividends by a parent from its subsidiary corporations.”).

In addition to subsidiary dividends, Simpson derives investment income from three primary sources: interest on bank deposits, stock dividends, and profits from market hedging and futures trading.4 These sources of revenue made up only a small percentage of Simpson’s gross income for the years at issue in this case, averaging approximately 4.26 percent. It is this “investment income,” found subject to B&O tax by the Department, which lies at the heart of this dispute.

The first item of investment income is Simpson’s interest income from overnight cash deposits of its subsidiaries’ excess funds. This is a by-product of Simpson’s “cash management” system, which was designed for the stated purpose of “fully utiliz[ing] all of the liquid resources of the Simpson group of related entities.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 94. Simpson has cash management systems in place at Seafirst Bank, Mellon Bank, and Wells Fargo Bank. Each Simpson subsidiary maintains at least one deposit, as well as one disbursement account, while Simpson maintains concentration accounts. Funds are transferred from subsidiary to subsidiary, based on their respective fiscal needs, through Simpson’s concentration accounts. This enables Simpson’s subsidiaries to avoid outside borrowing until the excess cash of each subsidiary is depleted. No written evidences of indebtedness memorialize these transfers.

Each subsidiary account maintains a daily target balance of zero. At the end of each day all excess funds are “swept” into Simpson’s concentration accounts and invested in interest-bearing overnight deposit accounts. The interest [145]*145earned is then included in the beginning daily balance of each concentration account. It is unclear what ultimately happens with this interest income, but it is clear that there is no pro rata redistribution of funds.

The second item of investment income is Simpson’s stock dividends. Simpson owns approximately 100 shares of stock in each of its publicly traded competitors. This stock is purchased as a means of tracking its competitors’ businesses and obtaining financial information that is available to shareholders. After financial information is collected it is placed in an industry database, maintained by Simpson, in order to assess Simpson’s performance against competitors and help in the setting of financial rating objectives.

If a stock splits or pays out dividends, Simpson may be left with more than 100 shares of a given stock. When the number of shares has increased to a point where it is practical, Simpson has, from “time-to-time,” sold excess shares to bring the balance down to 100. CP at 98. According to Simpson, this stock portfolio was acquired “strictly with the objective of gaining competitive financial and other public information about these competitor companies.” Id.

Two notable exceptions exist to Simpson’s general practice. From sometime prior to 1988 until 1993, Simpson owned 226,5005 shares of Longview Fibre stock, worth approximately $1,228,460. This investment returned an average annual dividend of $117,780. In 1993, Simpson sold all but 100 shares of this stock. Simpson also owned 86,507 shares of Palmer G. Lewis stock, worth $879,850.40. All of this stock was sold in 1988. Simpson concedes that these positions were “purchased . . . for investment purposes.” CP at 98.

Simpson also receives investment income from market hedging and futures trading. Lumber and plywood commodity price hedging was in operation at Simpson until [146]*146April of 1990 for the stated purpose of “reduc[ing] the price volatility inherent in the sale of lumber and plywood commodity items.” CP at 111. The price hedge was accomplished by selling contracts for the future delivery of lumber on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange when those prices exceeded the Corporate Plan Forecast or were higher than regular customers were willing to pay at the time. When the expiration for the futures contract approached, the contract was closed-out and an equal volume of lumber was sold to Simpson’s normal customers at the market price. If commodity prices had fallen since the date of the original futures contract sale, there would be a profit from the futures contract.

If market prices had risen since the sale of the futures contract, a loss would be recorded in the Futures Trading account when the contract was closed, but the lumber prices received from Simpson’s customers would be higher than expected several months earlier. The gains and losses from the futures contracts were accumulated in one ledger account for financial control purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
141 Wash. 2d 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-investment-co-v-department-of-revenue-wash-2000.