Triumph Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. Commonwealth

343 A.2d 710, 21 Pa. Commw. 186, 1975 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1381
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 5, 1975
DocketAppeal, No. 1609 C.D. 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 343 A.2d 710 (Triumph Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Triumph Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 343 A.2d 710, 21 Pa. Commw. 186, 1975 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1381 (Pa. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion by

President Judge Bowman,

Triumph Hosiery Hills, Inc. (appellant) is a New York corporation which transacts a part of its business in Pennsylvania. By exercising its privilege to engage in business within this state, appellant is necessarily subject to the imposition of the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax.1

Subsequent to appellant’s filing of its Pennsylvania corporate net income tax return for the year ending December 81, 1971, the Department of Revenue disagreed with the method employed by appellant in the computation of its tax liability, and settled the tax due to a higher amount. This action precipitated administrative review procedures culminating in the rejection of appellant’s contentions.2 Hence this appeal. It is before us on stipulated facts which we adopt in- this de novo appeal.

[188]*188The Pennsylvania corporate net income tax is measured upon a tax base of “taxable income” which is defined in limine as the “taxable income for the calendar year or fiscal year as returned to and ascertained by the Federal Government... ,”3 There follow several provisos which are not germane to this controversy. The last sentence of section 401(3)1 is one of two statutory focal points of the parties’ dispute.

“In arriving at 'taxable income’ for Federal tax purposes . . . any corporate net income tax due to the Commonwealth pursuant to the provisions of this article shall not be allowed as a deduction and the amount of corporate net income tax so due and excluded from Federal taxable income under the Internal Revenue Code shall not be apportioned but shall be subject to tax at the rate imposed under this article.” (Emphasis added.)

Initially, this provision requires taxpayers to “add-back,” to their federal taxable incomes, the deductions taken on their federal returns for the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax.4 Appellant disputes neither the clear meaning of this “add-back” requirement, nor its validity under constitutional principles. Rather, the parties disagree as to the appropriate time at which the federal deduction should be “added back” in computing the Pennsylvania tax base.

It cannot be gainsaid that the proscription against apportionment of the “add-back” is glaringly inappropriate within the context of section 401(3)1, since that [189]*189subsection, by its own terms of introduction, refers only to corporations whose entire business is transacted in Pennsylvania. The concept of apportionment, for state tax purposes, is meaningless when applied to purely local corporations. In fact, appellant contends that, in view of its placement, the proscription against apportionment is so meaningless that we should simply deem it a legislative aberration, and ignore its existence. Appellant buttresses this contention by reference to the second statutory focal point of the parties’ dispute, the language of section 401(3)2:

“In case the entire business of any corporation ... is not transacted within this Commonwealth, the tax imposed by this article shall be based upon such portion of the taxable income of such corporation . . . as defined in subclause 1 hereof... ,”5 (Emphasis added.)

Appellant argues that because section 401(3)2 defines the “taxable income” of multistate corporations in terms of “such portion of the taxable income ... as defined in subclause 1 [section 401(3)1],” and that because the “add-back” of the federal deduction for the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax is an integral part of the subclause 1 definition of “taxable income,” that, therefore, said “add-back,” as well as the other components of the subclause 1 definition, must be apportioned in computing appellant’s Pennsylvania taxable income. We agree with appellant’s premises, but not with its conclusion.

Despite its (mis-),placement in section 401(3)1, we feel that the proscription against apportionment of the federal deduction/“add-back” cannot be disregarded in deference to appellant’s perception of the “clear intent” [190]*190of^section 401(3)2. Rather,'when read in conjunction With subclause 2 (section 401(3)2), the proscription against apportionment leads us to the opposite conclusion. We agree that the “add-back” of the federal deduction for the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax does become incorporated into subclause 2 by the latter’s reference to “taxable income ... as defined in subclause 1,” but we cannot, as appellant has so conveniently done, terminate our analysis at that point. The proscription against apportionment is also an integral part of the subclause 1 definition of “taxable income,” and must also be incorporated by reference into subelause 2. Thus, while subclause 2 provides a general license to a multistate corporation to apportion its “taxable income . . . as defined in subclause 1,” that same definition of “taxable income” contains a specific prohibition against the apportionment of one component of said taxable income, namely, the “add-back” of the federal deduction of the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax. Even assuming that the two subclauses produce an irreconcilable conflict in their directions, the specific prohibition against apportionment must prevail over the general license to apportion.6

Therefore, we adopt the Commonwealth’s interpretation of sections 401 (3)1 and 401 (3)2. When computing its tax base for purposes of the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax, a corporation whose entire business is not transacted in Pennsylvania may apportion its taxable income except insofar as said taxable income represents the “add-back” of that corporation’s federal tax deduction for the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax.

Anticipating the possibility that this Court might so conclude, appellant also raises a multifaceted constitutional objection to the statute as so construed. Citing the [191]*191uniformity clause of the Pennsylvania Constitution,7 8and the federal equal protection, due process and commerce clauses,® appellant contends that a denial of apportionment, even as to only a single component of the statutorily defined tax base, renders the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax constitutionally infirm.

We need not address each of the four constitutional principles asserted. Within the parameters of this controversy they are collectively directed to the same question: Whether by denying a multistate corporation the right to apportion the “add-back” of the federal deduction for the Pennsylvania corporate net income tax, d'o sections 401(3)1 and 401(3)2 create two distinct classes of taxpayers, and thereby discriminate against multistate corporations ?

The purposes of apportionment, on a constitutional level, are to prevent any single state from taxing more than its just share of a multistate corporation’s income or property, and to preclude state government partiality towards purely intrastate interests. The proscription against allocation of the federal deduction/“add-back” frustrates neither purpose, and, in fact, affords a buffer against prospective allegations of reverse discrimination.

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Related

Unisys Corp. v. Commonwealth
726 A.2d 1096 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1999)
Triumph Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. Commonwealth
364 A.2d 919 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
343 A.2d 710, 21 Pa. Commw. 186, 1975 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triumph-hosiery-mills-inc-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1975.