United Shoe MacHinery Corporation v. White

89 F.2d 363, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 328, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3481
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1937
Docket3186-3188
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 89 F.2d 363 (United Shoe MacHinery Corporation v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Shoe MacHinery Corporation v. White, 89 F.2d 363, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 328, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3481 (1st Cir. 1937).

Opinion

MORTON, Circuit Judge.

These are three appeals in two different cases brought by the Shoe Machinery Company to recover income taxes alleged to have been erroneously exacted from it. The District Court decided the principal claims against the plaintiff; and in both cases the plaintiff has appealed. On one claim judgment for part of.the sum claimed was given against the Collector and in that' case he also has appealed. The years involved are 1923 to 1926, inclusive, and the statutes are the Revenue Acts of 1921, section 238 (42 Stat. 258), 1 and corresponding sections in the- Acts of 1924 and 1926 (43 Stat. 286, 44 Stat. 44).

Two major questions are involved. The first is whether the British income tax on British corporations is under our law a deductible credit for American sharehold *365 ers in such corporations. The second question is whether the credit for foreign taxes on a foreign subsidiary corporation (the majority of whose stock is owned by an American corporation), allowable under section 238 (e) of the Revenue Act of 1921 (repeated in substance in the Acts of 1924 and 1926), should be brought into the limitation on such credits contained in section 238 (a). There is also a question whether the limitation provision in 238 (e) applies separately to each subsidiary foreign corporation, or should be computed with reference to the aggregate of all dividends from foreign subsidiaries, and of all taxes assessed against them, when a domestic corporation owns more than one foreign subsidiary; and a final question whether the plaintiff made a sufficient claim for refund to entitle it to maintain suit on one of its claims. On the first question the District Judge ruled that the British tax was not a deductible credit; on the second, he ruled that the credits under section 238 (e) were not counted in computing the limitation under section 238 (a).; on the third, point he held that the credits should be computed for each foreign subsidiary separately; and on the last point mentioned he ruled that no sufficient claim for,refund had been filed.

Whether the British income tax on British corporations constitutes a tax on the shareholders, for which credit may be taken under our law by an American shareholder in such a corporation, is concededly a difficult and doubtful question. The Commissioner has reversed himself on it. Until 1929 he held such tax to be a deductible credit; and the taxes on the Shoe Machinery Company for the years in question were assessed and collected under that ruling. The disagreement between the Commissioner and the plaintiff, which originally led to the claim for refund and to the present suit, was occasioned by the Commissioner’s insistence that credits under 238 (e) should be brought into the limitation under 238 (a). After suit had been brought to recover alleged overpayments due to that ruling, the Commissioner, by an amended answer, set up that nothing was due because fie had improperly credited British income taxes as a tax on the dividends received by the plaintiff from its British subsidiary, whereas, in fact, the British taxes did not constitute such a credit. Striking out this credit, there was only a small overpayment, even if the plaintiff’s contention, that the credit under (e) was not subject to the limitation in (a), should be upheld. In the District Court the plaintiff recovered judgment for this overpayment amounting to about $2,-700, and this led to the Commissioner’s appeal, which presents the question as to the correct construction of section 238.

The nature of the British tax has lately been considered in Biddle v. Commissioner (C.C.A.2, December 7th, 1936) 86 F.(2d) *366 718, in which it was held that the tax was on the dividends, but that it was not “paid by” American shareholders so as to be a deductible credit under our statute. The tax is levied on the profits of a corporation at the “standard” (normal) rate; and the law requires that, when such profits are distributed in the form of dividends, the amount of tax paid .by the corporation which is appropriate to the dividend which each stockholder receives, shall be stated to him by the corporation and deducted from the amount which he would otherwise receive. A dividend may be declared “tax free,” in which case the stockholder is advised of the amount of tax which has been paid on account of his dividend. It is settled that the tax is on the corporation, and that the corporation in deducting it does not act as agent of the government. Numann v. Commissioner, (1934) A.C. 215.

If this were the whole story, the question would be simple. But the British tax has to be considered in the light of other statutory provisions and of a long history of income taxation in that country. For more than 125 years the basic principle has always been to tax incomes at the source, and this principle is still recognized. British taxation of incomes antedated the wide use of business corporations. Shareholders are still regarded as having interests in the nature of those of partners in a business enterprise. In the British statute a corporation is taxed as “a body of persons.” While it is settled that the tax is on the corporation, it is also settled that the amount of tax, appropriate to each share and deducted from the dividends, is to be considered as additional income of the shareholder; it is included in his income for supertax (surtax) purposes; he is referred to in the Income Tax Act of 1918 (the applicable statute) as a “person who has paid by deduction * * * United Kingdom income tax,” etc. (section 55 (1) ). If a person who has received dividends makes a claim that his total income was below the taxable minimum, the tax appropriate to his dividends is added to what he in fact received for the purpose of determining his income; and, more significant still, if his income is below the taxable minimum, the amount of tax which was deducted from his dividends is returned to him by the government. Ritson v. Phillips, 131 Law T. 384. If the dividend is paid without deduction for tax, the appropriate amount is added to the shareholder’s income for purposes of surtax or relief. In the case of the Ashton Gas Company which by its charter was restricted to dividends not exceeding 10 per cent., it was held that the 10 per cent, must include the appropriate tax and — assuming the tax to be 10 per cent. — only 9 per cent, could be paid. Ashton Gas Co. v. Attorney General, (1906) A.C. 10. The tax is deducted from dividends on preference shares even when there is ample profit from which to pay it, e. g., if the standard tax is 10 per cent., the dividend actually paid on 6 per cent, preferred stock is 10 per cent, less than that amount. The amounts thus deducted from dividends go to reimburse the company for the tax assessed on it. If the profits are made in one tax year, and dividends are declared in another, and the standard rate of tax is not the same in each year, there may be a difference in the amount of tax deducted from that actually paid — the deduction being made at the standard -rate for the year in which the dividend is declared. Probably this discrepancy, when one occurs, is not regarded as a matter of much practical importance. It thus appears that, while the tax is assessed against the corporation, it falls and is by law required to fall, on the shareholders. It was said by the English Court of Appeal: “The appellant here pays income tax although the tax is deducted at the source.” War-rington, L. J., Brooke v. Commissioners, (1918) 1 K.B. 257, 269. See too Hamilton v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Juvenile Male
269 F. Supp. 3d 29 (E.D. New York, 2017)
National Cash Register Co. v. United States
270 F. Supp. 930 (S.D. Ohio, 1967)
F. W. Woolworth Co. v. United States
91 F.2d 973 (Second Circuit, 1937)
Connor v. United States
19 F. Supp. 97 (D. New Hampshire, 1937)
Davis v. Boston & M. R. Co.
89 F.2d 368 (First Circuit, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 F.2d 363, 19 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 328, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-shoe-machinery-corporation-v-white-ca1-1937.