Utah Construction & Mining Co. v. Commission

3 Or. Tax 385
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Or. Tax 385 (Utah Construction & Mining Co. v. Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utah Construction & Mining Co. v. Commission, 3 Or. Tax 385 (Or. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Edward H. Howell, Judge.

The commission issued a deficiency against the plaintiff’s corporate excise taxes for the fiscal years ending October 31, 1963, 1964 and 1965, and plaintiff appealed. The issue is whether plaintiff, a multi-state corporation, should report its Oregon income by using the segregated method of reporting or the apportionment method as the commission required.

During the tax years involved ORS 314.280(1) stated:

“Allocation of income and losses of corporation or nonresident individual from business within and *387 without state. (1) If the gross income of a corporation or a nonresident individual is derived from business done both within and without the state, the determination of net income shall be based upon the business done within the state, and the commission shall have power to permit or require either the segregated method of reporting or the apportionment method of reporting, under rules and regulations adopted by the commission, so as fairly and accurately to reflect the net income of the business done within the state.”

The facts have been stipulated. The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation whose home office and principal place of business is San Francisco, California. The plaintiff builds industrial plants, military establishments, railroads, industrial parks, complete residential communities and has constructed dams and power plants including Hoover and Grand Coulee dams.

Plaintiff’s corporate organization has three divisions : construction, mining and land development, which are administratively and operationally separate. Each division is headed by a senior vice president who is virtually autonomous in the operation of his division and there is little interchange of employees between the various divisions. The plaintiff has legal, general corporate accounting and purchasing staffs at its home office which serve all three operating divisions to a limited extent. New projects are subject only to general approval by plaintiff’s executive committee, which consists of its chairman of the board of directors, its president and a senior vice president. Generally, once the executive committee has approved a project the division involved proceeds with the operation of the project, including coordination of accounting functions in the division.

*388 Plaintiff constructed the Detroit and Big Cliff dams on the North Santiam River in Oregon in 1953. After that it had no activity in Oregon until it started construction of the Bound Butte Dam on the Deschutes Biver as the general.contractor for Portland General Electric Company. During plaintiff’s fiscal years 1962, 1963 and 1964, the Bound Butte project was plaintiff’s sole activity in Oregon. During plaintiff’s fiscal year 1965 the construction of Bound Butte Dam was plaintiff’s principal activity in this state but plaintiff also participated as a nonsponsoring joint venturer in another Oregon project from which it derived no significant revenue.

The plaintiff secured the Bound Butte project by bid which was prepared by its construction division ánd ápproved by the executive committee. The bid preparation and the legal work in settlement of accounts were done at plaintiff’s home office in San Francisco. After the contract was awarded to plaintiff the construction division assigned one of its permanent-employees as project manager and he supervised the project at the job site. With the exception Of certain key personnel most of the labor was recruited at the job site for that project alone. The entire payroll for the project, including that for a few permanent employees was handled at the. job site where a complete, set of separate accounting records for the job was maintained. Equipment for the job was ordered by the project manager and in general Was either specially purchased by plaintiff’s central purchasing staff or transferred from its equipment pool, Over 77 percent of the dollar cost of the equipment was disposed of upon completion of the project. Less, than 3 percent was physically used by plaintiff on any subsequent job while about 20 percent of the *389 equipment was temporarily rented prior to disposition. Most other purchases were made locally.

The plaintiff started the project in its fiscal year 1962 and sustained a loss on the Round Butte project in each of its fiscal years 1963, 1964 and 1965. Using the segregated accounting method its loss for the three years was $2,194,110 without any charges being made against the project for construction division, home office general and administrative expense or for use or depreciation of equipment on the job. The project would have shown a loss each year even if no salaries for plaintiff’s permanent employees on the job had been charged against the project. With normal depreciation of equipment, but without division or home office overhead, the fiscal year losses, using the segregated method of accounting, would have been $2,543,410 in 1963, $2,335,897 in 1964 and $851,361 in 1965. As a result of these losses the plaintiff’s construction division as a whole sustained losses in fiscal years 1963 and 1964.

The plaintiff filed its corporate excise tax returns for 1962 through 1965 using the segregated method of reporting income for Oregon operations rather than the apportionment method which the commission contends it should have done.

Under ORS 314.280, supra, where gross income of a corporation is derived from business done both within and without the state, the tax commission is given authority to permit or require either the segregated method or apportionment method of accounting under proper regulations so that either method of reporting will “fairly and accurately * * * reflect the net income of the business done within the state.” It is easy to see that the primary intention of the legislature was not to endorse any particular method of *390 reporting nor to direct the commission to do so by regulation. The only legislative directive to the commission was to adopt regulations pertaining to either method of reporting which would fairly and accurately reflect the taxpayer’s net income from the business done within this state. Regulation 314.280 adopted by the commission also recognized that the primary objective was to require a method of reporting which would fairly and accurately reflect the net income from the taxpayer’s business done within this state. Subsection (1)-(A) of the regulation states in part:

“* * * The method to be used in determining the portion of the total income that is properly allocable to this state depends upon the circumstances in each ease, and no rule of universal application can be stated.”

The regulation is not clear concerning the effect of whether the business is unitary or not. Subsection (1)-(A) states that “[T]he segregated accounting method (Reg 314.280(1)-(C)) is appropriate where the business or activity in and out of the state cannot be classed as unitary.” .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Or. Tax 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-construction-mining-co-v-commission-ortc-1969.