Western Auto Supply Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation

71 N.W.2d 797, 245 Minn. 346, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 654
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 5, 1955
Docket36,340
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 71 N.W.2d 797 (Western Auto Supply Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Auto Supply Co. v. Commissioner of Taxation, 71 N.W.2d 797, 245 Minn. 346, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 654 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

The relator and taxpayer filed its income and franchise tax return for the year 1947 according to a separate accounting system previously used by it. The commissioner of taxation for the state of *348 Minnesota issued a deficiency letter on August 3,1951, and an order on August 31, 1951, in which he disallowed the taxpayer’s accounting method and assessed a deficiency for 1947. An appeal was taken from this order to the state board of tax appeals, which affirmed the commissioner’s decision to disallow the taxpayer’s separate accounting system and to assess the tax on the basis of the three-factor formula provided for in M. S. A. 1945, § 290.19, subd. 1(2) (b). 2 A writ of certiorari was issued to review the decision.

*349 The taxpayer is a Missouri corporation engaged in the retail and wholesale merchandising of automotive parts and accessories and other merchandise on a nationwide basis. During the calendar year 1947, taxpayer operated 257 retail stores in 30 states and the District of Columbia. This included eight such stores in the state of Minnesota. It also served 1,904 dealer stores of which five to seven were located in Minnesota.

All general, executive, and management functions of the taxpayer are performed at its home office in Kansas City, Missouri, with the exception of certain management functions which are performed at 16 different division warehouse offices, none of which were located in Minnesota. The centralized purchasing is done by expertly trained personnel whose department is located in Kansas City, Missouri. All the merchandise sold by it is purchased from manufacturers and jobbers by the company’s central purchasing department and initially shipped from the manufacturers and jobbers to the warehouses of the taxpayer and from there to the company stores or sold and delivered to the dealer stores. No segregation of the merchandise between company stores and dealer stores is made either in the purchasing or the storing in the warehouses. It so operated in 1947. The Minnesota dealer stores and retail stores were serviced mainly by the Dubuque, Iowa, warehouse, but in ordering merchandise they would either send their orders to the home office in Kansas City, Missouri, or to the warehouse in Dubuque, Iowa.

From time to time schools are set up by the company for the purpose of instructing the personnel of the company’s retail stores and the dealer stores in the principles of merchandising and selling. Its *350 representatives are sent to contact and interview persons interested in establishing dealer stores. Such representatives survey the trade territory, and when a dealer store is set up they help the dealer by advising him how to get started. These stores are strategically located so as to serve the customer and capture the market. Thereafter a representative calls on the dealer from time to time to see if the merchandise sold to the dealer is satisfactory and he also makes his service available in their merchandising problems. He makes it his business to show them good merchandising procedures.

The merchandise furnished to both the company retail stores and the dealer stores is the same, and the stores on the whole are more or less uniform in each state. Any person who sees the sign on a dealer store knows that it is a store where the Western Auto Supply Company’s line of merchandise can be purchased. Prices as to articles sold are set and the policies determined by the home office. Certain articles carry the Western Auto brand name. For instance, the Wizard batteries are made by the manufacturer under the Western Auto label and according to Western Auto specifications, and they are sold at all retail and most dealer stores. This battery is guaranteed, and it may be taken into any Western Auto store anywhere for adjustment. The same is true as to Davis tires. Other items carrying brand names are Truetone radios and certain oils and greases. All directive activities point to the reasonable conclusion that the wholesale side of the business helped the retail side of the business and vice versa and that both the wholesale side and the retail side contributed to the existence and the operational success of the entire organization as a centralized business operation.

The taxpayer, in filing its 1947 Minnesota corporation income tax return, apportioned to Minnesota on the basis of separate accounting a net taxable income of $22,518.20, which amounted to approximately .812 percent of total taxable income. 3

*351 The commissioner, upon auditing said return for 1917, apportioned taxpayer’s income upon the statutory three-factor formula of property, payroll, and sales. In arriving at the sales factor of the formula, the commissioner included in the denominator (the bottom figure of the fraction) all sales by the taxpayer to dealer stores and sales by its retail stores, but in the numerator (the top figure of the fraction) included only sales made by its Minnesota retail stores and did not include sales to Minnesota dealer stores. 4 The figure used, namely $2,056,919.91, over $121,395,031.32 resulted in a ratio of 1.69113 percent. The other factors in the formula used by the commissioner were Minnesota tangible property ($791,635.16) as compared to total tangible property ($16,199,120.22) and Minnesota payroll ($289,316.11) as compared to total payroll ($11,528,029.18). This resulted in a property factor of 1.72002 percent and a payroll factor of 1.99111 percent. The arithmetical average of the three factors produced a percentage of 1.80196 percent which, when applied to the total taxable net income of taxpayer ($2,772,700.72) resulted *352 in apportioning to Minnesota after certain allowances and credits a taxable net income of $17,836.18.

The board of tax appeals stated in part in its findings that the commissioner and the taxpayer each conceded that the sales formula alone does not result in a proper reflection of Minnesota taxable net income. The record indicates that the state and the taxpayer agree that the sales formula, § 290.19, subd. 1(2) (a), prescribed as the primary or specific method, does not properly reflect taxable income assignable to Minnesota and that it was therefore rejected by both sides. This agreement, even though seemingly harmonious, proceeds from different premises and somewhat opposite conclusions. The taxpayer contends that it was rejected because the sales formula alone allocated too much income to Minnesota. That contention of the taxpayer is not admitted by the state. The commissioner contends that the tax as assessed by the three-factor formula employed by the state is higher than that allocated by the use of the sales formula alone; that it is the practicable one here and the one which will properly and fairly reflect Minnesota income as required by the statute; and that the sales or single-factor formula does not here properly reflect taxable net income assignable to the state.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.W.2d 797, 245 Minn. 346, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-auto-supply-co-v-commissioner-of-taxation-minn-1955.