Lead Opinion
The question is whether petitioner, a foreign corporation, was a resident within the definition of Revenue Act of 1936
The definition of a resident corporation for our purposes is one “engaged in trade or business within the United States or having an office or place of business therein.” Petitioner concedes that it was “established at the hearing that petitioner was not engaged in business in the United States.” It has a principal office in Stockholm, Sweden, exists under the laws of that country and “was engaged in the business of manufacturing centrifugal machinery with interests over most of the world”, to use petitioner’s language. We take the concession to mean, as we think the evidence shows, that no part of that business was carried on in the United States at any time during the taxable year.
Petitioner focuses its claim upon the second half of the definition and insists that it had an office or place of business in the United States which is sufficient to bring it within the statutory description. We shall, without deciding, accept as a preliminary petitioner’s contention that the definition is in the disjunctive; that compliance with either part is therefore sufficient; that Congress would not have used the quoted language had it not intended to cover more than the mere transaction of business, since otherwise the additional phrase would have been superfluous; and that, therefore, it is not necessary that a foreign corporation transact business in the United States within the taxable year if it can show that it has “an office or place of business” here during such year.
But this is not to say that the business aspect of a foreign corporation’s relationship to the physical territory of the United States is entirely absent. Accepted definitions of the word “office” are intimately associated with the transaction of business.
The question then appears to be whether what petitioner established was an office for the transaction of its business.
We think petitioner’s evidence, which we agree was not controverted, fails to establish that the space which it leased was designed for the transaction of any part of its business. A summary description of that design may be quoted from petitioner’s brief:
*249 * * * Petitioner, for many years, Rad owned stock in two domestic corporations. Its income from sources within the United States was substantial. To receive and dispose of such income, petitioner needed some reliable person in this country wbo could be in daily attendance at its New York office, ready to attend to its interests as instructed by correspondence or cable.
Reviewed by the Board.
Decision will ~be entered for the respondent.
SEC. 231. TAX ON FOREIGN CORPORATIONS.
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(b) Resident Cokpobations. — A foreign corporation engaged in trade or business within Ihe United States or having an office or place of business therein shall be taxable without regard to the provisions of subsection (a), but the normal tax imposed by section 13 shall
be at the rate of 22 per centum instead of at the rates provided in such section.
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Sec. 231. TAX ON FOREIGN CORPORATIONS.
(a) Noneesidhnt Cospoeations. — There shall be levied, collected, and paid for each taxable year, in lieu of the tax imposed by sections 13 and 14, upon the amount received by every foreign corporation not engaged in trade or business within the United States and not having an office or place of business therein, from sources within the United States as interest (except interest on deposits with persons carrying on the banking business), dividends, rents, salaries, wages, premiums, annuities, compensations, remunerations, emoluments, or other fixed or determinable annual or periodical gains, profits, and income, a tax of 15 per centum of such amount, except that in the case of dividends the rate shall be 10 per centum, and except that in the case of corporations organized under the laws of a contiguous country such rate of 10 per centum with respect to dividends shall be reduced to such rate (not less than 5 per centum) as may be provided by treaty with such country.
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E. g., Webster’s New International Dictionary: “The place where a particular kind of business or service for others is transacted; a house, room, or apartment in which public officers and others transact business; the building, room, or department in which the clerical work of an establishment is done; a countinghouse; the room, etc., in which the business or work of some particular department of a large concern or institution is carried on or from which it is directed; as, the register’s office; a lawyer’s office; the office of a school or hospital; freight office.”
“The distinction between the meaning of ‘doing’ or ‘transacting business’ under one statute and the term ‘for the transaction of business’ in the present one is in our judgment too shadowy and unsubstantial to serve as a secure foundation for the differentiation of the statutes and for the pursuit by the state of opposing policies under them.” Honey v. De Long Hook & Eye Co., 211 N. Y. 420; 105 N. E. 667.
This is the construction placed upon this part of the statutory definition by respondent in his regulations which, for the reasons stated, we regard as entirely justified: “The term ‘office or place of business’ however implies a place for the regular transaction of business and does not include a place where casual or incidental transactions might be or are effected.” Regulations 94, art. 231 (1) (b).
This accords with representations made to respondent, as set forth in his letter of May 21, 1038, introduced as an exhibit on behalf of petitioner, that :
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: I respectfully dissent from the reasoning and conclusion of the majority opinion. That conclusion may be paraphrased as follows: For a foreign corporation to become a resident corporation within the meaning of section 231 (b) of the Revenue Act of 1936, it is necessary that it either engage in trade or business within the United States, or have “an office or place of business” within the United States which is used or established for the purpose of being used in the conduct, within the United States, of the corporation’s activities which are a part of its engagement in business therein.
*250 “The corporation [petitioner] states its representative is vested with no authority to conduct business or engage in business activities of any character on behalf of the corporation and ‘she has not done so’; that during the taxable year the only activities of the corporation in the United States consisted of the receiving of dividends * * *.
“Although the corporation has on various occasions made purchases of United States products for use in its foreign business from several sources within the United States, and has made sales of its products in Sweden for shipment to the United States, all of such purchases and sales have been made and carried out by correspondence at its Stockholm office and ‘none of them through its New York office’.”
The further statement by respondent in that letter that petitioner “became a resident foreign corporation” must be either an inadvertent acceptance of petitioner’s own representations or a misconstruction of the applicable law as treated in the present opinion, by which this Board can not consider itself bound. See footnote 5.
When legislation is unambiguous, resort to legislative intent in the proceedings of Congress is unnecessary. However, if we do look to the Congressional reports, loc. cit. supra, we find that the provision was introduced in the 1936 Revenue Act for administrative convenience and was thought by the House Ways and Means Committee to be “productive of substantial amounts of additional revenue, since it replaces a theoretical system impractical of administration in a great number of cases.” Foreign corporations not engaged in trade in the United States or not having an “office or place of business” were taxed at 15 percent of gross income and collection, as the report of each House mentions, and this tax was to be withheld at the source under section 143. Foreign corporations engaged in trade or having an office or place of business in the United States, on the other hand, were to be taxed at a higher rate, 22 percent, but on net, not gross, income. There was some difference between the Houses on the rate, but none on the principle applicable, which obviously differentiated between resident and nonresident foreign corporations on the simple and sound administrative ground of collectibility and ease in administration of the tax, the lower rate being applied when withholding at the source was necessary, and the higher rate when the presence of the corporation in the country through trade carried on here or by the maintenance of a business headquarters with a responsible agent would enable the Treasury to collect directly from the corporation or its agent.
When the statutory phrase now in question is read in the light of the statutory purpose which we have set out, two significant things appear: First, that the whole provision as to foreign corporations was one of administrative convenience in collecting the tax laid, and, consequently, was not the conference of an exemption or other special benefit on the foreign corporation claiming residence which must be construed strictly in a tax act; and, second, that the test of residence is the practical one of the collector finding a properly authorized agent of the corporation at a fixed office or place where adequate records of the corporation’s American income may be found, and where control over that income is retained, and where an agent may always be found by the Government in the event of differences in taxes paid and claimed. These are all practical tests; and too meticulous consideration of the physical aspects of the “office”, on the one hand, or speculation on the metaphysical concept of the maintenance of an office for some future conduct of business in the United States, on the other hand, are alike wide of the mark in reaching a sound conclusion as to whether the particular foreign corporation is taxable as a resident or not.
My opinion that the taxpayer here was a resident foreign corporation having the requisite American “office” does not require the disapproval of Commissioner’s Regulations 94 and 101, art. 231-1, where the term is said to imply “a place for the regular transaction of business and does not include a place where casual or incidental transactions might be, or are, effected.” I can not believe, however, that its meaning should be restricted by the same criteria as those applied to the doing of business within the country. Doing business and maintaining an office are two different things, and whatever deference should be paid to administrative construction, it can not be allowed to alter the clear meaning of the statute. I think that the business purpose for which the New York office, in the instant case, was used, the collection of petitioner’s revenue from American corporations, was a “regular” business within the meaning of the regulations and not “incidental” or “casual”; and, as such, complies with them as well as with the statute.