231 Mass. 237 | Mass. | 1918
It is provided by St. 1918, c. 255, § 1, that, “Every corporation incorporated under the laws of this Commonwealth and doing business for profit shall pay a tax to the Commonwealth computed upon the net income for its fiscal or calendar year next preceding, as hereinafter provided, upon which income such corporation is required to pay a tax to the United States.”
The controversy relates to the true meaning of the words “upon which income such corporation is required to pay a tax to the United States.” Considered solely as matter of statutory construction these words present no difficulty. They do not define net income. No other part of the act defines net income. Ordinarily an income tax act would give such a definition. But this act does not, either in the operative words which have been quoted or in its other provisions, contain any detailed specifications of the subjects of taxation. It simply refers, for a description of what is made liable to taxation, to the laws of the United States. The General Court found at hand already in operation an elaborate system of income taxation for corporations. Instead of multiplying requirements for returns, it adopted for the basis for its tax that system. In- selecting the subject for its taxation, the General Court used a carefully phrased, easily'ascertained and unambiguous amount of income, namely, the net income upon which the corporation is required to pay a tax to the United States. It did not use the net, income as established by any statute or by abstract definition, but only that income actually taxed by the United States and for which the corporation is under obligation to make payment.
The act took effect on May 29, 1918. It is agreed by all parties to these proceedings that when this act took effect such cor
The form for the corporation income tax return issued by the United States internal revenue department has been presented to us. It is conceded that it shows correctly according to the United States laws in force on May 29, 1918, the method for determining the three several federal taxes to which allusion has been made. It is required by § 1 of the Massachusetts act now to be interpreted that every corporation shall render to the tax commissioner “a true copy of the last return made to the collector of internal revenue of the annual net income . . . and . . . such other information as may be requested by the United States treasury department for the purpose of ascertaining the total amount of net income taxable under the United States income tax act; the net income of such corporation after making the deductions authorized; . . .”
It is manifest that the Massachusetts act refers to the federal return as a basis for information. It is plain from that return and from an examination of the statutes of the United States, that no corporation on May 29, 1918, was required to pay a tax upon the entire “net income” as defined in acts of Congress and disclosed on the return, except such as were not liable to the war excess profits tax. The federal income tax law of September 8, 1916, as originally enacted provided in § 10 that there should be assessed a tax of two per cent upon the total net income. But that law was not in force as to corporations required to pay the war excess profits tax when the act now before us was passed, because by the act of October 3, 1917, c. 63, § 29, it was provided
It is contended in behalf of the Commonwealth that the only net income described in any of the acts of Congress is that ascertained in'accordance with § 12 of U. S. St. 1916, c. 463, the act of September 8, 1916, and hence that that net income must bear a tax of one per cent under the Massachusetts act, although no one of the corporations here a party pays a tax to the United States upon that exact sum. That contention cannot be supported. It is contrary to the express words of § 1 whereby only that portion of the net income, upon which the “corporation is required to pay a tax to the United States,” is made subject to the State tax. If it had been the purpose of the General Court to adopt a measúre of taxation in accordance with that contention, apt words to express that purpose would have been used, as, for example, that the tax should be computed “upon the net income as ascertained under the corporation income tax law of the United States,” or “upon the net income used as the basis for the assessment of the income tax of such corporation to the United States,” or “upon the net income as determined by the commissioner of internal revenue in accordance with income tax laws of the United States,” or other unmistakable language. But instead of stating in direct fashion that simple purpose, the General Court used words which precisely express the very different design of subjecting to the income tax only .that portion of the total net income upon which the United States requires the payment of a tax. That design is reiterated thrice in the act, later in § 1 where reference is made to “the total amount of net income taxable under the United States income tax,” in § 2 where the words occur “changed or corrected net income upon which the tax is required to be paid to the United States,” and in § 3 where provision is made as to corporations doing business outside the
The meaning of the operative words of the statute is plain. The purpose of the act is unequivocal. Its effect is to subject to the income tax there to be assessed only that portion, of the net income of a corporation within its terms upon which the United States under its laws actually requires a tax to be paid to it.
It is adjudged in each case thafa part of the tax has been illegally exacted, and appropriate decrees are to be entered accordingly.
So ordered.