1 Or. Tax 571 | Or. T.C. | 1964
Decision for defendant rendered May 4, 1964. This is a suit to set aside defendant's Opinion and Order No. I-62-34, which affirmed defendant's assessment of corporation excise tax against plaintiff for its fiscal year ending April 30, 1958. The parties submitted the case on a written stipulation of facts.
The principal issue is whether intangible income arising out of plaintiff's discount purchase of its obligations has an Oregon situs for corporation excise taxation. The parties have stipulated that this discount transaction resulted in income taxable somewhere to plaintiff in its 1958 tax year.
An Oregon corporation with its registered office and agent in Portland, plaintiff now is wholly-owned by a New York company, A. C. Dutton Lumber Corporation. Some years before 1957, plaintiff borrowed approximately $526,000 from the Bank of California to build and operate a sawmill at Crescent City, California. It later defaulted the promissory notes which evidence this debt and the bank forced the guarantor of these notes to purchase them. Plaintiff ceased operating its Crescent City sawmill, its only operating asset, and during its fiscal years 1957 and 1958 it leased the sawmill to its parent corporation. Presumably to protect its leasehold, plaintiff's parent acquired plaintiff's defaulted notes and all plaintiff's stock prior to October 8, 1957. On that date, when the unpaid balance was $370,500, its parent corporation sold plaintiff its notes for $225,996.38, a discount of $144,503.62. *574
The written stipulation states:
"No part of the proceeds represented by the above-described notes were used in the State of Oregon; all such proceeds were used entirely in California for the construction and operation of the California sawmill.
"* * * * *
"During the tax year in question Castle's contacts with the State of Oregon were as follows: The annual meeting of its board of directors and stockholders was held in Portland; it had a registered office and agent in Oregon, as required by law, and it retained an Oregon accountant to perform certain bookkeeping services. The accountant was not an employee of Castle but was an independent certified public accountant retained to perform specific accounting services.
"During the tax year, the sole business of Castle consisted of leasing a sawmill and facilities in the State of California to the A. C. Dutton Lumber Corp. During the tax year, Castle had no employees in the State of Oregon; it maintained no bank accounts in this state; it operated no business, made no sales or purchases and owned, leased, possessed and held no assets, fixed, current or otherwise, in the State of Oregon. The promissory notes which Castle purchased at a discount were not employed as capital or current assets of Castle's business within the State of Oregon. No part of the proceeds from the above described loans were used in the State of Oregon; they were used exclusively for the construction of the California facilities. The notes themselves, during the year in question, were located in California."
Plaintiff reported the discount as income on its 1958 California and federal tax returns and paid tax thereon. It also reported the discount on its Oregon corporation excise tax return but allocated all its *575 income, including the discount, to states other than Oregon. It paid only the minimum Oregon corporation excise tax.
Defendant assessed against plaintiff a $8,660.22 deficiency in 1958 corporation excise taxes. Affirming this assessment in its order, defendant held that the situs of the notes was Oregon, plaintiff's domiciliary state, and that the intangible income from the purchase of these notes was non-apportionable and was all taxable to plaintiff in Oregon. Plaintiff claims that this intangible income had its business and only situs in California and that Oregon's incorporation of plaintiff, without a further Oregon connection with plaintiff's business activity, did not make Oregon a situs for plaintiff's taxation.
1. As the state of domicile, Oregon clearly has the power to tax plaintiff's intangible income. Cream of Wheat Co. v. Countyof Grand Forks,
Plaintiff filed its return on the apportionment method under ORS
"317.180. (1) If the gross income of a corporation 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. The commission shall have the 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.
(2) The provisions of subsection (1) dealing *576 with the apportionment of income earned from sources both within and without the State of Oregon are designed to allocate to the State of Oregon on a fair and equitable basis a proportion of the income earned from sources both within and without the state. Any taxpayer may submit an alternative basis of apportionment with respect to its own income and explain that basis in full in its return. If approved by the tax commission, that method will be accepted as the basis of allocation."
Purportedly acting under this statute, plaintiff apportioned its discount income to California as income from business done in that state and not in Oregon. The California tax rate was only two-thirds of the Oregon rate.
Defendant established a method of apportionment by rules and regulations implementing ORS
*577"* * * Income from intangible personal property which is not a part of or connected with the unitary business shall be assigned to the situs of such intangible personal property. The income from tangible and intangible personal property which is a part of or connected with the unitary business shall constitute apportionable income. In the case of corporations domiciled in Oregon, in addition to the portion of the unitary income attributable to Oregon, there shall also be included as nonapportionable income, interest on notes, bonds, and other evidences of indebtedness, royalties from patents or copyrights not used in the unitary business, dividends on stock, and all other income from intangible personal property, including gains derived from the sale or other disposition of stocks, bonds and other intangible assets. * * *"
Defendant contends that this regulation properly makes plaintiff's intangible discount income taxable in Oregon as nonapportionable income.
2. The regulation applies the rule that the situs of personal property follows its owner's person. A corporation's person is always in the state of its incorporation. "It must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate to another sovereignty." Chief Justice Taney in Bank of Augusta v. Earle,
3, 4. Defendant has administered the excise tax in the manner set forth in its regulation for a quarter of a century. Any doubt that the regulation correctly interprets the statute should be resolved in its favor. In the absence of judicial construction, administrative construction is informative, and unless clearly at variance with the express terms of the statute, is entitled to respect. Jarvie v. Commission,
5, 6. In seeking to void defendant's regulation, plaintiff presents three arguments. First, plaintiff points out that some intangible property acquires a situs other than its owner's domicile when it becomes an integral part of its owner's business elsewhere. Endicott, Johnson Co. v. MultnomahCounty, supra. Under this rule, personal property may acquire either a "commercial" situs or a "business" situs. But such commercial or business situs does not destroy the situs in its owner's domiciliary state. The domiciliary state may still subject this property to tax. Double taxation of property because it has two or three tax situs does not violate the Federal Constitution. Cream of Wheat Co. v. County of GrandForks, supra.
7. Secondly, in an attempt to establish a rule that Oregon's apportionment formula assigns intangible income to the situs of the transaction out of which the intangible arose, plaintiff cites three cases. Hines Lumber Co. v. Galloway,
8, 9, 10. Thirdly, plaintiff contends that only income from a "source within this state" is taxable under the excise tax. Nowhere by statute or commission *579
regulation is Oregon's excise tax limited to income from such source. Missouri cases interpreting this phrase cited by plaintiff are not here applicable. Union Electric Co.'sPetition,
What plaintiff has really attempted is to assign to the discount income the situs of the transaction in which the notes were created. But plaintiff was the maker, not the holder, of these notes. Their situs followed not the debtor, plaintiff, but the various *580 holders. Debts are not the debtor's property. Plaintiff's notes acquired no situs through plaintiff until it purchased them. When plaintiff purchased them, they became general assets of plaintiff. When plaintiff bought them, it no longer operated a business in California. It merely leased a property which it owned there. Upon its purchase of its notes, plaintiff extinguished a general liability. The parties have stipulated that, by doing so at less than face value, plaintiff earned taxable income. At no time had the notes acquired a California situs through plaintiff. That they may have acquired a situs in California theretofore through another, or others, is immaterial. Any situs so acquired had to be acquired under a legal fiction because, being an intangible property, they had no inherent situs. Any situs so acquired by legal fiction did not, and could not, carry beyond the existence of the fact giving rise to the fiction, the ownership of the intangible property. Because at the time it purchased the notes, plaintiff no longer operated its California sawmill, but merely leased it, plaintiff had no business situs in California to which these notes could be assigned and these notes did not then become an integral part of any active business operation there.
11. This court finds that the tax commission's regulation, Reg. 7.180(1)-(B), properly establishes plaintiff's discount income as intangible income attributable to Oregon and nonapportionable under the allocation formula. The regulation does not violate either the letter or the spirit of ORS
As an alternative issue, plaintiff contends that defendant should have made its additional assessment, *581 if at all, under the Corporation Income Tax Act of 1955, ORS Chapter 318, rather than the Corporation Excise Tax Act, ORS Chapter 317. Plaintiff relies on defendant's regulation 8.020(1) which reads, in part:
"* * * A foreign or domestic corporation which is authorized to do business within this state, having qualified with the Corporation Commissioner, which is not 'doing business,' but nevertheless receives income ascribable to Oregon, is subject to ORS chapter 318. * * *"
Plaintiff claims to be a domestic corporation not "doing business" within this state because its only business is the leasing of its California sawmill. It cites defendant's Legal Department Abstract, LDA OF 1410, March 22, 1957, which ruled that the rental income of a domestic stevedoring corporation was subject to Oregon's corporation excise tax, but that its stevedoring income earned in interstate commerce was subject to the corporation income tax.
12, 13, 14, 15. ORS Chapter 318 was enacted to subject to state taxation corporation income from interstate commerce which is not subject to corporation excise tax underSpector Motor Service, Inc. v. O'Connor,
The vagueness of plaintiff's separate identity causes much of the difficulty in this case. It arises because plaintiff, a wholly-owned subsidiary, purchased its notes at a discount from its parent corporation, which at the time was leasing plaintiff's only asset, its Crescent City sawmill. The parties stipulated that this discount was income under ORS Chapter 317. This court does not have all the necessary facts before it but it suspects that the discount may be nothing more than a nontaxable capital contribution by the sole shareholder. See Eustice, "Cancellation of Indebtedness and the Federal Income Tax: A Problem of Creeping Confusion," 14 Tax L. Rev. 225, 250 (1959). However, since the parties stipulated that it is income, this issue is not before this court and it cannot decide it. Kitterman v. Eagle Pine Company,
16. In summation, this court finds that plaintiff's discount income was intangible income of a domiciliary corporation and had a tax situs in Oregon, that for plaintiff's 1958 fiscal year, such income was properly taxed as nonapportionable Oregon income under the apportionment formula of ORS
Defendant will prepare a decree under Rule 38 in accordance with this decision, affirming its assessment against plaintiff and allowing defendant its costs and disbursements. *584