605 N.E.2d 981 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1992
This is an appeal from the Franklin County Municipal Court, which granted judgment to E. Thomas Boles, Jr., M.D., defendant herein. The city of Columbus, Division of Income Tax, plaintiff herein, appeals and asserts the following assignments of error:
"I. The trial court committed prejudicial error in determining that income from defendant's interest in the Atlas Building was not taxable by the City of Columbus. *619
"II. The trial court committed prejudicial error by entering judgment for defendant and against plaintiff on plaintiff's complaint and by entering judgment against plaintiff and for defendant on defendant's counterclaim."
These two assignments of error present a single question for our review. That question is whether Columbus may tax a nonresident for limited partnership income derived from partnership business operations conducted within city limits.
Plaintiff filed a complaint on May 17, 1990 in the Franklin County Municipal Court against defendant, alleging that he failed to pay sufficient municipal income tax for the years 1986 and 1987. Plaintiff demanded judgment in the amount of $1,565.92 plus interest. Defendant answered and defended, arguing that plaintiff had no authority to tax his limited partnership income. He also counterclaimed for a refund of certain taxes previously paid for such income.
The parties submitted stipulations and the cause was tried to the court. The stipulations state that defendant is a resident of Upper Arlington, Ohio. During the years 1986 and 1987, defendant was a limited partner in several business ventures, including Atlas Building, Ltd. The principal office and location of operations of this limited partnership is in Columbus. In 1986, defendant derived $32,856 in income from his interest in Atlas Building, Ltd. In 1987, he derived $84,026 in income from it.
Given these elementary facts, the trial court held that plaintiff could not tax defendant's limited partnership income. First, the trial court decided that defendant's investment activity in a Columbus enterprise did not qualify as a taxable activity under the local tax code. Second, the trial court concluded that limited partnership income, by its very nature, is intangible income that is not subject to municipal income taxation in any event. Accordingly, the trial court entered judgment against plaintiff and for defendant.
The threshold issue in this appeal is whether the trial court erred in concluding that the language of the local income tax code precludes the taxation of defendant's limited partnership income. During the tax periods in question, the Columbus City Code Net Profits Tax, contained in Section 361.19 of the code, read:
"To provide for the purposes of general municipal operations, maintenance, new equipment, and capital improvements of the City, there is hereby levied a tax at the rate of two (2.0) percent per annum upon the following:
"* * *
"(c) Net Profits; *620
"(1) On the net profits earned of all unincorporated businesses, professions, or other activities conducted by residents of the City.
"(2) On the net profits earned of all unincorporated businesses, professions, or other activities conducted in the City by nonresidents.
"(3) For purposes of (c)(1) and (c)(2) above, an association shall not be taxable as an entity, but any member thereof who is a resident of the City shall be taxed individually on his entire share whether distributed or not, of the annual net profits of the association, and any non-resident member thereof shall be taxed individually only on that portion of his share, whether distributed or not, of the annual net profits of the association as is derived from work done, services performed or rendered, and business or other activities conducted in the City."
In this appeal the parties present widely disparate interpretations of this particular impost. Plaintiff emphasizes that defendant's partnership, which qualifies as an "association" under Sections 361.03 and 361.19(c)(3), was located in Columbus and did business there. Because of this, plaintiff contends that the resident partnership's net profits were taxable under Section 361.19(c)(1) and then attributable to defendant under Section 361.19(c)(3). Contrarily, defendant contends that the foregoing provisions clearly state in Section 361.19(c)(3) that no entity tax is imposed on an association such as a partnership.1 Rather, defendant argues that partners are taxed only for their actual personal activities in Columbus. Because defendant was merely a "passive" investor, defendant contends that he neither personally conducted any activity in Columbus nor personally conducted any business there. Hence, defendant contends that no tax can be imposed upon him.
At the outset, we note that the local income tax code is by no means a model of clarity. Like other Ohio municipalities, Columbus entered the income tax field in the 1940s after the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, pioneered this area of municipal finance in 1938. See, generally, Fordham Mallison, Local Income Taxation (1950), 11 Ohio St.L.J. 217, 220-223; Note, Municipal Personal Income Taxation of Nonresidents (1970), 31 Ohio St.L.J. 770, 785. Today, the Columbus City Code retains much of the same language as was contained in that early 1938 Philadelphia ordinance.
In Benua v. Columbus (1959),
While Benua is not entirely on point, it undoubtedly establishes that the language of the taxing ordinance itself should control our analysis here and that the relatively passive activity of receiving rent can qualify as "business" under the broadly drafted Columbus tax ordinance.
In the present case, the trial court found that receiving income from a Columbus limited partnership is not an "activity" under Section 361.19(c)(2). In addition, defendant urges on appeal that he cannot be said to have "conducted" any activity in Columbus because a limited partner, by statute, is only a passive investor with no right of day-to-day control or management responsibilities.3
These same arguments were raised in Philadelphia and considered by the courts there years ago. For instance, inFreedman v. Tax Review Bd. of City of Philadelphia (1968),
The Superior Court's ruling in Freedman was appealed to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. In a one-sentence, per curiam
opinion, the ruling was *622
affirmed by an evenly divided Supreme Court. Freedman v. TaxReview Bd. of City of Philadelphia (1969),
We do not find these Pennsylvania cases to be persuasive in the case at hand. First, the Philadelphia ordinance has received strict construction and very restrictive treatment from the courts in that state, in part because of limitations set forth in the state's amended Sterling Act, which initially allowed for municipal income taxation in 1932. Consequently, unlike Ohio courts, the Pennsylvania courts have felt constrained by principles of state preemption to create an "earned" income restriction, which in the final analysis has lead to much litigation and various restrictive holdings. See Breitinger v.Philadelphia (1950),
Second, the points made in the dissenting opinions ofFreedman have much force. The net profits tax ordinance, on its face, makes no distinction between types of business association partners, be they general, limited, silent, or otherwise. Further, regardless of the amount of personal control over operations, the limited partner is definitely reaping benefits from conducting business within the city.5 And, if limited partners could not be taxed, then limited partnerships would essentially have special tax-exempt status, which is not the case for any other business enterprise in the city. *623
This latter point is ever the more significant in Ohio because of the passage of the 1957 Uniform Municipal Income Tax Act. Pursuant to the constitutional authority to limit municipal taxation despite municipal home rule power, the General Assembly enacted R.C.
Accordingly, Section 361.19(c)(2) broadly allows for the taxation of the net profits of activities conducted in the city by nonresidents. Section 361.19(c)(3) provides a special rule for "associations," which, by virtue of Section 361.03, includes partnerships, limited partnerships, or any other unincorporated enterprises owned by two or more persons. Under 361.19(c)(3), only that portion of a nonresident partner's share as is derived from work done, services performed or rendered, and business or other activities conducted in the city is taxable. Defendant has not disputed in any fashion that his entire share of limited partnership income is derived from business operations of his partnership, which is located within the city of Columbus. Cf.Columbus v. Newkirk (Feb. 19, 1976), Franklin App. No. 75AP-378, unreported (nonresident physician failed to present evidence that losses from nonresident businesses were attributable to Columbus, so as to offset gains from business in the city). Indeed, even if the court were to accept defendant's argument that a limited partnership is tantamount to an investment, defendant cannot dispute that his professed investment in Columbus constitutes an undertaking conducted by him under the definition of "business" in Section 361.04.
While defendant insists that the term "conducted," used throughout the ordinance, is a limiting term denoting some active control, management, or services performed (in essence, invoking a sort of "earned" income concept), the term is not defined in the ordinance at all, let alone in this manner. To be sure, the term has a variety of usages, one of which signifies to "carry on" *624 some endeavor.6 In this sense, obviously the partnership carried on business in Columbus and defendant carried on investment there as well.
This particular construction of the ordinance is supported by other portions of the Net Profits Tax and the consequences of an alternative construction. For, in addition to taxation of all unincorporated enterprises by virtue of Section 361.19(c), the net profits of other enterprises such as corporations, estates, and trusts are subject to municipal income taxation under Section 361.19(d).
We therefore hold that the trial court erred in concluding that plaintiff could not tax the income in question under the Columbus City Code. Hence, we turn to the next issue raised by the briefs. That issue is whether the taxation of defendant's limited partnership income is expressly or impliedly preempted by the state laws concerning intangible income.
In addition to familiar constitutional limitations on the municipal taxing power, one limitation on the exercise of such power in Ohio is the doctrine of state preemption. Pursuant to the home-rule provision of the Ohio Constitution granting municipalities the power of local self-government, municipalities may impose an income tax; however, this power is subject to limitations prescribed by the General Assembly.Williams v. Columbus (1987),
In accordance with this doctrine, in Ohio Finance Co. v.Toledo (1955),
Because of this, the Uniform Municipal Income Tax Act was amended in 1986 by Am.Sub.S.B. No. 238. By this enactment, division (C) was added to R.C.
Nevertheless, the General Assembly also included a provision of temporary law in Section 3 of the Act, which clearly states:
"Notwithstanding section
Hence, contrary to defendant's contention, the 1986 amendment to the statute did not totally preclude or expressly preempt all municipal taxation of intangible income. Rather, Section 3 of the Act expressly allowed for such taxation in 1986 and 1987 if previously permitted by local ordinance. Thus, even if limited partnership income qualifies as intangible income under division (C) of the 1986 version of R.C.
Did plaintiff previously permit municipal income taxation of intangible income? There is no evidence in this case to establish that the city collected such income from anyone. Therefore, we are left with the language of the ordinance itself which, during the period in question, contained the same operative language in Section 361.19(c) regarding limited partnership taxation that we have previously discussed above. As we previously concluded, this language would permit taxation of nonresident limited partnership income. Consequently, to the extent that such income is intangible income, it was permitted to be taxed prior to April 1, 1986. Accordingly, the 1986 version of R.C.
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiff's assignments of error are sustained. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and in accordance with the law.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
JOHN C. YOUNG, P.J., and TYACK, J., concur.