296 Mass. 201 | Mass. | 1936
This is an appeal (under G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 58A, § 13, as amended, so far as now material, by St. 1933, c. 321, § 7) by the commissioner of corporations and taxation from a decision by the Board of Tax Appeals granting an abatement of $13,098.81 to a partnership known as Hornblower and Weeks, upon an income tax return filed in 1931, upon the income received during the year 1930.
The facts in a condensed form are as follows: The tax return of Hornblower and Weeks (hereinafter called the brokers) for the year 1930 included an item of $907,002.47 under “Losses during the year from fire, theft, etc. (not compensated for by insurance).” This item, for the purposes of this appeal, in fact represented losses sustained by the brokers from the purchase and sale of securities for
The pertinent statutes involved are the various sections of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62. By § 1 thereof, interest and dividends received by the taxpayer from certain sources are taxable at the rate of six per cent. Section 2 reads as follows: “From the income taxable under the preceding section, the taxpayer may, under the conditions prescribed in this section and section seven, receive a deduction on account of interest paid by him during the year on debts of the following classes: (a) Debts, except those secured by mortgage or pledge of real estate or tangible personal property, owed by persons engaged in the business of buying, selling, or otherwise dealing in intangible personal property, provided that such business, if it includes other classes of dealings, does not include buying, selling, improving or otherwise dealing in or with real estate or buying, selling, manufacturing or otherwise dealing in or with tangible personal property other -than gold bullion, (b) Debts owed by other persons, except debts secured by such mortgage or pledge and debts on account of which the taxpayer is entitled to claim a deduction under sections five and six. Said deduction shall be allowed, in respect of interest on any debt belonging to class (b) above enumerated arising from loans or open accounts directly or indirectly secured by intangible personal property, only to an amount not exceeding eighty per cent of the income returned by the taxpayer for taxation under section one on account of intangible personal property which secured such loans or open accounts. Persons described in paragraph (a) of this section may, if the deduc-
In the case at bar there appears to be no misunderstanding between the parties as to what the figures in the return represented. The sole controversy centers about the question as to whether the item respecting losses from bad margin accounts may, under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 6, be deducted from business income and swell the total deductions under § 6; so that, under § 2, the excess of this deduction over business income and gains from dealing in intangible personal property may be used as a deduction to wipe out the interest and dividends reported by the brokers under § 1 of c. 62.
It is not disputed that the brokers’ aggregate losses from all sources exceeded their aggregate gains from all sources. Under the method employed by the tax commissioner, of allowing the item to be deducted, not from business income, but from the excess of gains over losses in the purchase and sale of intangible personal property, all taxable interest and dividends would not be wiped out.
The controversy, reduced to its lowest terms, is, therefore, as to whether the item representing bad margin accounts may be deducted from income under § 6. The opinion of the board seems to rest on the assumption that receipts and expenditures for purchase and sale of securities will offset each other, or that income is received by a broker from any transaction for a customer which gives rise to a debt owed him by the customer. The board made the first of these assumptions, and allowed the item in question to be deducted as a bad debt under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 6 (f). We are of opinion that the decision of the board cannot be supported. It is obvious that under
As above stated, the matter for decision is whether the item in question may be deducted from the gross receipts, under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 6, or whether it may be deducted at all. In support of the position that the item may not be deducted at all, it may be pointed out that the Massachusetts income tax law is not a general income tax law, but that it provides for separate taxes at different rates upon income from various sources. See Tax Commissioner v. Putnam, 227 Mass. 522, 531-532. Knights v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 237 Mass. 493, 495. In the case at bar it is not denied that the interest which the brokers obtained on account of loans to customers on margin accounts is taxable, under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 1, as interest, at six per cent. It is clear that under §§ 1 and 2 of c. 62, no deduction is there allowed for bad debts receivable as principal, unless such debts constitute part of an excess of deduction over business income and gains from intangible personal property under §§ 5 and 6. If the Legislature had intended such debts to be deductible at all, the normal place for such deduction would have been directly under §§ 1 and 2, since interest there reported is a gain resulting directly from risk of capital by the broker. We are of opinion that the brokers in the present case are barred by the principle that one seeking an exemption
It results that the entry must be
Petition for abatement dismissed.