This is an appeal by the commissioner of corporations and taxation from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board granting an abatement of an income tax, assessed by virtue of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 1, upon the dividends received by the appellee in 1937 on the share accounts owned by him in the Worcester Cooperative Federal Savings and Loan Association (hereafter called the association), a corporation located in Worcester in this Commonwealth and organized and incorporated under the home owners’ loan act (48 U. S. Sts. at Large, 128, U. S. C. Title 12, § 1461, et seq.). This association resulted from the consolidation, in 1937, of three similar associations and, later in the same year, from the merger with the association of a cooperative bank. The business of the association is substantially similar to that conducted by our State chartered cooperative banks. Both appeal to the same type of investor and to the same class of borrowers. Their investments and loans are practically identical in character. The association on December 31, 1937, had fourteen thousand six hundred twenty-seven shareholders and its savings and
We assume, as the Supreme Court of the United States has assumed, that Congress was empowered to create the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation as provided for by the home owners’ loan act. Kay v. United States,
If the creation of such Federal instrumentalities as savings and loan associations was a valid exercise of congressional power, and if the activities of such associations are governmental functions and so entitled to whatever im
The act in reference to savings and loan associations provides, U. S. C. Title 12, § 1464 (h), that “no State, Territorial, county, municipal, or local taxing authority shall impose any tax on such associations or their franchise, capital, reserves, surplus, loans, or income greater than that imposed by such authority on other similar local mutual or cooperative thrift and home financing institutions.” The tax now assailed does not offend this provision because it was not assessed upon the association or its property. It was laid upon the income of an individual. The incidence of the tax was the receipt of income by him. Helvering v. Therrell,
The appellant contends that the income received from shares in these associations is not protected by any act of Congress from the imposition of a State tax, and that immunity from such taxation on the ground that the association is an instrumentality of the Federal government is no longer tenable. The performance by the Federal government of the functions delegated to it cannot be prevented or impaired by the exercise by the State of taxing power reserved to it. That principle, we think, has always been observed, although the boundaries of immunity enjoyed by one against the other have been restricted by a series of recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. It is now settled that the immunity of a governmental or State agency from taxation does not accrue to a taxpayer who has received income from such an agency. James v. Dravo Contracting Co.
The appellee does not challenge the authority of the Commonwealth to lay a tax on income received by shareholders in a Federal savings and loan association, but contends that the receipt of such income cannot be taxed if no tax is laid upon the receipt of similar income by the shareholders of a cooperative bank. Our inquiry is whether the instant tax is discriminatory against the shareholders in these associations and therefore void.
Taxes assessed upon income derived from private and governmental sources alike have been sustained provided they do not substantially interfere with the performance of governmental functions. Metcalf & Eddy v. Mitchell,
The tax in question was assessed to the appellee under the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 1. See Brink v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation,
Abatement is granted in the amount found by the board, together with interest and costs. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Morgan, ante, 305.
So ordered.
