184 S.W.2d 250 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1944
Affirming.
This action was instituted by the Commissioner of Revenue of the Commonwealth to recover income taxes, penalties and interest aggregating $98,602.66 over a period of seven years from 1936 to 1942, inclusive, from the Radio Corporation of America (hereinafter referred to as RCA). A general demurrer was sustained to the petition, the Commonwealth declined to plead further, whereupon its petition was dismissed, and it appeals.
The petition avers that RCA is a Delaware corporation with its principal office and place of business located in New York and that it maintains no office or officers in this state; that Ken-Rad Tube Lamp Company (hereinafter referred to as Ken-Rad) is a Delaware corporation engaged in manufacturing radio tubes with its principal place of business and its chief office located in Owensboro, Ky.; that RCA was the owner of certain letters patent and that it entered into an agreement with *46 Ken-Rad permitting the latter to manufacture radio tubes under RCA's patent in consideration of certain royalties to be paid it by Ken-Rad on the tubes manufactured. The petition sets out the amount of royalties Ken-Rad paid RCA during each of the 7 years which range in round numbers from $131,000 to $275,000, and then pleads the income tax rate, the interest and penalties as provided by statute and averred a total of $98,602.66 was due the Commonwealth by RCA.
The pertinent parts of our income tax statute read:
KRS
KRS
KRS
"(a) Interest, dividends, rents and royalties, less related expenses, received in connection with business in this state shall be allocated to this state, and that received in connection with business outside of this state shall be allocated outside of this state." *47
The question before us simply stated is, whether or not the royalties paid RCA by Ken-Rad were received from business done, or from property located in Kentucky, or arose from sources within this state? To answer this three-pronged question it is first necessary to determine the legal aspects of a patent right and of a royalty paid for the use thereof where the owner of the patent has no direct connection with the manufacture of the tubes in Kentucky but relies solely on a contract made in a foreign state for the right to receive royalties.
A patent right is an intangible, incorporeal right granted by the federal government and is as broad as the government's jurisdiction but it has no situs apart from the domicile of the owner. 1 Conflict of Laws (Beale) sec. 104.2, p. 448; 48 C. J. sec. 8, p. 18; Ebsary Gypsum Co. v. Ruby,
RCA's only relation with Ken-Rad was that the two companies entered into a contract in New York wherein RCA permitted Ken-Rad to use its patent in manufacturing tubes in Kentucky in consideration of the latter paying certain royalties to the former. RCA had no hand whatever in Ken-Rad's manufacturing business in Kentucky. By no stretch of the imagination can it be said that RCA was doing business in Kentucky by receiving royalties in New York under a contract entered into in that state with a corporation domiciled in Kentucky. In reality the royalties are paid not by reason of the tubes being manufactured in Kentucky (they would have been *48 due just the same had the tubes been manufactured elsewhere), but are paid solely by virtue of the contract, which in effect was that in consideration of the royalties to be paid by Ken-Rad there would be no suit brought by RCA for infringement of its patent. Nor did RCA bring its patent into this state. A patent is an intangible right which has its situs at the domicile of its owner, in this instance New York. And as RCA took no part in Ken-Rad's manufacturing business in Kentucky, it did not bring its patent into this state merely by executing the royalty contract in New York.
The Commonwealth most earnestly insists that should we hold that RCA was not doing business in Kentucky and that it had no property located in this state, yet there is no escape from the conclusion that the royalties arose from sources in Kentucky, relying largely on Sabatini v. Commissioner, 2 Cir.,
The source of the royalties was not in Kentucky where the tubes happen to be manufactured, but was in New York where the contract was signed and the royalties were payable. The contract created a debt or obligation on the part of Ken-Rad, whose domicile was in Kentucky, to RCA, whose domicile was in New York, and *49
this debt is intangible, personal property which under the rule of mobila sequuntur personam has its legal situs at the domicile of the creditor. Curry v. McCanless,
Let us suppose for the moment that instead of this contract providing for a royalty payable on the tubes as they were manufactured, that the parties had anticipated the number of tubes which would have been made during the life of the patent and had agreed that the royalties would amount to $2,000,000 and that the contract recited Ken-Rad would pay for the license that sum at the rate of $200,000 per year for 10 years and executed in New York a series of notes covering such indebtedness. It is immediately apparent that in such circumstances it could not be argued with reason that the $200,000 payable yearly would be subject to Kentucky's income tax statute as having arisen from sources within this state. In legal effect there is no difference between the hypothetical contract and the actual one now before us.
Hazeltine Corp. v. McColgan, decided by the Superior Court of Sacramento County, California, is exactly on all fours with the case before us. While this is not a decision by a court of last resort and a copy of the opinion was appended to appellee's brief, it is a thoroughly considered and well-reasoned opinion in which many leading cases are carefully reviewed. The court there reached the conclusion that the royalties paid to a foreign corporation (not doing business in that state) under a contract granting a California corporation the right to use certain patents were not income from sources within the State of California. It may be noted that the Tax Commissioner of California acquiesced in the opinion and prosecuted no appeal, and for this reason the Supreme Court of California did not write on the subject. *50
The Commonwealth relies upon Greene v. Kentenia Corp.,
Fox Film Corp. v. Doyal,
As RCA is not liable for the income tax sought to *51 be collected from it, the trial judge properly sustained a demurrer to the petition and his judgment is affirmed.
Whole Court sitting.
Judges Cammack and Thomas dissenting.