This is the second appeal in a suit instituted to enjoin the collection of taxes and penalties in the sum of $135,761.51 assessed by the Tax Commissioner of West Virginia against the Dravo Contracting Company. The case was first heard before a statutory court of three judges, and the taxes were held void on the ground that they burdened operations of the United States Government. Dravo Contracting Co. v. Fox, D.C.,
The statute involved is ch. 11, art. 13, West Virginia Code of 1931, as amended May 26, 1933, Acts W.Va.1933, 1st Ex. Sess., c. 33. The applicable provisions thereof are as follows:
“Sec. 2. There is hereby levied and shall be collected annual privilege taxes against the persons, on account of the business and other activities, and in the amounts to be determined by the application of rates against values or gross incоme, as follows:
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“(e) Upon every person engaging or continuing within this state in the business of contracting, the tax shall be equal to two per cent of the gross income of the business.”
Gross income is thus defined in the statute : “ ‘Gross income’ means the gross receipts of the taxpayer received as compensation for personal services and the gross receipts of the taxpayer derived from trade, business, сommerce or sales and the value proceeding or accruing from the sale of tangible property (real or personal), or service, or both, and all receipts by reason of the investment of the capital of the business engaged in, including interest, discount, rentals, royalties, fees or other emoluments however designated and without any deductions on account of the cost of propеrty sold, the cost of materials used, labor costs, taxes, royalties, interest or discount paid or any other expense whatsoever.” Section 1.
Taxpayer is an engineering and contracting corporation existing under the laws of Pennsylvania and having its office and principal place of business as well as its extensive plant at Neville Island near Pittsburgh. During 1933 and 1934, the tax years here in question, it held four contracts with thе United States Government for the construction of locks and dams in the Ohio and Kanawha rivers in the state of West Virginia. These contracts provided for the payment of unit prices for the work to be done in the construction of the locks and dams; and, with the exception hereafter noted, progress payments were made upon delivery of materials at the dam sites or upon incorporation of thesе materials in the locks or dams. The exception, as pointed out by the Supreme Court (
“A large part of respondent’s work was performed at its plant at Pittsburgh. The stipulation of facts shows that respondent purchased outside the state of West Virginia materials used in the manufacture of the roller gates, lock gates, cranes, substructure racks and spur rims, structural steel, patterns, hoisting mechanism and equipment, under each of its contracts, and fabricated the same at its Pittsburgh plant. The roller gates and the appurtenant equipment were .preassembled at respondent’s shops at' Pittsburgh, and were there inspected and tested by officers of the United States government. The materials and equipment fabricated at Pittsburgh were there stored until time for delivery, and the appropriate units as prepared for shipment were then transported by respondent to' the designated sites in West Virginia and there installed. The United States knew at the time the contracts were made that the above-described work was to be performed at the plaintiff’s main plant. The contracts provided for partial payments as the work progressed, and that all the material and work covered by the *245 partial payments should thereupon become ‘the sole property of the government.’ Payments by the government were made from time to time accordingly.
“It is clear that West Virginia had no jurisdiction to lay a tax upon respondent with respect to this work done in Pennsylvania. As to the material and equipment there fabricated, the business and activities of respondent in West Virginia consisted of the installation at the respective sites within that state, and an apportionment would in any event be necessary to limit the tax accordingly. Hans Reеs’ Sons v. North Carolina [283 U.S. 123 ,51 S.Ct. 385 ,75 L.Ed. 879 ], supra.”
The contention of the taxpayer is that the State of West Virginia may not tax activities under the contract not taking place in West Virginia; and that, in addition to the fabrication of parts at the Pittsburgh plant upon which partial payments were made, it did much work there in preparing structural steel and other materials for incorporation in the locks and dams. A stipulation as to the costs incurrеd at the plant and at the work sites was entered into; and the judge below made an apportionment of income based upon this stipulation. Taxpayer contends, however, that the court is without power to apportion income for the purpose of taxation on the basis of relative costs, as no such apportionment is provided for in the statute, and that, in the absence of such provisiоn, the effect of the fact that taxpayer earns the income from the contracts by activities occurring without the state as well as within it, is to invalidate the tax as applied to such income.
We agree with taxpayer that the court was without power to apportion its income on the basis of the cost of the activities involved in earning the income within and without the state. No such basis of appоrtionment is prescribed by statute ; and, in the absence of statute, the court is without power to adopt it, as this is a legislative function involved in the imposition of the tax, and, therefore, not one which courts may exercise. 61 C.J. 1583. Commonwealth v. P. Lorillard Co.,
Since'no method of apportionment is provided by the statute, it is clear that the apportionment directed by the Supreme Court means a separation, for purposes of taxation under the statute, of the portion of the income subject to the taxing power of the state. And that this is all that the statute was intended to tax, appears from the fact that the tax is imposed upon “engaging or continuing
within the state
in the business of contracting.” (Italics supplied.) The business here involved was contracting for the erection of locks and dams within the state. With the exception of the deliveries and the fabrication at the Pittsburgh plant, for which partial payments were made with passage of title to the government, all of the activities upon which payments were made occurred within the state, and the income derived therefrom was subject to the state’s power to tax. Certainly property brought within the state was rendered subject to that power; and no distinction can be drawn between the state’s power to tax the property and its power to tax income received upon delivery of the property within the state by the contractor or its incorporаtion by him in the dams and locks. As said by
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the Supreme Court in this case (
Nоt only is it clear from the language of the Supreme Court first quoted, that its intention was that only those portions of taxpayer’s income derived from payments made upon delivery or fabrication at the Pittsburgh plant should be excluded from income in computing the tax, but this is the interpretation -placed upon its decision by the Supreme Court itself in the later case of Ford Motor Co. v. Beauchamp,
It is argued that the tax is invalid under the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Hans Rees’ Sons v. North Carolina,
Pertinent is the language used by the Supreme Court in Ford Motor Co. v. Beauchamp, supra,
In the very recent case of McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co.,
With respect to the рower of the state to tax on the basis of transactions occurring within its borders, this case, in its implications, is not unlike South Carolina Power Co. v. South Carolina Tax Commission, D.C.,
Another question presented by the appeal is whether penalties or interest should be allowed upon the amount of taxes found to be due. We think, however, that the court below was unquestionably right in denying penalties. The assessment was made upon a basis held by the Supreme Court to be erroneous in that it included in the gross income of the taxpayer partial payments made on account of the materials delivered or fabricated at the Pittsburgh plant. No assessment of the correct amount of the tax has even yet been made. Moreover, the tax as assessed was not severable so that taxpayer was given an opportunity of paying the amount properly due; and no opportunity was given to pay the entire amount and sue for the recovery of the portion illegally assessed. Taxpayer was justified in contesting liability for the taxes as assessed; and until the income to serve as the basis for taxation shall be ascertained and the taxes thereon determined, it would be inequitable to allow penalties for non payment to be collected. United States Trust Co. v. New Mexico,
The question as to the allowance of interest is a more difficult one. It is true that the statutes of West Virginia make no provision for the collection of interest upon delinquent taxes; and it is well settled that in suits for the recovery оf such taxes interest is not recoverable unless authorized by statute. Board of Education v. Old Dominion Iron, Min. & Mfg. Co.,
-For the reasons stated, the decree appealed from will be reversed, and the cause will be remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith. Upon such remand, decree should be entered enjoining the collection of only so much of the taxes as were assessed upon the portion of the income of taxpayer derived from payments made upon deliveries or fabrication at its Pittsburgh plant, but enjoining the collection of all penalties or interest assessed prior to the entry of the decree. The costs in this • Court on both appeals will be equally divided between the parties.
Reversed.
SOPER, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result.
