F. W. Wоolworth Company v. Commissioner of Taxes of the State of Vermont
No. 36-74
Supreme Court of Vermont
October 1, 1974
Motion for Reargument Denied November 14, 1974
328 A.2d 402
Barney, C.J., Smith, Keyser, Daley and Larrow, JJ.
Kimberly B. Cheney, Attorney General, James E. Hirsch, Assistant Attorney General, and Charles E. Goldkamp, Deputy Commissioner of Taxes, for Defendant.
Daley, J. This is an appeal from an order of the Washington County Court affirming a determination of the Commissioner of Taxes. Thаt determination was a result of a remand ordered by this Court in F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, 130 Vt. 544, 298 A.2d 839 (1972). F. W. Woolworth Co., the appellant, here argues that the Commissioner of Taxes did not completely comply with this Court‘s holding in that case in making his determination. The Commissioner of Taxes, the appellee, here contends that his determination is indeed in full comрliance with this Court‘s holding in that case.
This matter originated when Woolworth complained of an assessment of additional corporate income taxes against it by the Commissioner for the years 1966 through 1969. The heart of Woolworth‘s complaint was the Commissioner‘s disallowance of Woolworth‘s exclusion from its taxable income of the “foreign tax credit dividend gross-up” which was reported as income on Woolworth‘s Federal tax return.
This item, known as “gross-up“, is taxable under the laws of the United States in the following situation. In
Under the Vermont corporate income tax structure, it is necessary to determine the amount of Woolworth‘s taxable income under the laws of the United States because that is the starting point for the assessment of the Vermont corporate income tax.
To undertake this apportionment, a formula is provided in
In F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, supra, 130 Vt. at 557, this Court required the Commissioner to adjust the apportionment formula under the authority vested in him by
The obvious effect of including the “gross-up” . . . is to increase the Vermont net income by including this item of foreign subsidiary dividend income in the Vermont net income, while at the same time failing to reflect in the three factors any of the activities of the foreign subsidiaries which have no business activity in Vermont.
In the above quotation the term “Vermont net income” means the taxable income of thе corporation for the taxable year under the laws of the United States.
Following this Court‘s opinion, the Commissioner issued a determination in which he adjusted the apportionment formula utilized to allocate a fair and equitable portion of Woolworth‘s taxable income under the laws of the United States to Vermont fоr the years 1966 through 1969. His new formula included the property, wages, and sales of Woolworth‘s foreign subsidiaries as factors to allocate a fair and equitable portion of the “gross-up” item of Woolworth‘s taxable income. The Commissioner maintains that this determination is in full compliance with this Court‘s holding in F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, supra.
Woolworth argues thаt the Commissioner‘s determination does not comply with this Court‘s holding because, as stated in its brief, “the formula should be modified to include foreign property, payroll, and sales to the extent the non-‘gross-up’ portion as well as the ‘gross-up’ portion of foreign dividends are included in apportionable income.” This argumеnt is predicated on the assumption that the dividend income that Woolworth receives from its foreign subsidiary corporations and its “gross-up” of its Federal taxable income that it is required to make in order to take the “deemed paid foreign tax credit” cannot be separated for purposes of allоcation.
Similar arguments as these were heard by this Court in Gulf Oil Corp. v. Morrison, 120 Vt. 324, 141 A.2d 671 (1958). Although that case was decided when the taxation of corporations was accomplished under a franchise tax, the apportiоnment formula there utilized to allocate a fair and equitable portion of net income of the corporation to Vermont was identical to the one now contained in
Gulf Oil Corporation argued against the taxation of dividends it received from its wholly owned subsidiaries which had no direct relationship with its business in Vermont. It alternatively argued that the tax imposed on such dividends was illegal becausе the Commissioner of Taxes imposed the tax without modifying the allocation formula to include the value of the stock of the corporations located wholly without Vermont from which it received the dividends.
This Court, in Gulf Oil Corp. v. Morrison, supra, pointed out that the assessment of the tax against dividends received is not a tax assessed against the cоrporations paying those dividends. It is a tax assessed solely against the income of the corporation which receives those dividends. Id. 120 Vt. at 328. This is true regardless whether the tax is called a franchise or corporate income tax. Therefore, the allegation that dividend income must be deemed to be incоme from Woolworth‘s foreign stores, necessitating the inclusion of the foreign apportionment factors in the apportionment formula, cannot be sustained.
“Gross-up“, in contrast, is a creation of the Federal income tax system, wholly foreign to a corporation‘s financial and economic structure. The inclusion of this item, directly traceable to the business activities of a foreign corporation, in taxable corporate income would constitute an arbitrary and unfair representation of “the extent of the business activities of a corporation within this state,” in contravention of
The Legislature has provided no statutory authority either under the franchise tax or under the corporate income tax for specialized allocation of dividend income separate and apart from the allocation of all other forms of corporate income, and this Court cannot undertake to do so here, absent a showing that the formula of appоrtionment designated by the Legislature was intrinsically arbitrary or that the allocation formula used operated unreasonably and arbitrarily. Gulf Oil Corp. v. Morrison, supra, 120 Vt. at 330. The Commissioner there was provided no legislative authority to consider intangible personal property, the value of stock, as a factor in the allocation formula in a tax assessment made against the dividends received by Gulf Oil Corporation from corporations located wholly without Vermont. Id. at 329. The Commissioner here is provided no legislative authority to consider the property, payroll and sales of a foreign subsidiary corporation which pays dividends to Woolworth as а
Legislative functions cannot be undertaken in the guise of judicial interpretation. State v. Ball, 123 Vt. 26, 31, 179 A.2d 466 (1962); see also State v. Franklin County Savings Bank & Trust Co., 74 Vt. 246, 52 A. 1069 (1902). To add dividend income to “gross-up” and allocate it according to the adjusted apportionment formula required by F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, supra, 130 Vt. at 557, would do just that. Moreover, it would give Woolworth an unfair advantage with respect to its foreign dividend income over all other corporations within Vermont which receive dividend income without benefit of such adjusted formula. This Court cannot undertake to provide a specialized apportionment formula to specific items of corporate income when the Legislature chose not to do so by statute or by a grant of authority to the Commissioner of Taxes where it has not been established that the apportionment formula does not fairly represent the extent of the business activities of a corporation within Vermont.
Woolworth alsо maintains that the Commissioner wrongfully excluded “withholding taxes on dividends received from foreign subsidiaries” from “gross-up“. However, the withholding tax is a direct tax on the dividend income realized by a domestic corporation, as Woolworth states in its brief, not a tax paid or deemed paid by a foreign subsidiary corporation. Sinсe the withholding tax is not part of “gross-up“, directly traceable to the business activities of the foreign corporation, but a portion of the dividend income of the domestic corporation paid to the country wherein the foreign corporation is located, there is no basis for including the property, payroll, and sales of the foreign subsidiary as a factor in the allocation formula utilized to impose the Vermont corporate income tax. The sum of money, “about $20,000,000“, stated in F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, supra, 130 Vt. at 556, contended by Woolworth to be the actual amount of “gross-up“, did not mean to suggest that the Commissioner was precluded from an еxamination of Woolworth‘s declared Vermont net income to determine the
No conflict between the Commissioner‘s determination made under the authority vested in him by
Judgment affirmed.
Larrow, J. (dissenting). I have no substantial disagreement with the conclusions of the majority opinion in this case, or with the rationale employed to reach those conclusions. Implied, however, in the majority opinion is tacit agreement with the conclusions arrived at in the first appeal in this matter. F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Commissioner of Taxes, 130 Vt. 544, 298 A.2d 839 (1972). Insofar as assent to the majority opinion wоuld seem to me to imply acquiescence in the first opinion also, I feel obligated to dissent.
In several places (cf. Woolworth, supra, pp. 551, 557) the prior opinion refers to “gross-up” as a dividend or as dividend income. This, coupled with the garbled definition set forth at the bottom of p. 551, impels me to conclude that the essential nature of “gross-up” was misconstrued. Although it is “deemed” paid under Federal tax law for the purpose, where appropriate, of determining the Federal tax credit of a domestic corporation, it is never, in fact, received by or paid out by that corporation. It is merely a determined proportion of the taxes paid directly by thе foreign subsidiary to the foreign country, thereafter treated for determining tax liability to the United States as though it had been received as a dividend and paid out in foreign taxes against the domestic corporation. The obvious purpose, essentially Federal, is to encourage domestic ownership of forеign corporations through special tax treatment.
In my view, this particular item, which the domestic corporation never received, either actually or constructively, and which it was not at any time entitled to receive, does not become taxable income of the taxpayer, even though “deеmed” or treated as such for the purpose of computing its tax in the event it elects to claim credit in that amount. It is merely, as the prior opinion acknowledges (Woolworth, supra, p. 551) one step taken in the computation of taxable income.
The findings and conclusions below set forth the formula used by the Commissioner in making the comрutations required by the previous opinion. I do not agree to its accuracy, nor do I understand the majority opinion to expressly endorse it. But its accuracy was not put in issue, either below or in this Court, and is therefore not for determination.
I would review and revise the prior opinion, remanding to the Commissioner for new computations, excluding “gross-up” from the Vermont net income of the taxpayer for the years in question.
