250 F. 1 | 5th Cir. | 1918
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Texas in favor of the defendant in error, the United States, against the plaintiff in error for the amount of taxes claimed to have been due and unpaid under the corporation tax law of August 5, 1909 (36 Statutes at Barge, 11), for the years 1909, 1910, and 1911. The case was tried by stipulation before the District Judge without a jury, and the error relied on is that the evidence does not support the judgment rendered by him. The evidence was partly stipulated and partly oral, but there was not any dispute of fact on the trial below, and but a single question of law is presented for decision.
The terminal company executed the bonds and mortgage which
The contention of the plaintiff in error is that the tenant companies were principal debtors of the Central Trust Company and not mere guarantors of the terminal company, and that the payments, never having been received into1 the treasury of the terminal company, constituted no part of its income for the years in question, and were properly left out of account by the terminal company in returning its corporation tax. This is the issue between the parties. Its solution depends upon whether the payments made by the tenant companies tof the Central Trust Company were properly income of the terminal company under the corporation tax law. That law was held by the Supreme Court in the case of Anderson v. Forty-Two Broadway Co., 239 U. S. 69, 36 Sup. Ct. 17, 60 L. Ed. 152, to be “not in any proper sense an income tax law, nor intended as such, but was an excise upon tbe conduct of business in a corporate capacity, the tax being measured by reference to the income in a manner prescribed by the act itself.” Section 38 of the Act of 1909, c. 6, 36 Statutes at Earge, 112, provides that the taxable net income shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross
It may be that the tenant companies organized the terminal company to provide a convenient joint agency for the performance of certain of their duties as carriers, and with no view to profit to be derive'd from its organization. It was, however, legally organized as a corporation, capable of earning and paying dividends to its stockholders, and the fact that it has not done so does not malee it tire less a corporation engaged in business and organized for profit, within the meaning of the corporation tax law. Profit from its organization and operation could result to' its stockholders in other ways than in dividends. If the tenant companies chose to avail themselves of an agency, owned by. them, which did business in a corporate capacity, then under the act of August 5, 1909, they became liable through it for the payment of an excise tax for this privilege. The voluntary payment of part of the tax concedes this. Boston Terminal Co. v. Gill, Collector, 246 Fed. 664, — C. C. A. —.
The tenant companies made use of the facilities and services of the terminal company in two ways: First, by the use of its property; and, second, through the services of its employes. Compensation for the services of its employes was returned by the payment by the tenant companies of a pro rata part of its actual operating expenses. The only other return from' the tenant companies to the terminal company provided for was the payment of interest and sinking fund installments. Unless these represented compensation for the use of the terminal company’s property, there was none. The property so used was owned, by the terminal company, not by the tenant companies, and compensation for its use was properly due to the terminal company as owner. Upon withdrawal from such use by a tenant company, its obligation to continue interest, and sinking fund payments ceased. This is persuasive that the consideration for such payments was the user of the property of the terminal company. When the sinking fund installments fully paid the mortgage indebtedness, the property became the unincumbered property of .the terminal company. -The payments of interest by the tenant companies were not voluntary, even as to the terminal company. The tenant companies covenanted with the terminal company to’ make such payments, and, in case of default, a provision was made in the agreements for the exclusion of any that defaulted from the privileges they enjoyed in the terminal company’s facili-
The effect of the arrangement was the same as if the tenant companies had expressly agreed to pay rental for the use of the premises in the amount of the interest and sinking fund payments, and, to avoid circuity, the payments by mutual consent were made direct to the mortgagee. If the owner of a building, as a condition of securing a loan on if, should conscnt'that the mortgagee might collect the rents and apply them in reduction of the mortgage debt, the owner would still he required to report them as income, though they were never, in fact, paid to him. He would benefit from their payments, as much as if they had been paid to him direct. The case is similar to that of Blalock v. Georgia Ry. & Electric Co., 246 Fed. 387, - C. C. A. — , recently decided by this court, and is not distinguishable from it in principle in this respect. Nor is it important to determine whether the tenant companies were guarantors of the loan of the terminal company or principal debtors with it, in their relations to the Central Trust Company. As between the terminal company and the tenant companies, there was an independent enforceable covenant on the part of the tenant companies in favor of the terminal company to pay the installments of interest and sinking fund, for the terminal company, as they fell due— a covenant, upon a continued performance of which the right of the tenant companies to use the property of the terminal company depended. There was also a primary and direct obligation on the part of the terminal company to pay the interest and sinking fund installments to the Central Trust Company, which obligation the tenant companies, as a consideration for their enjoyment of the terminal company’s property, agreed to perform. We think it dear that the payment of such sums, in pursuance of their covenant, was but a payment of rent by the tenant companies to the terminal company for the use of the premises occupied by them, and was properly treated as if it had been paid to the terminal company, and by it paid to the Central Trust Company.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.