99 P.2d 24 | Or. | 1939
The question presented on this appeal is whether net income, received in 1934 and 1935 by a *673 resident of this state from intangibles held in a testamentary trust administered in the state of Iowa, is liable to a tax under the Intangibles Tax Act of 1931, Oregon Laws 1931, Ch. 335, as amended by Oregon Laws 1933, Ch. 394, and Oregon Laws 1933, Second Special Session, Ch. 32, codified in title LXIX, Ch. XIV, Oregon Code Supp. 1935. The beneficiary of the trust is the plaintiff Alice H. Middlekauff, who, with her husband, the plaintiff O. Middlekauff, filed joint income tax returns from which the income in question was omitted. The State Tax Commission assessed additional taxes on account of such income; the plaintiffs sued to enjoin their collection, and the circuit court entered a decree in their favor from which the Commission has prosecuted this appeal.
The trust and taxpayers are the same as in Middlekauff v.Galloway,
Notwithstanding this language it is urged by the plaintiffs that the former Middlekauff case requires us to hold that the law does not reach the income here in question. We think this contention is without merit. The opinion in that case was concerned only with the intention of the legislature found in the law as originally enacted, and cannot now be invoked as authority to override a different intention clearly manifested.
The plaintiffs assert that the case decides that the act applies only where the state of Oregon has the right to levy anad valorem tax on intangibles which produce the income. This is true with respect to the meaning of the law before the 1933 amendment. The decision deals with nothing else. The provision of the law that the tax on income from intangibles should be in lieu of general property taxes on intangibles (Oregon Laws 1931, Ch. 335, § 36), along with other provisions mentioned in the opinion, was thought to support that construction. But, whatever may have been said arguendo regarding the legislative intention, the court did not hold that the legislature could not, by appropriate language, give expression to, and enforce, an intention to tax the income from intangibles located elsewhere than in this state. The reference in the opinion to the 1933 amendment (
From the assumption that the act imposes a property tax, and not an income tax, it is argued that the state is without jurisdiction to levy the tax unless the property which produces the income is within its borders. The original Intangibles Tax Act of 1929 was held to impose a property tax in Redfield v.Fisher,
In the case of Graves v. New York ex rel. O'Keefe,
"Neither analysis of the two types of taxes, nor consideration of the bases upon which the power to impose them rests, supports the contention that a tax on income is a tax on the land which produces it. The incidence of a tax on income differs from that of a tax on property. Neither tax is dependent upon the possession by the taxpayer of the subject of the other. His income may be taxed, although he owns no property, and his property may be taxed although it produces no income. The two taxes are measured by different standards, the one by the amount of income received over a period of time, the other by the value of the property at a particular date. Income is taxed but once; the same property may be taxed recurrently. The tax on each is predicated upon different governmental benefits; the protection offered to the property in one state does not extend to the receipt and enjoyment of income from it in another."
To the same effect are Maguire v. Trefry,
In both the legal and economic aspects of the subject the reasoning of these cases is, in our opinion, conclusive. We think that the tax is what it purports to be — a tax on income and not on the intangibles which produce it.
Being so, the jurisdiction of this state to impose the tax cannot be questioned. "Domicile in itself establishes a basis for taxation." New York ex rel. Cohn v. Graves, supra;Lawrence v. State Tax Commission, supra; Maguire v. Trefry, supra; Ross v. McCabe,
The plaintiffs contend that the tax is in reality assessed against Mrs. Middlekauff's legacy, which cannot be made liable for the payment of an income tax. The will gave and bequeathed a sum of money to a trustee in Iowa with directions to invest and to pay to Mrs. Middlekauff periodically the net income from a portion of the fund. The trustee holds full legal title to the fund. Mrs. Middlekauff was given no future estate in remainder and has no interest in the corpus aside from a right in equity to compel the performance of the trust: Haas v. Holman,
The corpus of the trust is taxed by Iowa on an advalorem basis, and from this it is argued by plaintiffs that there is double taxation in violation of the 14th Amendment. Mere duplication does not make taxation invalid: Illinois CentralRailroad Co. v. State of *679 Minnesota,
On the basis of the principles announced in the authorities cited it follows that the tax does not, as the plaintiffs contend, violate the guaranty of equal protection in either the federal or the state constitution or the requirement of uniformity in the state constitution. As to the federal questions, the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Guaranty Trust Co. v. Commonwealth of Virginia,
"The mere fact that another state lawfully taxed funds from which the payments were made does not necessarily destroy Virginia's right to tax something done within her borders."
Much has been said in argument concerning the construction to be placed upon the provisions in the statute imposing a tax on non-residents. But, as we are not dealing with non-residents in this case, we decline to enter upon that field of debate. It is enough to decide the case before us.
Other matters are urged by the plaintiffs, but only one which calls for discussion. The plaintiffs having failed to make a return of the income in question, the Commission, acting pursuant to the authority granted it by Subd. 8 of § 69-1442, Oregon Code Supp. 1935, made a determination of such income, according to its best information and belief, from transcripts of the records *681 of the proceedings in the Iowa trust. For the period from January 1, 1934, to April 1, 1934, it was necessary to estimate the income, as the information for that period was not obtainable. At the hearing in the circuit court the plaintiffs introduced no evidence as to the amount of the contraverted income. They admit that they received some income, but they assert that the Commission's determination shows on its face that it is wrong, and therefore the assessment is invalid.
The Commission's determination was made in good faith, and, in the absence of assistance from the plaintiffs, on the basis of the best information obtainable. The presumption is that it is correct, even though a part of it was, of necessity, an estimate. If it is the law that the Commission must demonstrate the correctness of its determination, then an easy avenue of escape from income taxes has been opened up. But we do not understand that to be the law. On the contrary, the taxpayer, who knows or should know the amount of his own income, has the burden of proving that the Commission has erred: Beneficial LoanSociety v. Tax Commission, ante p. 211,
For the reasons given the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment for the defendants.
RAND, C.J., and ROSSMAN, KELLY, BELT, BEAN and BAILEY, JJ., concur. *683