27 Haw. 336 | Haw. | 1923
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an original submission upon an agreed state
Tbe dispute arose from tbe disallowance by tbe tax assessor of a deduction claimed in tbe 1922 return of tbe taxpayer of a reserve for tbe estimated amount of tbe Federal income taxes payable in 1922 on 1921 income. This tbe taxpayer conceded provided it were permitted to withdraw from its return of gross income of 1921 tbe amount it bad previously reserved at tbe close of tbe year 1920 for tbe estimated Federal income tax payable in 1921 on 1920 income and allowed as a deduction in its 1921 return.
Tbe printed form of return furnished by tbe treasurer of tbe Territory to corporations upon which to make income tax retuims on January tbe 1st, 1922, and which was used by tbe taxpayer apparently contemplated a return which should include as one of tbe deductions allowed by law tbe estimated amount of Federal income tax payable in 1922 on 1921 income and that there should be included under gross income of tbe year 1921 tbe amount reserved at tbe close of tbe year 1920 for tbe payment in 1921 of Federal income taxes on 1920 income and deducted in tbe 1921 return. Section 1309, R. L. 1915, as amended, requires corporations to make a “full return” among other matters of “gross receipts” and “expenses.” Tbe form of return so furnished contains in “Schedule ‘A’ Gross Income” as one of tbe items of “gross receipts” upon which a return is required tbe beading “Amount deducted from 1921 return to cover Federal tax payable in 1921” and in “Schedule ‘B’ — Deductions and Exemptions” as one of tbe items of “expenses” for like purpose, the beading “Federal tax reserve (payable in 1922).” The taxpayer conformed thereto and as a part of “Gross
This method of inclusion under “Gross Income” of the reserve for taxes the previous year and the deduction of the estimated amount of taxes payable during the succeeding year apparently had been in vogue since the year 1920, prior to which time it was the practice, recognized and accepted by the tax assessor and in accord with the printed form of returns furnished by the treasurer, for corporations in their territorial income tax return to include among the deductions only the taxes actually paid during said preceding year and not' to include among the deductions any reserve made during said preceding year for taxes payable in the return year nor to include in gross income any reserve made in any preceding year for taxes payable in any subsequent year. The tax assessor, sometime after the blanks for 1922 return were furnished hut at what time the statement of facts does not disclose, determined to revert to the method in vogue prior to 1920. This was learned, however, by the taxpayer only after it had filed its 1922 return.
The disallowance by the tax assessor of the deduction of the reserve made at the close of the year 1921 for
It is equally clear that the reserve for taxes made by the taxpayer at the close of the year 1920 and allowed as a deduction in the taxpayer’s 1921 tax return was improperly included by the taxpayer in its 1922 tax return as income for the calendar year 1921. Section 1306 as amended provides: “There shall be levied, assessed, collected and paid annually * * * a tax * * * on the net profit or income above actual operating and business expenses derived during each taxation period, from all property owned, and every business * * * carried on in the Territory of Hawaii, of all corporations, doing business for profit in the Territory * * The taxation period as referred to in section 1306, R. L. 1915, is defined in section 1305, R. L. 1915, as amended, as “* * * the year immediately preceding the first day of January of each year, in which such tax is payable.” By section 1315, R. L. 1915, as amended, income taxes are due and payable on the first day of January of each year.
What was called a “reserve” and entered as such on the books of the taxpayer at the close of the year 1920 was no less a part of the income of the year 1920. There is no magic in bookkeeping. Income by whatever name is none the less income and its status is fixed by the taxation period within which it is derived. That this reserve, after the Federal taxes on 1920 income were paid in 1921 for purposes of reconciliation and adjustment, was included in the gross income of 1921 does not convert it into income
No question is raised by the tax assessor as to the right of the taxpayer in the absence of an extension of time within which so to do to amend its return after January 31, 1922, by deleting from “gross income” this item of 1920 income. Hence this question is not passed upon. Nor are we concerned with the effect of sustaining as we do the appeal of the taxpayer. This is a special proceeding permitted hy sections 2381, 2382 as amended, 2383 and 2384, R. L. 1915. The “question in difference” between the parties involves only the 1922 taxes payable by the taxpayer and it is only upon this “question in difference” that our judgment is either required or permitted.
A judgment in conformity with the foregoing opinion will be signed upon presentation.
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING OPINION OF
While concurring in the conclusion that the sum of $150,000 appearing as a deduction, in the return under consideration, as a reserve for taxes payable in 1922 upon income of 1921, is not deductible because it was not actually paid in 1921 and in the conclusion that the sum of $325,000 reported in the return as income is not taxable as income in the year 1922 because it was not in fact income received by the taxpayer during the year 1921 but was income received by it during the year 1920,' I prefer to add, specifically, that this does not mean that this item of $325,000 need escape taxation. That sum of $325,000,