60 A.2d 580 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued March 22, 1948. This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment entered for defendant by the court below after sustaining defendant's demurrer to plaintiff's complaint. Plaintiff is a mutual savings institution and the holder of certain sinking fund mortgage bonds issued by defendant. Plaintiff instituted this action in assumpsit to recover taxes paid by plaintiff, which plaintiff alleged were covered by a tax reimbursement clause in the bonds and the mortgage indenture.
The facts are undisputed. Between October 30, 1945, and February 2, 1946, plaintiff purchased 3 1/2 per cent sinking fund mortgage bonds, which had been issued by defendant, in the principal amount of $1,000,000. During the year 1946, plaintiff received interest on the bonds, the interest coupons being payable semi-annually, *108 in the sum of $35,000. Each of the bonds so acquired by plaintiff contained the following clause with respect to the refunding of taxes:
"Such payments of principal and interest shall be made without deduction for, and the Company hereby agrees to pay, any taxes (except succession or inheritance taxes) which the Company or the Trustee under the Indenture below mentioned may be required to pay thereon, or may be required or permitted to deduct or retain therefrom, under any present or future law of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, up to but not exceeding $4 per annum in respect of each $1,000 principal amount hereof. Subject to the aforesaid maximum of $4 per annum per $1,000 Bond, and upon the conditions and to the extent specified in said Indenture, the Company agrees to refund to each holder of Bonds of this Series the amount of certain Pennsylvania taxes paid by such holder as a resident of said Commonwealth by reason of the ownership of such Bonds or receipt of income derived therefrom."
The mortgage indenture under which the issue of bonds was secured contained a similar clause which reads as follows:
"Section 7.18. Reimbursement or Payment of Certain Taxes. (1) The Company will, subject to the provisions of this Section, reimburse to any Bondholder resident in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the amount of any tax or taxes (except succession or inheritance taxes) legally imposed by or under authority of said Commonwealth upon such Bondholder and paid by him by reason of his ownership of any of the Bonds or the receipt by him of income derived therefrom, but not exceeding $4 for each calendar year in respect of each $1,000 principal amount of Bonds. . . ."
As a mutual savings institution without capital stock, plaintiff was subject to a tax of 3 per cent on its net earnings or income, in accordance with the *109
provisions of the Act of June 1, 1889, P.L. 420, § 27, as amended by the Act of April 25, 1929, P.L. 668, and further amended by the Act of May 23, 1945, P.L. 910,
The court below entered judgment for defendant on the ground that the tax for which plaintiff seeks reimbursement is in the nature of a franchise tax imposed upon plaintiff by reason of its doing business as a mutual savings society and not a tax imposed by reason of plaintiff's receipt of income from the bonds. Upon the entry of final judgment, plaintiff appealed to this Court.
The question presented is one of law, and its determination depends upon our interpretation of the tax reimbursement clause. A tax reimbursement clause in a bond, like any other contract, must be construed with a view to ascertaining the intention of the parties, as gathered from the language used, the subject matter, and attendant circumstances. Central-Penn National Bankv. Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.,
The express purpose of the clause in the bonds and indenture is to provide for the reimbursement "to any Bondholder . . . [of] the amount of any tax or taxes (except succession or inheritance taxes) legally imposed by or under authority of said Commonwealth upon such Bondholder and paid by him by reason of his ownership of any of the Bonds or the receipt by him of income derived therefrom."
It is a recognized principle that a covenant transferring tax liability from the party normally liable will be strictly construed. This rule has been applied to covenants by a lessee to pay taxes of the lessor where the subject matter of the lease is an entire business. Northern Liberties Gas Co. v. United GasImprovement Co. et al.,
Appellant endeavors to avoid the rule of strict construction of clauses transferring tax liability recognized in the NorthernLiberties case. It is argued that the provision in the bonds should be construed in favor of the obligee, since bonds, like insurance policies, are prepared by the party issuing them. Whether we adopt a strict or liberal construction of the tax reimbursement clause involved in the present case, it cannot be said that the tax sought to be recouped is covered therein, or that it was within the reasonable contemplation of the parties, that is, appellee which issued the bonds or appellant as one of the investing public which purchased such bonds.
The tax under the Act of 1889, as amended,
We conclude, after all contentions presented by appellant have been considered, that the tax which is the subject matter of this litigation, regardless of the name by which it may be designated, is not covered by the refund clause. The tax was not imposed upon appellant "by reason . . . or the receipt . . . of income *112
derived" from appellee's bonds. Rather the tax was imposed upon appellant for the privilege of doing business within the Commonwealth, and it was measured by the percentage of appellant's net income. Cf. Com. v. Bayuk Cigars, Inc.,
The income from the bonds issued by appellee formed only a small proportion of either appellant's gross or net income. At most, the tax which appellant was obliged to pay on its net income bears an extremely indirect relationship to the receipt of income from the bonds. This fact is obvious; the proportion of the tax paid by appellant by reason of a $35,000 gross income from these bonds was only $74.64. We do not believe, from the language used, that the pro rata share of the tax which appellant seeks to recover from appellee was reasonably within the contemplation of the parties to the reimbursement covenants in the bonds and mortgage indenture.
Judgment of the court below is affirmed.