212 Wis. 412 | Wis. | 1933
The following opinion was filed June 29, 1933: .
The applicable provision of the income tax act is now sec. 71.03, which provides:
“Every corporation, joint stock company or association shall be allowed to make from its gross income the following deductions:
“(2) . . . interest paid during the year in the operation of the business from which its income is derived.”
In determining whether or not the interest paid by the Delaware Company upon its debentures was deductible the Tax Commission said:
“As no new assets came to the taxpayer by reason of its bond issue, and as that issue was merely used to secure the bonds of the parent company, the interest on the $4,000,000 is no more deductible than the interest on the 1905 issue would have been. Nor is the interest deductible after the bonds were acquired by the parent company in 1928. There is no showing that the parent company advanced any money to taxpayer which was used in carrying on its business in Wisconsin and no showing that the $4,000,000 bond issue was given in exchange for any such advances.”
It appears without dispute that the property acquired by the Delaware corporation, by virtue of the transactions already outlined, had a sound value of approximately $6,000,000. It cannot be denied that in payment for the property thus acquired by it the Delaware Company issued
It is indisputably true that the ultimate ownership of all Wisconsin property when the transaction began was in the Leather Company by reason of its ownership of the capital stock of the Wisconsin subsidiary. It is equally true that when the transaction was complete, the ultimate ownership was still in -the Leather Company by reason of its ownership of the capital stock of the Delaware Company. While this revision of the capital structure may result in making certain earnings of the Delaware Company deductible because paid out by way of interest instead of dividends, we find no provision either, in the laws of Wisconsin or the state of Delaware which makes such unusual apportionment between capital stock and bonds issued illegal.
The question presented here is for what income tax the Delaware Company is liable under the laws of Wisconsin?
No attack is made upon the valuation placed upon the Wisconsin properties as of December 31, 1924, that being approximately the time at which they were taken over by the Delaware Company. The whole financial set-up is disclosed by Schedule 6, which is reproduced on pp. 418, 419.
It is considered that the taxpayer was entitled to the deduction for interest paid in the operation of its business during the year from which its income was derived.
By the Court. — Judgment appealed from is reversed, with directions to enter judgment setting aside the reassessment so far as it disallows deduction of interest paid on debentures.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, without costs, on September 12, 1933.