This is an action of contract whereby the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant the amount of an instalment of the income tax assessed by the United States against the plaintiff and paid by it. The income on which this tax was levied consists of payments in the nature of rental made to the plaintiff by the defendant. The plaintiff was incorporated under the laws of this Commonwealth and owns a railroad located wholly within this Commonwealth. The plaintiff leased its railroad and all its railroad property to the Boston and Lowell Railroad Corporation for a term of ninety-nine years from January 1, 1890. The defendant is now the successor to all the obligations imposed upon the original lessee. The lease contained this clause respecting the payment of taxes: “Said second party [the lessee] further agrees that it will pay all public taxes, assessments and charges whatsoever on the property, franchise or capital stock of said first party [the lessor] that shall be placed or assessed upon said first party or upon its stockholders residing in Massachusetts.” The tax here sought to be recovered was imposed under c. 136, § 230, of the revenue act of November 23, 1921; 42 U. S. Sts. at Large, 252. The material words of that section are that in lieu of taxes imposed by an earlier law “there shall be levied, collected, and paid for each taxable year upon the net income of every corporation a tax at the following rates: (a) For the calendar year 1921, 10 per centum of the amount of the net income in excess of the credits provided in section 236; and (b) For each calendar year thereafter, 12J per centum for such excess amount.” Stated narrowly, the question, is, whether the Federal income tax thus levied is comprehended within the clause in the lease above quoted.
The question, whether a Federal income tax is included within the terms of an agreement to pay taxes, has arisen in several of our cases. The determination of any such question depends upon the words of the contract, the context in which they occur, and the subject matter to which they are applied. It will be helpful to examine our own
On the other hand, in Suter v. Jordan Marsh Co. 225 Mass. 34, a covenant to pay “all taxes and assessments whatsoever, except betterment taxes, which may be levied for or in respect to the said leased premises, or any part thereof, or upon or in respect to the rent payable hereunder by the Lessee, howsoever and to whomsoever assessed,” was held to include the income tax assessed upon the lessor on account of the rent received under the lease. It was held in Kimball v. Cotting, 229 Mass. 541, that a covenant “to pay and discharge any taxes or excises . . . levied or assessed to either the Lessors or the Lessees upon or against the rent payable hereunder . . . whether levied or assessed upon the same as rental or income,” included the Federal income tax assessed to the lessor in respect to the rent received under the lease. In Kimball v. Cotting, 234 Mass. 172, it was held that a covenant by the lessee to “pay and discharge any taxes or excises which during the term may be lawfully levied, laid or assessed upon or against the rent payable hereunder, whether levied or assessed upon the same as rental or as income of any person or persons entitled thereto,” included the normal Federal income tax and surtax. To the same general effect are North Pennsylvania Railroad v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway, 249 Penn. St. 326, Schlafly v. D’Arcy, 1 Fed. Rep. (2d) 297, and Philadelphia City Passenger Railway v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. 263 Penn. St. 561, in all of which words embracing un
Questions of a similar nature have arisen in other jurisdictions: Agreements to pay “all expenses . . . including taxes, assessments,” Illinois Central Railroad v. Indianapolis Union Railway, 6 Fed. Rep. (2d) 830; “all taxes, assessments and municipal or governmental charges, general and special, ordinary and extraordinary, of every nature and kind whatsoever, which may be (a) levied, imposed or assessed upon the real estate hereby demised . . . or (b) . . . upon any interest of the lessor in or under this lease; or (c) which the lessor shall be required to pay by reason of or on account of his interest in the real estate hereby demised,” Young v. Illinois Athletic Club, 310 Ill. 75, 77; “all taxes and assessments which may be levied or become chargeable on the said road or property or upon” the lessor “by reason of its ownership thereof,” Brainard v. New York Central Railroad, 242 N. Y. 125; “all taxes or assessments special, or otherwise, and public charges of every kind and nature that shall or maybe taxed or assessed against the . . . Company or its property,” Des Moines Union Railway v. Chicago Great Western Railway, 188 Iowa, 1019; “all rates, taxes, charges for revenue and otherwise, assessments and levies, general and special, ordinary and extraordinary of every name, nature and kind whatsoever . . . which may be taxed, charged, assessed, levied or imposed upon said premises, and upon any and all buildings and improvements thereon and any personal tax levied or assessed upon said party of the first part, which may be assessed, levied or imposed upon the leaseholder estate hereby created and upon the reversionary estate upon said premises . . . the intent hereof being to insure to said party of the first part a net rental hereunder, not chargeable with any burdens by way of taxes, or otherwise, resulting in the diminution of the same,” Park Building Co. v. Yost Fur Co. 208 Mich. 349; “all taxes, duties and assessments, of every name and nature, that may accrue or be assessed, charged or levied upon said demised premises or any part thereof, and upon the receipts for transportation of persons and property on said demised railroads, and upon the busi
As matter of authority, the plaintiff fails to show support for its contention in decided cases.
If the question be examined apart from authority and upon grounds of reason, the same result is reached. It is to be observed that the agreement as to taxes occurs in a lease of a railroad. The description of the leased property is confined to the railroad with all lands, stations and other buildings and all easements, fixtures and appurtenances connected therewith. That is the property leased. Covenants and agreements in a lease of such property naturally are confined in operation to the property so leased unless otherwise expressly provided.
Analysis of the words of the lease leads to the conclusion that the plaintiff cannot recover the income tax thus paid. “All public taxes, assessments and charges whatsoever” are broad enough to include an income tax provided the connection shows that those words are applicable to that kind of tax. Those words of the lease are restricted to the “property, franchise or capital stock” of the lessor or its stockholders. It thus appears that “property” was not used in its comprehensive sense, because “franchise” and “capital stock” are property in its broad signification but they were specified by the parties in addition to “property.” This enumeration excludes “income” from the subjects on
Reliance is placed by the plaintiff on the portion of the decision in Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. 157 U. S. 429, 581, to the effect that a tax upon income derived from property is a tax upon the property, and that hence a tax on the income from real estate was a direct tax and unconstitutional, and also on the discussion of a somewhat analogous question of constitutional law in Opinion of the Justices, 220 Mass. 613, 623, 624. The point before the court in each of these instances was quite different from the one here presented. See Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222 Mass. 542, 545. As was said in Brainard v. New York Central Railroad, 242 N. Y. 125, at page 133, “We are construing an agreement; not determining the constitutionality of a taxing statute. In Pollock v. Farmers L. & T. Co. (157 U. S. 429) it was held that a tax on rents or income received from real estate was a tax on real estate. Obviously this was no ruling on the distinct question whether a tax on rent was a tax assessed on land or by reason of the ownership thereof. The distinction is pointed out in . . . [Woodruff v. Oswego Starch Factory, 177 N. Y. 23, at page 29] . . .
Although the conduct of the parties in the construction of a contract of doubtful meaning is important evidence of its true signification, Southborough v. Boston & Worcester Street Railway, 250 Mass. 234, 239, we are of opinion that the clause of the lease here in question is too clear to warrant resort to that conduct. The conduct of the parties, while it may illuminate words of equivocal import, cannot change the rights of the parties as fixed by the unambiguous provisions of a definite contract. Menage v. Rosenthal, 175 Mass. 358, and cases there collected. O’Brien v. Peck, 198 Mass. 50, 56. Wooldridge v. Wolf, 254 Mass. 128, 130.
The argument that the conditions under which the lease was executed indicate a purpose that the rent to be received by the lessor was to be a net sum for distribution among its stockholders cannot overcome the words of the lease by which the parties expressed their intent. We cannot speculate as to what the parties might have said by their contract if, at the time of its execution, the present taxation situation had been directly brought to their attention. We can construe the contract only as they actually made it.
We are of opinion that upon the correct interpretation of the words of the lease, as applied to the subject matter, the lessee did not become obligated to pay the income tax assessed to the plaintiff.
It becomes unnecessary to discuss the other questions argued.
Exceptions sustained.
Order overruling demurrer reversed.