275 Mass. 426 | Mass. | 1931
This is a petition for the abatement of an excise assessed upon a domestic corporation for the privilege of transacting business as a corporation within and under the protection of this Commonwealth. It is based upon the contention that so much of the petitioner’s income- as was derived from royalties received from patents granted by the United States could not under the Federal Constitution be considered in computing the net income by which the excise was in part measured. The respondent demurred. The case was reserved upon the pleadings. All facts well pleaded in the petition must be taken to be true for the purposes of this decision. The proceeding is entitled “Petition for Abatement of Excise Tax under General Laws, Chapter 63, Section 77.”
The pertinent statutes are these: G. L. c. 63, § 32, as amended by St. 1927, c. 258, § 3: “Except as otherwise provided in section thirty-four, every domestic business •corporation shall pay annually, with respect to the carrying on or doing of business by it, an excise equal to the sum of the following, provided, that every such corporation shall pay annually a total excise not less in amount than one twentieth of one per cent of the fair value of its capital stock on the day fixed for determination of the value of its corporate excess:— (1) An amount equal to five dollars per thousand upon the value of its corporate excess. (2) An amount equal to two and one half per cent of its net income determined to be taxable in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.”; G. L. c. 63¿ § 30, cl. 5, as amended by St. 1925, c. 265, § 1: “5. ‘Net income’, except as otherwise provided in sections thirty-four and thirty-nine, the net income for the taxable year as required to be returned by the corporation to the federal government under the federal revenue act applicable to the period, adding thereto any net losses as defined by said federal revenue act that have been deducted, and, in the case of a domestic business corporation, such interest and dividends, not so required to be returned as net income, as would be taxable if received by an inhabitant of this commonwealth; less, both in the case of a domestic business corporation and of a foreign corporation, interest, so required to be returned, which is received upon bonds, notes and certificates of in
The force and validity of these sections of the governing statute have not been in any degree affected by the ineffectual attempt by the Legislature to amend by an act stricken down by Macallen Co. v. Massachusetts, 279 U. S. 620, as contrary to the Federal Constitution. The reasons were given at length with adequate review of authorities in Opinion of the Justices, 269 Mass. 611. Those reasons are here adopted and affirmed. The contrary has not been argued. The statutes 'make no mention of royalties from patents and contain no provision for the deduction or omission of sums received by the corporation for royalties on patents owned by it in computing the amount of the excise. The sole question is the constitutionality of the statutes under the Constitution of the United States. The language of the statutes is entirely general and in no sense specific save in the express exemption of income from bonds, notes and certificates of indebtedness of the United States.
Plainly, income received from royalties on patents cannot be taxed as income to an individual recipient. Rockwood v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 257 Mass. 572; affirmed sub nomine, Long v. Rockwood, 277 U. S. 142. The tax here assailed is not a tax on an individual and it is not a tax on income. It is an excise upon a domestic corporation for the privilege of carrying on business as a corporation. The distinction between an excise upon the privilege of carrying on business as a corporation and a tax upon personal property, such as is a tax on income under our Constitution and laws, is vital and fundamental under the Constitution of this Commonwealth. It has long been recognized and applied in decisions of this court. So far as this court has jurisdiction to interpret the meaning and declare the purpose of the statute under which this excise was laid, it is not now open to discussion that an excise is thereby levied upon the privilege of doing business as a corporation and not a tax upon the property or income of the corporation. The General Court has asserted by § 32,.
The nature of the tax in any particular case must be determined by its operation rather than its specially descriptive phrase. The contentions of the petitioner seem to us to have been settled adversely to it by Educational
This decision, in our opinion, is precisely applicable to the facts of the present record. The circumstance that royalties from copyrights were involved, rather than from patents, is immaterial because these two are joined in art. 1, § 8, of the Constitution of the United States, whereby “The congress shall have power ... to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”
The history of the system of excises upon corporations in this Commonwealth for the privilege of conducting business as a corporation, as shown by decisions of this court already. cited, forbids the inference that there was any purpose on the part of the Legislature to single out royalties derived from patents as a subject for direct taxation. It appears to us impossible to infer that in enacting the statutes here assailed the Legislature had such uncanny prevision as to design by the use of language general in terms, having a wide field of unquestionable application, supported by numerous decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, to select royalties derived from patents as a special basis for a corporate excise. The final sentences of the opinion in the Educational Films Corporation case, if the word “patents” be substituted for the word “copy
The petitioner relies chiefly on Macallen Co. v. Massachusetts, 279 U. S. 620, overruling Macallen Co. v. Commonwealth, 264 Mass. 396. Of course we bow to that controlling authority and endeavor to follow and apply the principles there laid down. We do not understand that that decision strikes down as unconstitutional every statute whereby a general excise is laid upon corporations for the privilege of doing business, merely because in computing the excise income from tax exempt sources may be included. It was said in 279 U. S. 620, at page 628 that, in Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594, Society for Savings v. Coite, 6 Wall. 594, and Provident Institution v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611, the distinction was pointed out “between an attempt to tax the property or income as such and to measure a legitimate tax upon the privileges involved in the use thereof. It is implicit in all that the thing taxed in form was in fact and reality the subject aimed at, and that any burden put upon the non-taxable subject by its use as a measure of value was fortuitous and incidental.” We think that the thing aimed at by the statutes under which the excise was levied in the case at bar was the privilege of doing business as a corporation, and that any burden upon income received from royalties on patents was fortuitous and incidental to the measure of the lawful excise levied on that privilege. The distinction
Petition dismissed.