1 Or. Tax 564 | Or. T.C. | 1964
Decision for plaintiffs rendered May 8, 1964. These three cases are suits to set aside defendant's opinions and orders assessing additional corporation excise tax against plaintiffs for the years 1955 through 1958 and for refund of such tax paid under protest. To each complaint, defendant demurred generally. Because the demurrers present the same issue, the cases were consolidated for hearing, briefing, and decision. The parties agree that a determination of the demurrers will dispose of each case.
The sole issue is whether plaintiffs must include in their apportionable income subject to allocation in part to Oregon so much of their interest income received from properties having no Oregon situs that the apportionable interest income received will equal the apportionable interest expense deducted.
1. As common carrier railroads, plaintiffs are centrally assessed for Oregon ad valorem tax purposes under ORS
In 1955, the legislature levied a corporation excise tax against centrally assessed corporations for the first time. Oregon Laws 1955, ch 592. This act did not impose the same excise tax on centrally assessed corporations as was imposed on mercantile corporations. In addition to a reduced rate of tax, the statute, now ORS
In their tax returns under ORS
In support of their allocation procedure, plaintiffs rely on ORS
"(d) [From income determined for federal tax purposes] Subtract, under rules and regulations *567 adopted by the commission, all net income derived from (A) property, other than property having a situs in this state as defined in ORS
308.505 , which is not used in operations conducted partly within and partly without this state, * * *."
and ORS
"(4) If the net income arrived at in accordance with subsection (3) of this section shall have been derived from business done both within and without the state, such net income shall be allocated as follows:
"(a) All net income from properties in this state which are assessed by the county assessor, and all net income from intangibles having a situs in this state, shall be allocated to this state.
"(b) The remainder of such net income shall be allocated to this state in accordance with ORS
317.180 [the apportionment and segregated income section of the general excise tax law] * * *."
Defendant has no quarrel with plaintiffs' allocation of nonapportionable income. It contends that, after including and excluding the various nonapportionable items, plaintiffs should have added back to the apportionable income so much of the excluded interest income as would cause apportionable interest income received to equal apportionable interest expense deducted. Defendant contends that this should have been done because ORS
"(b) The remainder * * * shall be allocated to this state in accordance with ORS
317.180 under rules and regulations adopted by the commission which shall fairly and accurately reflect the net income of the business done within the state * * *."
Prior to 1955 and pursuant to ORS
Defendant erred in its assessment.
Reg 7.180 regulates not only the apportionment of apportionable income but also the determination of that income to be apportioned. The sentence providing for the inclusion of interest received in an amount equal to the interest paid deduction appears in that part of Reg 7.180 defining apportionable income and is so entitled.
In its first three subsections, ORS
2. When the legislature provided its own definition of net apportionable income in subsections (1) through (3) of ORS
3. In addition, throughout the first three subsections of ORS
4, 5. In finding defendant in error, this court is fully aware of the weight to be attached to administrative interpretation. Castle Sawmills, Inc. v. Commission,
This court's decision that defendant has erred does not extend to whether defendant can accomplish the same result by exercising its extensive but unused powers over the apportionable income definition of ORS
In each case, plaintiff shall prepare a decree setting aside defendant's additional assessment, refunding any tax paid under protest in compliance with such assessment, and allowing plaintiff its costs and disbursements in accordance with Rule 38.*