24 F. 577 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1885
This is a writ of error brought to review the judgment of the district court overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to the answer of the defendant. The plaintiff sues for internal revenue taxes imposed by section 120 of the act of congress of June 30,1864, as amended July 13, 1866, (14 St. at Large, 138,) on dividends declared and paid by the defendant to its stockholders. That section provides:
“That there shall be levied and collected a tax of five per centum on all dividends in scrip or money, thereafter declared due, * * * to stockholders, * * * as a part of the earnings, income, or gains of any bank, trust company, ” etc.
The complaint contains four counts or separate causes of action, differing only in respect to dates and amounts, and setting out respectively the declaration of the dividends by the defendant to its stockholders in each of the years 1866,1867, 1868, and 1870, whereof no return was made to the assessor, and whereon no tax was over paid to tlic collector. The answer, as is permitted by section 500 of the Codo of Civil Procedure of this state, consists of several defenses by way of new matter to each count of the complaint, except to the fourth count, as to which a single defense is alleged. The second de
Concisely stated, the substance of the second defense is that the defendant did not return or pay a tax upon such portion of its dividend declared within the year as is represented by the amount it paid for municipal taxes against its stockholders under state laws during the year; and the substance of the third defense is that, although the defendant declared and paid dividends during each year to its stockholders,' it ought not to have done so, because' no dividends were earned in fact, although its officers supposed otherwise. The second defense is not good, because the sum paid by the defendant for municipal taxes was in no sense taxes of the defendant, or a legitimate item of its expenses, during the year. The averments show that the taxes imposed by the state laws' are imposed upon stockholders and not upon the corporation, and the provisions of the state law which require the corporation to retain the amount assessed as a tax against each stockholder merely provide a mode of collecting the stockholders’ tax. The plaintiff is not concluded by the averments of the answer in respect to the force and effect of the state laws, or the duties imposed upon the defendant thereby. These are conclusions of law, and as such are not admitted by a demurrer. This court takes judicial notice of state statutes, and they need not be proved. Chapter
The third defense is not good, because section 120, by which the taxes sued for are imposed, does not permit an inquiry into the facts whether a dividend which has been declared was actually earned or not. The tax is laid upon the dividend as declared, and the declaration concludes the corporation in respect to the amount for which it is liable to be taxed. The amount declared by the corporation to be duo to its stockholders as dividends, furnishes the obvious standard and the only safe criterion for the assessment of the tax in order to prevent fraudulent evasion. The same construction is to be placed upon this section which is to be given to section 122 of the same act, imposing a tax upon dividends declared by railroad, canal, and other companies to their stockholders as part oí tho earnings, profits, and income or gain of such companies. In respect to that section, it was said by the supreme court in Bailey v. Railroad Co. 106 U. S. 109, 115, S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 62, Matthews, J., delivering the opinion:
“We have no hesitation in saying that, in reference to a dividend declared as of earnings for the current year, and paid as such to stockholders, whether in money or in scrip, no proof would be admissible for the purpose of avoiding the tax that no earnings had, in fact, been made. The law conclusively assumes, in such a ease, that a dividend declared and paid is a dividend earned.”
For these reasons it must be held that the court below erred in overruling the demurrer to both classes of the defenses. The judgment is therefore reversed, with costs, and the caso is remanded to the district court with instructions to enter judgment for the plaintiff sustaining the demurrer.