UNITED STATES v. OGILVIE HARDWARE CO., INC.
No. 430
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 5, 1947. - Decided April 7, 1947.
330 U.S. 709
For these reasons, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is vacated insofar as it relates to the respondents other than Shapiro, and the cause is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
UNITED STATES v. OGILVIE HARDWARE CO., INC.
No. 430. Argued March 5, 1947.—Decided April 7, 1947.
Elias Goldstein argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief was H. C. Walker, Jr.
Briefs were filed as amici curiae by Milton R. Schlesinger for the Vaughn Machinery Co.; F. Eberhart Haynes, U. E. Wild and J. Marvin Haynes for the Hawaiian Canneries Co., Ltd.; and John E. Hughes, urging affirmance.
This is a suit for tax refund which the District Court allowed. 62 F. Supp. 338. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 155 F. 2d 577. We granted certiorari because of an apparent conflict with Century Electric Co. v. Commissioner, 144 F. 2d 983.
The respondent, Ogilvie Hardware Co., Inc., was incorporated in Louisiana in 1907 with a paid-in capital of $100,000. In 1924 it increased its capitalization to $200,000 by declaration of a $100,000 stock dividend out of past earnings. Depressed business conditions during the 1930‘s brought heavy operating losses so that by 1937 the company‘s assets were about $71,000 less than the $200,000 capitalization. The company books accordingly showed a deficit in this amount. By 1938 this deficit was reduced to about $61,000. In this financial posture the corporation could not declare dividends without impairing its then capital structure (which included capitalization of the $100,000 stock dividend) and Louisiana law prohibited payment of a dividend under such circumstances.1 Section 14 of the governing Rev
Acting under this 1936 law, the Commissioner, on examination of respondent‘s 1937 and 1938 tax returns, determined that respondent was subject to the undistributed profits tax, despite the deficit and the state prohibition against payment of dividends. The Commissioner‘s interpretation and application of the 1936 Act was in accord with our holding in Helvering v. Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, 311 U. S. 46, and Crane-Johnson Co. v. Helvering, 311 U. S. 54. The taxpayers in those cases claimed exemption from the surtax on the ground that they could not distribute dividends “without violating a provision of a written contract executed by the corporation prior to May 1, 1936, which provision expressly deals with the payment of dividends.” Section 26 (c) (1) of the 1936 Act relieved corporations from the tax if such contracts existed.
But this suit is not brought to determine the company‘s tax liability under the 1936 Act as it stood in the taxable years 1937 and 1938. It is an action for a refund under a 1942 relief amendment to the 1936 Act specifically designed to authorize corporations to obtain repayments of taxes they had been forced to pay under the 1936 Act as we had interpreted it. That amendment, as enacted, provided for complete or partial retroactive immunity from the 1936 undistributed profits tax under the following circumstances:
“DEFICIT CORPORATIONS.—In the case of a corporation having a deficit in accumulated earnings and profits as of the close of the preceding taxable year, the amount of such deficit, if the corporation is prohibited by a provision of a law or of an order of a public regulatory body from paying dividends during the existence of a deficit in accumulated earnings and profits, and if such provision was in effect prior to May 1, 1936.”
§ 501 (a) (3), Revenue Act of 1942 ,56 Stat. 798, 954 .
This amendment was designed to grant corporations a refund on account of payments of undistributed profits taxes for tax years in which they had an accumulated deficit, and where, for that reason, state law, federal law, or public regulatory orders of either prohibited distribution of dividends. It therefore authorized refunds to the very taxpayers who had been lawfully required to pay taxes by the 1936 Act as we had interpreted it in the two cases cited above. Furthermore, in order to make sure that taxpayers who had paid under our interpretation might recover refunds, § 501 (c) of the same amendment specifically authorized claims for repayment to be filed within one year after its passage, without regard to
The Government‘s contention is that we should construe the word “deficit” and the phrase “accumulated earnings and profits” according to their established meaning under federal tax law; that so construed the $100,000 allotted for stock dividends remained a part of earnings and profits for tax purposes; therefore, there was no deficit in the federal tax sense, and consequently the tax payments should not have been refunded here despite the state prohibition against distribution. We may assume that the Government is correct in contending that if Congress intended in the 1942 amendment to use the words “deficit” and “earnings and profits” in this federal tax sense, the stock dividend did not reduce “earnings,” there was no “deficit,” and the refund should be denied. See
The 1936 undistributed profits tax law was a novelty in the field of federal taxation. Its chief novel feature was that it was designed to compel corporations to distribute current earnings to shareholders by imposing a surtax on corporations which failed to make such distributions. It had detailed provisions for defining the net income which would be reached by this tax. Its application, therefore, raised new and sometimes wholly unexpected problems. Widespread opposition developed to the tax. Since 1938, only a token of it has survived. See
One subject of complaint was that under the income tax definitions only a fraction of capital losses was deductible from taxable net income. Corporations which had suffered large capital losses in a given year were required to pay undistributed profits taxes in that year as though they had made a profit. The 1942 amendment, as reported by the House Committee, met this complaint by recommending that refunds be authorized for corporations who had paid under this 1936 definition of net income.3 This authorization, subsequently approved by the Senate Committee,4 clearly shows that Congress intended to provide for this phase of the refund without regard to tax definitions, and did not intend its authorized refund to be restricted by the application of established tax terminology.
When the bill reached the Senate Committee, insistent complaints related to the fact that corporations with defi
Some of the language Congress used, considered taxwise only, provides plausible support for the interpretation urged by the Government which would give the relief amendment more limited scope. But the provision before us is not a general tax exemption to be interpreted in the framework of a currently operating general revenue law. It is a special retroactive relief measure to authorize repayment of taxes collected in previous years under a revenue law which had already been substantially abandoned. The language of this extraordinary relief measure and the circumstances which prompted its passage convince us that Congress intended to provide refunds to corporate taxpayers, with possible minor exceptions, who had paid undistributed profits taxes as a choice between conflicting state and federal compulsions.
Furthermore, the very mechanics of the 1942 amendment require that determination of rights to refund under it be based on consideration of something other than the tax meaning of the 1936 Act or other tax terminology. The right to recovery in every case depends ultimately upon whether federal law or federal regulatory bodies, or
We think the Senate Committee Report, as a whole, leans toward the view we have taken of the purpose of the law.9 But in one of the six illustrative examples of application of the new tax relief provisions of the amendment,
We are persuaded that Congress at least intended by the amendment to refund taxes imposed on corporations which had failed to distribute dividends when distribution, in violation of state law, would have impaired long-existing state-approved corporate capitalizations. See United States v. Byron Sash & Door Co., 150 F. 2d 44, 46. In order that this purpose may be effected, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED joins, dissenting.
The Revenue Act of 1936 imposed a surtax on undistributed corporate profits.
The legislative history of this enactment and the administrative practice only reenforce what seems to me to be the compelling requirement, to render technical terms used by Congress with their technical meaning. If it be suggested that counsel for taxpayers at a Congressional hearing urged the fairness of the construction which the Court now places upon what Congress has expressed, it would not be the first time that the final legislation of Congress did not satisfy the desire of some of its proponents. In
No doubt Congress, to some extent, desired to relieve from the undistributed profits tax corporations forbidden by State law from declaring dividends. But neither what Congress enacted nor its legislative history indicates a purpose to disregard the limiting provisions of § 115 (h) of the Revenue Act of 1936.3 This section, which embodies the analysis of Commissioner v. Sansome, 60 F. 2d 931,
We think the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals should be reversed.
