Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/262/413/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 04:29:17+00:00

Document:
1. A state may, consistently with the federal Constitution, impose a tax upon the net income of property, as distinguished from the net income of him who owns or operates it, although the property is used in interstate commerce. P. 262 U. S. 420.
interstate railroads, does it directly burden interstate commerce or discriminate against it (other public service corporations, wholly intrastate, being treated in the same way); nor does it, with other railroad taxes of the state, make an aggregate burden violating the commerce clause; nor does it violate that clause by departing from the standard form of accounts prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission under the Transportation Act, 1920. P. 262 U. S. 421.
3. The above statute is not obnoxious to the equal protection clause either in refusing to public service corporations, including railroads, deductions of interest on funded debt, rentals, and worthless debts which are allowed to other corporations and individuals in calculating net income, or in not requiring certain short line railroads to keep the accounts required of other railroads. P. 262 U. S. 423.
4. The Constitution of North Carolina does not forbid taxing the net income of property operated as a railroad, as distinguished from the net income of the company owning the railroad. P. 262 U. S. 424.
5. The above cited statute does not violate the uniformity clause of the North Carolina Constitution in that the permissible deductions in computing net income of public service corporations are different from, and not so great as, those allowed individuals or other corporations. Id.
6. The statute is not retroactive and void under the state constitution because it lays a tax based upon the net income of the calendar year within which it was enacted. P. 262 U. S. 425.
7. A bill in the district court to enjoin the collection of state taxes alleged to be unconstitutional will not be dismissed upon the ground that a plain, adequate, and complete remedy exists in paying the taxes under protest and suing to recover the amount paid when the statute relied on as affording such remedy is recent, and has not been construed and applied by the highest court of the state. P. 262 U. S. 425.
Appeals from decrees of the district court dismissing the bills, after hearing the merits, in four suits brought by railroad companies to enjoin the enforcement of a state income tax.
the income year, other than income taxes, and war profits and excess profits taxes, (c) amounts paid for car hire. Whether the statute is unconstitutional because it fails to include among the deductions from income allowed public service corporations the capital charges, including other rentals paid, is the main question for decision.
The first year's tax under the act was payable in 1922, with respect to the net income received during the calendar year 1921. To enjoin its enforcement, these four corporations brought suit in the Federal Court for the Eastern district of North Carolina against the Commissioner of Revenue and others. Each plaintiff owns and operates a line of railroad within the state, and is an interstate carrier. Each assails the statute on the grounds that it violates the commerce clause, the Fourteenth Amendment, and the state constitution, and only on these grounds. Each case was heard upon the merits, and in each a final decree was entered dismissing the bill. Appeals were taken under § 238 of the Judicial Code, and orders of the district court stayed collection of the taxes pending the determination of the appeals. Since the cases are properly here on federal questions, all questions presented by the record, whether involving federal law or state law, must be considered. Southern Railway Co v. Watts, 260 U. S. 519.
Bell's Gap Railroad Co. v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232, 134 U. S. 237; Southern Railway Co. v. Watts, 260 U. S. 519, and by the state, that an arbitrary classification is obnoxious to the equal protection clause, Southern Ry. Co. v. Greene, 216 U. S. 400. The contentions are that the statute, in fact taxes gross income; that the classification as made by it is unreasonable, and that, for these and other reasons it violates both the federal and the state constitution. All the contentions are, in our opinion, unsound. To appreciate the objections urged, and to present the reasons for holding them groundless, it is necessary to show the incidence of the tax. This may be done by examining how the assessment of $13,133.09 made upon the Seaboard Air Line, and here assailed, was calculated.
Thus, about one-twentieth (1/20) of the operating revenues of the Seaboard was subjected to taxation. To this one-twentieth the 3 percent income tax was applied.
The tax assessed ($13, 133.09) is about one six hundred fiftieth (1/650) of the total operating revenues ($8,457,328.52).
most other railroad systems, is to some extent a holding company as well as an operating company, and, as holding company, receives dividends from other concerns, interest on bonds of other concerns, and rental from property owned but not operated. As the state treats the operated property as the entity, it does not concern itself with interest charges and the rentals paid, just as it does not concern itself with a mortgage upon the real estate when it lays the ad valorem tax. On the other hand, as the Seaboard treats the company -- the person -- as the entity to be taxed, it undertakes to ascertain the net income of the company. This includes as gross income a proportion of the receipts from property not within the state, and includes among the deductions from the gross income of the company the capital charges.
in the method of determining what is net income, but from difference as to what is the subject of the tax. In other words, they differ as to the thing of which the net income is to be ascertained. This will appear from an examination of the several grounds on which the validity of the statute is assailed.
First. The contention that the statute is obnoxious to the commerce clause rests upon the argument that the state's definition of net income differs from that adopted by the Interstate Commerce Commission; that the state is without power to depart from the Commission's definition so far as concerns interstate commerce, and that, since the statutory definition differs, the act is unconstitutional. A conclusive answer to that argument is found in the fact that the state adopts (without modification) the Commission's definition for the net income of that which it taxes; for, treating as the entity to be taxed the railroad property operated by the company within the state, it appears that every item which the railroad claims the statute wrongly disallowed as a deduction is of such a character, that it is either clearly a capital charge (as distinguished from an operating charge) or reasonably may be deemed such as a matter of accounting. [Footnote 5] The question of law thus presented is not one which involves inquiry into the intricacies of railroad accounting.
Under the commerce clause, it is essential that a state tax shall not directly burden interstate commerce and that it shall not discriminate against interstate commerce. With these essentials, the North Carolina act complies. It is not assessed on gross receipts. [Footnote 6] Compare Peck & Co., Inc. v. Lowe, 247 U. S. 165; Pullman Co. v. Richardson, 261 U. S. 330. It does not discriminate against interstate commerce. For the taxable net income of other public service corporations which are wholly intrastate is determined also without allowing capital charges as a deduction. That there is no basis for the claim that the commerce clause is violated by the burden resulting from the aggregate of the several North Carolina railroad road taxes was settled in Southern Ry. Co. v. Watts, supra.
are denied to public service corporations -- namely, interest on funded debt, rentals, and certain worthless debts. (§ 306, pars. 2, 3, 6, and 7.) That the differentiation results from the difference in the subject of the tax and hence is not arbitrary has been pointed out above. But, in any event, the differentiation would not render the statute unconstitutional. The state might, consistently with the equal protection clause, have subjected only public service corporations to the income tax, or it might have laid upon them a higher income tax than upon others, as it laid upon railroads a higher franchise tax than it did upon other corporations. Compare Southern Railway Co. v. Watts, 260 U. S. 519.
The classification is also assailed as arbitrary on the ground that § 202 defining net income applies only to corporations required to keep records "according to the standard classification of accounting of the Interstate Commerce Commission;" that there are in the state corporations which are not required by law to keep their accounts according to the Commission's form, but which own railroads of standard gauge operated by steam, and have obtained authority to act as limited common carriers. In support of this contention, two railroads with short lines are instanced. They are owned by lumber companies, and are taxed not as railroads, but as if part of the lumber corporation. So far as appears, the North Carolina authorities might require them to file accounts according to the Commission's classification, if they deemed this advisable. But obviously the state might reasonably classify such railroads differently from ordinary carriers.
is erroneous. Only the net income of the property operated as a utility is taxed. There is nothing in the Constitution of the state which precludes taxing the net income of the property so operated, as distinguished from the net income of the company. There is no inconsistency between §§ 101 and 202 of the statute. It would seem from the decisions of the Supreme Court of North Carolina that the uniformity clause applies to income taxation, but that court has repeatedly held that the uniformity clause does not prevent reasonable classification. [Footnote 10] The contention that the uniformity clause is violated because the permissible deductions in the case of public service corporations are different from (and not so great as) those allowed individuals or other defendants [Footnote 11] is unfounded, for reasons stated above. So is the contention that the statute is retroactive and void, because it was not enacted until March, 1922, but lays a tax based upon the net income of the calendar year.
complete remedy at law by which a taxpayer may recover the amount of an illegal tax paid by him under protest. Our attention has been called to several North Carolina cases and statutes bearing upon this contention. But the statute mainly relied upon is a recent one which appears not to have been construed and applied by the highest court of the state. In the absence of such decision, we cannot say the remedy at law is plain and adequate. Dawson v. Kentucky Distilleries, 255 U. S. 288, 255 U. S. 296; Wallace v. Hines, 253 U. S. 66, 253 U. S. 68; Shaffer v. Carter, 252 U. S. 37, 252 U. S. 47; Union Pacific R. Co. v. Weld County, 247 U. S. 282; Davis v. Wakelee, 156 U. S. 680, 156 U. S. 688. We have therefore passed upon the merits.
For the Atlantic Coast Line, the calculation in accordance with the statute shows a net income of $1,389,565.25. According to the the company's contention, the net income was $333,205.09.
For the Norfolk Southern, the calculation in accordance with the statute, it is said, shows a net income of $653,882.17. (The correct figures would seem to be $603,003.51.) According to the company's contention, there was a deficit of $424,338.92.
For the Southern Railway, the calculation in accordance with the statute shows a net income of $2,384,068.71. According to the company's contention, the net income on one calculation was $554,724.41, and, on another calculation, was $456,798.56.
The federal government taxes the net income of property owned or business carried on within the United States by a citizen resident abroad. DeGanay v. Lederer, 250 U. S. 376. The New York income tax law involved in Travis v. Yale & Towne Mfg. Co., 252 U. S. 60, 252 U. S. 73, taxes the net income "from all property owned . . . by natural persons not residents of the state."
To prove that the statute in fact taxes some part of the gross earnings, attention is called specifically to some minor items which the statute does not allow as deductions. But these stand in no different position than the major items -- interest on funded debt and leased line rentals -- discussed above. Prominent among these lesser items is "joint facility rents," which, in the case of the Seaboard, amounted net to $21,816.81. Joint facility rents paid were $34,480.98; those received (credited as nonoperating income) were $12,664.17. This is rental paid for railroad facilities like tracks, terminals, and roundhouses. They are needed by the carrier as a part of the plant, and, not being owned, are rented from others. The fact that they are used jointly with others is, of course, immaterial. This rent, like the rent of a leased line, is paid to secure control of the property operated. Hire of freight cars might have been treated in the same way, but the state, for reasons satisfactory to it, permitted that financial charge to be deducted, and to that extent reduced the tax.
The term "net income," in law or in economics, has not a rigid meaning. Every Income Tax Act necessarily defines what is included in gross income; what deductions are to be made from the gross to ascertain net income, and what part, if any, of the net income is exempt from taxation. These details are largely a matter of governmental policy. As to them, states differ, and there is apt to be difference of view in the same states at different times, and at the same time a different definition of taxable net income for different classes of taxpayers. Obviously such differences in detail do not render obnoxious to the commerce clause a state income tax which is otherwise unobjectionable.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. United States, 231 U. S. 423; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Goodrich Transit Co., 224 U. S. 194; also Illinois Central R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 206 U. S. 441, 206 U. S. 461-462; Union Pacific R. Co. v. United States, 99 U. S. 402, 99 U. S. 420, 99 U. S. 427.
See Groesbeck v. Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry. Co., 250 U. S. 607, 250 U. S. 614; 3 I.C.C. 289, 343. Power to prescribe a mandatory accounting system was first conferred upon the, commission by Hepburn Act June 29, 1906, c. 3591, § 7 (34 Stat. 584, 593). In 1888, a recommendatory classification of operating revenues, expenses, and charges was issued by the Commission, and between that date and 1908, the form was revised from time to time. On June 1, 1908, the Commission ordered carriers to make reports in the form prescribed and furnished by the Commission. Thereafter, changes continued to be made from time to time. A comprehensive and detailed classification of income accounts was issued effective July 1, 1912. This was superseded by the revised classification effective July 1, 1914, which is now in force.
"The General Assembly may also tax . . . incomes provided the rate . . . shall not . . . exceed six percent, and there . . . may be allowed . . . deductions . . . so that only net incomes are taxed."
Smith v. Wilkins, 164 N.C. 135; Caldwell Land & Lumber Co. v. Smith, 151 N.C. 70; Lacy v. Packing Co., 134 N.C. 567; Gatlin v. Town of Tarboro, 78 N.C. 119. Compare State v. Williams, 158 N.C. 610; State v. Moore, 113 N.C. 697; Worth v. Railroad, 89 N.C. 291.
Every corporation is allowed to deduct from gross income all operating expenses -- that is, the disbursements incident to the life and the conduct of its business. But the individual is not permitted to deduct from gross income any part of his living expenses (except so far as they may be covered by the exemption). Railroads and other public corporations are allowed to deduct, as an operating expenses, the cost of tools and small equipment. Individuals and other corporations are not. Ordinary corporations and individuals are allowed to deduct rentals and interest paid. Compare the limited deduction for interest paid under the federal Corporation Tax Act. Anderson v. Forty-Two Broadway Co., 239 U. S. 69; New York, New Haven & Hartford R. Co. v. United States, 269 F. 907.

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