Court Opinion

ID: 6432330
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:09:22.833386+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:14.852640
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C. J.
The question presented on this record is whether *328St. 1912, c. 491, applied to the corporation excise tax for the year 1912. That statute effected an important change in the deduction to be made by the tax commissioner from the value of the corporate franchise of domestic corporations before computing the excise. That statute was approved on April 16,1912. St. 1909, c. 440, § 1, establishes the rule that taxes shall be assessed as of the first day of April in each year. St. 1909, c. 490, Part III, § 40, in connection with St. 1909, c. 440, requires domestic corporations to make returns to the tax commissioner in detail as to their property “as of the first day of April,” while § 41 directs the tax commissioner to ascertain from the returns or otherwise the fair cash value of all shares constituting the capital stock of corporations “on the preceding first day of April.” From this value certain deductions including that established by St. 1912, c. 491, are to be made. The fair implication from these repeated references to the first day of April is that that date is the one as of which all assessments, ascertainments of value and deductions are to be made. It is the contention of the Commonwealth that because the actual computations by the tax commissioner were not made until the summer of 1912, they should be made according to the law as it stood when made and not as it was on April 1. Its argument is founded chiefly on § 2 of the Act of 1912, which provides that it shall take effect on its passage, and which will be of little or no effect unless it is held to apply to the taxes of 1912. We are of opinion that this contention cannot be supported. The general rule is that taxes shall be assessed as of April 1. Hough v. North Adams, 196 Mass. 290. It is apparent from the sections to which reference has been made that this date applies to corporation excises as well as to direct taxes. The deductions should be made as of the same date. It would create great confusion in the ascertainment of corporation excises if the valuation of property to be deducted from the value of the franchise was not made as of the same date. It must be made as of some date. No other date is mentioned in the statutes. It is unreasonable to think that the Legislature could have intended that the value of the deductions should be made as of the sliding time in each year when the tax commissioner might reach each corporation in his calculations. A definite time is almost imperative in the practical administration of the law. The state of the statutes *329on the same date must govern the rights of parties. Tax laws are strictly construed. If the right to tax is not plainly conferred by the statute it is not to be extended by implication. Statutes commonly are not interpreted as retroactive in operation in the absence of a plainly expressed legislative intent to that end. It would have been simple to say that the statute should apply to excises for 1912 if that had been its purpose. The argument drawn from the section that the statute should take effect at once adds little if anything to what would have been its force without that provision, for it then would have been in effect before the excise was computed.
In accordance with the terms of the reservation decree is to be entered adjudging that the amount of $1,070.11 of tax and $2.67 of interest thereon were exacted illegally.

So ordered.