170 Wis. 415

State ex rel. Moon and others, Respondents, vs. Nygaard, County Clerk, Appellant.

December 2, 1919

January 13, 1920.

Income taxation: Dividends of corporation from surplus: Holding company: Right of stockholder to show dividend not from earnings or profits.

1. Under sub. 2 (b), sec. 1087w — 2, Stats., as amended by ch. 247, Laws 1917, a stockholder in any corporation to whom there has been paid a sum of money under the designation of dividends has a right to show that such payment or dividend was made out of the capital or surplus and is therefore not taxable, instead of out of the earnings or profits accrued since January 1, 1911, which would be taxable.

2. Where a stockholder of a corporation exchanged his stock 'for stock in a holding company, and the holding company received from the corporation a so-called dividend, paid out of the surplus and not out of the earnings or profits accrued after January 1, 1911, a dividend paid by the holding company, resulting from such dividend from the surplus of the corporation, was not “income,” within the meaning of sub. 2 (b), sec. 1087m — 2, as amended by ch. 247, Laws 1917.

Appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Eau Claire county:' James Wicki-iam, Circuit Judge.

Affirmed.

The plaintiffs in this action were stockholders of the Sallie F. Moon Company, a Wisconsin corporation. That company was organized in 1906, and its capital stock of $400,000 was issued to the mother of relators in consideration of the transfer to it of her property, and among such were 1,893 out of the 2,423 shares of the capital stock of the Northwestern Lumber Company, also a Wisconsin corporation. Although the charter of the Sallie F. Moon Company authorized the dealing in real and personal property, loaning money, general merchandising, manufacturing, lumber and logging business, it appears that it functioned merely as a holding company in collecting returns from and conserving its assets and distributing them among its stockholders.

*416January 1, 1911, the Northwestern Lumber Company had a surplus of $5,268,851.19. This was reduced from year to year thereafter by dividends declared from that as well as from its earnings, so that on January 1, 1915, the surplus was $4,548,688.93, and on January 1, 1916, $4,292,198.28.

The Northwestern Lumber Company made no profit in carrying on its business during the years 1915 and 1916 respectively, as appeared from its returns to the tax commission.

On the 1st of December, 1916 and 1917, resolutions were respectively adopted declaring a dividend of fifty per cent, on the outstanding capital stock of the Northwestern Lumber Company, payable out of the surplus fund that existed on January 1, 1911. Pursuant thereto payment was made in 1916 to the Sallie F. Moon Company of $47,325 and in 1917 of $94,650.

During the year 1917 the Sallie F. Moon Company paid to its stockholders dividends aggregating $38,035, of which $5,700 was paid to each of the three plaintiffs. Such dividends were substantially and in effect paid out of the moneys received from the Northwestern Lumber Compan}' as above Stated.

Due returns were made according to law by each of the said corporations and the relators as individuals of their respective incomes during the years in question.

Each of the relators claimed a deduction from his income subject to taxation to an extent of $5,322 from the $5,700 received from the Sallie F. Moon Company. Such several claims for deductions were allowed by the board of review of Eau Claire county on due hearing, thereby overruling the assessment made against such relators by the supervisor of assessors. The supervisor thereupon appealed to the tax commission of Wisconsin, and on the hearing before said body the action of the board of review was reversed and the assessment made by the supervisor of assessors con*417firmed. Thereupon the relators obtained a writ of certiorari from the circuit court for Eau Claire county to review such determination of the tax commission. Upon hearing in the court below it was adjudged that the assessment as taxable income made against each of the relators for the year 1917, so far as it was based on the dividend1 of $5,700 received from the Sallie F. Moon Company, must be vacated and set aside.

From the judgment so entered an appeal was taken to this court by the county clerk of Eau Claire county and by him as clerk of the county income tax board of review for said county.

For the appellant there was a brief by the Attorney General and E. E. Brossard, assistant attorney general, atad oral argument by Mr. Brossard.

For the respondents there was a brief by Bundy & Wilcox and P. M. Beach, all of Eau Claire, and oral argument by C. T. Bundy.

Eschweiler, J.

The appellant contends that the money paid to the plaintiffs as stockholders of the Sallie F. Moon Company and designated as dividends is taxable income of the relators although the source of such dividends is a surplus accumulated prior to 1911 by the Northwestern Lumber Company and paid out by it to the Sallie F. Moon Company in 1917 as a result of severally declared dividends by the Northwestern Lumber Company in 1916.

The income tax law provides for the levying of a tax upon annual incomes. Sub. 2, sec. 1087m — 2, Stats., in defining the term “income,” so far as material here now reads as follows:

“(b) All dividends derived from stocks and all interest derived from money loaned or invested in notes, mortgages, bonds or other evidence of debt of any kind whatsoever, provided, that the term ‘dividends’ as used in this section shall he held to mean any distribution made by a corporation, joint-stock company or association, out of its *418 earnings or profits accrued since January i, ipil, and paid to its shareholders whether in cash or in stock of the corporation, joint company or association.”

The italicised portion of said sub. 2 (b) was added to the statute as it then stood by ch. 247, Laws 1917, approved May 21st.

The word “dividend” as used in the subsection prior to the amendment had been construed in Van Dyke v. Milwaukee, 159 Wis. 460, 159 N. W. 509, to mean that “ordinary dividends declared by a going corporation, including mining corporations, will be conclusively presumed as against stockholders to be from earnings or profits for purposes of income taxation.” Page 464.

In State ex rel. Bundy v. Nygaard, 163 Wis. 307, 158 N. W. 87, the word “income” as used in the statute before amendment was defined to be “profit or gain derived from capital or labor, or from both combined. ... It must be gain or profit.”

Subsequently the cases of State ex rel. Pfister v. Widule, 166 Wis. 48, 163 N. W. 641 (decided in June, 1917), and State ex rel. Sallie F. Moon Co. (a Wisconsin corporation) v. Wis. Tax Comm. 166 Wis. 287, 288, 163 N. W. 639, 165 N. W. 470 (decided in December, 1917, but argued in May of that year), repeated what was said in the Van Dyke Case, supra, as to the definition given to the word “dividend.”

We construe the legislative definition now applicable to the term “dividend” as it stands in the amended sec. 1087m — 2 as intended to now permit the opening of the door of inquiry as to the source from which came the money paid by a corporation to its stockholders, although designated by it as dividends, the door which was in effect declared in the prior cases completely closed. The result now is that a stockholder in any corporation to whom, as stockholder, there has been paid a sum of money under the designation of dividends has the right to show that such *419payment or dividend was made out of capital or surplus and therefore not taxable, instead of out of earnings or profits accrued since January 1, 1911, which would be taxable. That the fund in question passes through the treasury of the Sallie F. Moon Company after leaving that of the Northwestern Lumber Company and before reaching the hands of the relators does not change the nature of the transaction. At no time on its passage from the first company to the relators does it meet the present definition of the dividend which is to be considered as part of the taxable income of an individual.

It follows that when, as here, the fund in question does not meet the definition of taxable income, it is unnecessary to consider the language of the same law providing for deductions and exemptions, for they are properly considered only in reference to that which would otherwise be taxable income.

Giving the words “earnings” and “profits” their plain, every-day meaning, the payments in question here are not profits or earnings accrued since January 1, 1911, to-the Sallie F. Moon Company and therefore do not meet the present statutory definition of taxable income. The trial court was therefore right in his conclusion.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.

Winslow, C. J., and Siebecker, J., dissent.

State ex rel. Moon v. Nygaard
170 Wis. 415

Case Details

Name
State ex rel. Moon v. Nygaard
Decision Date
Jan 13, 1920
Citations

170 Wis. 415

Jurisdiction
Wisconsin

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