Household Finance Corp. v. Department of Taxation
Household Finance Corp. v. Department of Taxation
Opinion of the Court
The Wisconsin privilege dividend tax law (now sec. 71.16, Stats.) was enacted in 1935, and by its terms a tax was levied upon the privilege of declaring and receiving dividends out of income derived from property located and business transacted in this state. The law provides that the tax shall be deducted and withheld from such dividends by the payor corporation.
The respondent is a foreign corporation licensed to operate in Wisconsin, and does business here and in many other states. After the passage of the law, the respondent, upon advice of counsel that the law was unconstitutional so far
The respondent concedes that privilege dividend taxes paid by it to the state cannot be deducted as taxes paid under sec. 71.04 (3), Stats., and it further concedes that if the privilege dividend taxes paid by it had been paid for the purpose of paying an extra dividend to its stockholders it would not be entitled to claim such payments as ordinary andt necessary business expense. Thus the sole question to be determined in this case is as 'follows: Are privilege dividend taxes, paid by a corporation from corporate funds of the corporation and not withheld from stockholders, deductible by the corporation as an ordinary and necessary business expense in the computation of its state income tax?
The respondent contended before the board of tax appeals and the circuit court that if it had withheld the privilege dividend taxes from dividends paid to its stockholders, the expense of computing and withholding the same would have exceeded the amount of taxes paid. It contended that it would be impossible to determine the exact amount of taxes to be withheld at the time of declaring and paying dividends as the final figures could not be determined until the returns
The record was devoted almost entirely to estimates of the certain and uncertain expense that would have been incurred by the respondent if it had withheld the taxes from the dividends paid to its stockholders.
The board of tax appeals found, among other things, that the certain expense of withholding the privilege dividend tax from dividend checks would not have exceeded the amount of the privilege dividend tax so paid, and that the certain and uncertain expense of withholding said tax would have exceeded the privilege dividend tax so paid. The circuit court reversed the finding that the certain expense of withholding the tax would not have exceeded the amount of the privilege dividend tax so paid and affirmed the other findings of the board.
These findings and the testimony offered to show the certain and uncertain expenses are wholly immaterial. The wisdom of a tax and the deductions that can be made in computing taxes are wholly within the province of the legislature. If a statute is valid, it is the duty of the court to, applj it. The respondent is asking that the clear language of the statute be disregarded and that upon equitable principles it be allowed _ to deduct the privilege ' dividend taxes which it paid, because if it had withheld the amount of such taxes from the stockholders the estimated cost or expense of doing so would exceed the amount of taxes paid. The fact remains, however, that the corporation did not incur any expense in deducting and withholding the taxes, and the clear wording of the statute requires rejection of its contention.
“We are certain of three things: (1) That the burden of the tax is specifically laid upon the stockholder; (2) that the corporation declaring the dividend must deduct the tax from the dividend and may not under any circumstances treat the tax as a necessary expense of doing business; (3) that the power to levy the tax so construed was authoritatively established in the Penney Case, supra.”
The respondent contends that the statement is dicta. It is apparent that the circuit judge held the same view. The question was directly raised in that case and the statement was deliberately made after this court had thoroughly studied the Privilege Dividend Tax Law in several cases decided by it. It clearly states the law, and we repeat here that a corporation paying a dividend tax from its own funds may not treat the tax as an ordinary and necessary expense in computing its income tax.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions to enter a judgment consistent with this opinion.
Reference
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