Reversing.
In October, 1940, the Division of Income Tax of the Department of Revenue made deficiency assessments against the East Cairo Ferry Company in the amount of $974.82 for income taxes for the calendar year 1936 with six per cent interest thereon from May, 1937. The sum of $282.53 represented tax liability on income earned by the East Cairo Ferry Company in 1936 and the balance of $692.29 represented a tax on a liquidating dividend owed by the Mound City Ferry Company. The East Cairo Company acquired the Mound City Company in January, 1934, and both companies sold and transferred all of their assets to the Cairo Bridge Commission late in 1936. A few days after the Department of Revenue finally approved the deficiency assessments, the East Cairo Company, through its last president, petitioned the Franklin Circuit Court for a review of and relief from the deficiency assessments, and asked that the appellants *Page 385 be enjoined from collecting or attempting to collect any income tax from the Cairo Company for the year 1936. The trial court granted the Company the relief prayed; hence this appeal.
Reversal is urged upon the grounds that (1) the relief granted was broader than that asked; and (2) the Commonwealth has a right to look to the stockholders of a dissolved corporation for its unpaid taxes.
We gather from the briefs that at the time this action was filed another was filed seeking a review of the deficiency assessment of $692.29 against the Mound City Ferry Company and that the outcome of that proceeding was a finding in favor of the Commonwealth. While the Company asked that the whole assessment of $974.82 be reviewed, the only part thereof which appears to be seriously challenged is the tax on the liquidating dividend from the Mound City Company. We find no basis whatever for challenging the item of $282.53 which represents the deficiency assessment on the operating income of the Cairo Company for 1936.
It was pointed out in the case of Chesapeake, Ohio
Southwestern R. R. Co. v. Griest,
We have noted that this action was instituted within only a few days after the Department of Revenue notified the Cairo Company of the deficiency assessments. Ordinarily, a question such as the one involved herein would come up in a proceeding instituted by the Commonwealth against the stockholders of the dissolved corporation, but since the question has been raised in this proceeding we fail to see how the rights of either party can be prejudiced by a determination of it at this time.
Since it is not contended that the deficiency assessment of $692.29 is incorrect or erroneous, we are faced only with the question as to whether or not the Cairo Company can be held liable for it. We think it can. To rule otherwise would require a departure from the holdings in the Griest and American Railway Express Company cases, supra, to the effect that the property of a corporation is impressed with the trust for the payment of its debts.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to set it aside and for the entry of a judgment dismissing the petition. Whole Court sitting.