1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*165
Interest on special tax bills issued by the city of Kansas City, Kansas, which was levied and assessed by the city as a tax and was payable to the holders of the tax bills by the city but was not payable out of the general funds of the city,
1 T.C. 1147">*1147 OPINION.
This proceeding involves income and excess profits tax deficiencies for 1938 and 1939 as follows:
Deficiency | ||
Year | Excess profits | |
Income tax | tax | |
1938 | $ 255.70 | $ 92.98 |
1939 | 3,897.56 |
The issue for our determination is whether the interest payments which petitioner received during the taxable years on special tax bills issued by the city of Kansas City, Kansas, are exempt from taxation as interest upon the obligations of a political subdivision1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*166 of the State of Kansas. The material facts pertaining to this issue have been stipulated.
It has also been stipulated that petitioner is entitled to a loss deduction in 1939 of $ 3,910.73 representing the unrecovered cost basis of certain special tax bills charged off as worthless in that year, and that petitioner is taxable on certain specified portions of bad debt recoveries in each of the taxable years.
Petitioner is a state banking corporation, organized under the laws of the State of Kansas, with its principal office in Kansas City, Kansas. It filed its income and excess profits tax returns for 1938 and 1939 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Kansas.
1 T.C. 1147">*1148 Prior to the taxable years here involved petitioner purchased a number of interest-bearing "special tax bills" which had been issued by the city of Kansas City to various contractors in payment for street improvements. The issuance of special tax bills for payment of street improvements in cities of over 110,000 population (the population of Kansas City at all times here material was in excess of 110,000) was authorized by chapter 133 of the Laws of Kansas, 1927, and amendments thereto.
Under1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*167 the Kansas statutes cities of a population of 110,000 or over are authorized to pay the cost of street and alley improvements by issuing special tax bills payable in not over ten annual installments, with interest of not more than 8 percent per annum. It is provided that the tax bills shall become a lien upon the improved property therein described, superior to all other liens "excepting the lien for general taxes," with which they are concurrent. It is further provided that:
* * * no liability of whatever character on account of said tax bills shall attach to or be a claim against the city therefor, except that it shall be the duty of the governing body of the city to levy by ordinance the total amount of said tax bills against the property charged therewith, and cause each installment of such tax bills in its order, with interest on the unpaid portion thereof to August 1 of the following year, to be duly certified by the city clerk to the county clerk, to be placed on the tax roll for collection as other taxes for the benefit of the legal holder of such special tax bills as hereinafter provided for. * * *
The tax bills become negotiable when endorsed to bearer by the contractor1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*168 to whom issued. General Statutes of Kansas, 1935, § 13-1079. See also §§ 13-1084 and 13-1085.
The tax bills under consideration were issued by the municipality directly to the contractors upon completion of the authorized improvements and they became a lien upon the specific private property so benefited. Petitioner purchased the tax bills from the contractors at or below par. Interest was paid to the petitioner by the municipality in 1938 and 1939 on the tax bills which petitioner owned in the respective amounts of $ 12,611.87 and $ 16,847.88. These amounts were not reported by petitioner in its returns for either of the years but were added to gross income by the respondent in his determination of the deficiencies here in dispute. Petitioner's returns were made on the cash basis.
It is the petitioner's contention that the interest payments which it received on the tax bills in question in 1938 and 1939 were interest on obligations of the city of Kansas City, a political subdivision of the State of Kansas, and are therefore exempt from income tax under section 22 (b) (4) of the Revenue Act of 1938.
The respondent contends that, since no obligation for payment of either principal1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*169 or interest on the tax bills rested directly upon the 1 T.C. 1147">*1149 city, they were not "obligations" of the city within the meaning of the statute. He cites
In two previously decided cases, which we sought to distinguish in
In
While the interest payments here involved were made on special tax bills similar to those in
In its opinion in
The Commissioner also claims these municipal bonds are mere tax bills or warrants within
Here, as with the bonds to which the court referred in the quotation from the
We hold upon authority of the cases discussed above that the interest payments which petitioner received on the special tax bills issued by the city of Kansas City is exempt from taxation.
Mellott,
Disney,
In my opinion, the whole tenor of the above epitomized statutes indicates nothing more than an administrative duty upon the city. Unless prior to the issuance of the special tax bills the assessment has been paid to the city treasurer, who receipts and holds same for the contractor, the city merely certifies to the county clerk and the county treasurer, who collects. If so, he remits to the city1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*177 treasurer, 1 T.C. 1147">*1152 who pays to the holder of the special tax bill. Dereliction on the part of the county treasurer in collection would involve no obligation on the city. If the amount is not voluntarily paid to the county treasurer, the holder of the special tax bill takes matters into his own hands, files foreclosure, and the matter is no longer within the control of either county treasurer or city. The county treasurer may not collect. The city clerk may not further certify to him. Only the clerk of the court may accept payment.
I think that the exemption of interest from taxation, here in question, must be limited to a financial obligation of the city. Interest entails indebtedness, in money or at least in property. Under the Kansas statute, I find none. Only after receiving the moneys from the treasurer could the city be liable, and then not upon an indebtedness, but for money had and received. It has no power to institute proceedings to collect, as seems the case under Missouri statutes. It is no party to a foreclosure by the tax bill holder. An action by the city to collect the tax bills would be clearly demurrable under the statute. If the county treasurer failed1943 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 165">*178 to remit the interest to the city treasurer, remitting only the principal of the installment, obviously the city could not be held for the interest. I find the instant situation different from that in
Unable to discover, under the Kansas law, liability of the city for the interest, or any inherently municipal connection with it, I do not believe that exemption of such interest is reasonably within the intendment of the Federal statute providing exemption. I therefore respectfully dissent.