1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*40
Petitioner paid and properly deducted, pursuant to
73 T.C. 61">*61 OPINION
Respondent determined1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*42 a deficiency in petitioner's income taxes paid for its taxable year ended December 31, 1973, in the amount of $ 13,143. 1 After concessions, the only issue left for our decision is whether or not petitioner had such a recovery of previously paid and deducted State taxes 73 T.C. 61">*62 as to allow respondent to successfully invoke the tax benefit rule.
This case was submitted for decision under
Petitioner Hillsboro National Bank (Hillsboro) is a national banking association. At the time it filed its petition herein, Hillsboro maintained its principal place of business and principal office at Hillsboro, Ill. Petitioner filed timely Federal corporate income tax returns for its taxable years ended December 31, 1972 and 1973, with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Kansas City, Mo. A timely statutory notice of deficiency with respect to petitioner's 1973 taxable year was mailed to petitioner on August 5, 1976.
On July 7, 1972, petitioner paid $ 35,055.02 to the county collector of Montgomery County, Ill. Of this amount, $ 31,424.55 was paid by petitioner with respect to an Illinois State ad valorem personal property tax which, although paid by petitioner, was levied upon petitioner's shareholders on their interests as shareholders. 2 Petitioner deducted this latter amount on its 1972 Federal corporate income tax return in accordance with
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*45 The entire amount of 1971 Illinois personal property taxes paid by petitioner on behalf of its shareholders was paid by petitioner out of its general funds and not from dividends 73 T.C. 61">*63 declared before or after said payment. Dividends were not otherwise withheld from petitioner's shareholders as a result of petitioner's payment of their ad valorem tax liabilities. Petitioner has never received reimbursement from its individual shareholders in respect of its payment of their tax. Throughout 1972 and 1973, petitioner's current earnings and profits exceeded the amounts of 1971 Illinois personal property taxes paid by petitioner in 1972 on behalf of its individual stockholders.
Effective January 1, 1971, the Illinois constitution was amended to prohibit the taxation of individuals on the value of their personal property. Ill. Const. of 1870, art. 9-A (effective January 1, 1971); Ill. Const. of 1970 art. 9, sec. 5(b) (Smith-Hurd) (effective July 1, 1971). The constitutionality of this provision under the
On April 3, 1972, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari to the Illinois Supreme Court for the purpose of deciding the United States constitutional question involved in the
Sec. 676.01 Deposit of payments of personal property taxes extended in 1972 -- Payment under protest presumed
The county collector of each county shall deposit in a special interest-bearing escrow account an amount equal to all payments of ad valorem personal property1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*47 taxes extended in 1972 against personal property owned by a natural person, or two or more natural persons as joint tenants or tenants in common, and received by him pending final disposition of
On February 22, 1973, the United States Supreme Court decided the case of
During the year ended December 31, 1973, the county treasurer of Montgomery County, Ill., issued checks to 132 individual shareholders of the petitioner in amounts corresponding to the personal property tax deposited on their behalf by the petitioner. The amounts so paid to said individual shareholders were not transferred or repaid to petitioner. No payment was made by the county treasurer directly to petitioner. No tax refunds were made by the county treasurer to 17 other shareholders in petitioner, who were neither natural persons nor two or more natural persons owning shares as joint tenants or tenants in common.
The amounts paid to petitioner's individual shareholders totaled $ 26,697.79, i.e., $ 26,110.32 in refunded taxes, all of which had been paid and deducted by petitioner, plus $ 587.47 in interest. These payments were issued directly to the individual shareholders. No entries were made on the books and records of petitioner to account for these payments from the county treasurer to the individual shareholders1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*49 of petitioner. The amounts so paid were not reported as income by petitioner on its Federal corporate income tax return for the year ended December 31, 1973.
The method of disposition of funds held in escrow by the county treasurer was based upon advice of the Illinois State's attorney and the Illinois Department of Local Government Affairs. The opinion of petitioner in this matter was neither solicited nor received by the county treasurer.
Until January 1, 1972, the petitioner kept its books and records on the cash receipts and disbursements method of 73 T.C. 61">*65 accounting and computed its taxable income by the same method. At that time, its assets first exceeded $ 25 million and petitioner was required, under regulations promulgated by the Comptroller of Currency, to carry certain items on the accrual method of accounting on its financial books and records. In 1973, therefore, petitioner regularly kept its financial books and records on a combination of the cash receipts and disbursement method and the accrual method. Petitioner never sought respondent's permission to change its accounting method. In completing its 1973 Federal corporate income tax return, however, petitioner1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*50 made adjustments on Schedule M-1 to reconcile its book income with its income for tax purposes -- which was still computed using the cash receipts and disbursement method.
To recapitulate briefly the relevant facts, during its taxable year ended December 31, 1972, petitioner paid ad valorem property tax levied by the State of Illinois on those of its shares of stock issued and outstanding on April 1, 1971. It received no reimbursement therefor from its shareholders and properly deducted the amounts paid on its 1972 taxable year income tax return under the provisions of
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*52 73 T.C. 61">*66 Petitioner's argument is simple. It argues that, as it was at all times relevant hereto on a cash basis of accounting for tax purposes and as it never actually received any amount of the refunded taxes, it cannot be held to have had a "recovery" for purposes of the tax benefit rule. Respondent's argument is more complex. He argues, firstly, that petitioner has had a "recovery" because it not only deducted the taxes when paid, but also received a second benefit from payment of the taxes by way of "the discharge [in 1973] of petitioner's liability to its individual shareholders * * * to treat shareholders of the same class equally in the declaration and payment of dividends." Alternatively, respondent argues that "under Illinois law, the County Collector, having received funds in respect of a liability which was later held unconstitutional, held those funds upon a constructive trust for the rightful owner of the property, namely, the transferor, the petitioner." Under this line of argument, respondent would have us find that petitioner had constructively received the refunded amounts and then paid these amounts out in discharge of its obligation to treat all shareholders1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*53 of the same class equally with respect to the payment of dividends.
We agree with respondent that petitioner derived such a benefit from the refunds to its shareholders as to constitute a "recovery" for purposes of the tax benefit rule. We therefore hold for respondent.
The tax benefit rule is a judicially created doctrine embodying both transactional tax accounting and equitable aspects. The doctrine is intended to assure that income not taxed in year 1, because subject to a deduction, will be taxed in year 2 when the amount deducted is "recovered" -- so long as the first year's deduction provided a "tax benefit" to the taxpayer in that taxable year. The doctrine contains three elements: (1) An 73 T.C. 61">*67 amount previously deducted, (2) which deduction resulted in a tax benefit, and (3) which amount was recovered during the taxable year in issue.
Petitioner has conceded the first two elements of the doctrine. Thus, only the third element, i.e., "recovery," is here at issue. In the usual case a "recovery" occurs by way of either the1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*54 actual receipt of funds or a release of liability resulting in an increase in the taxpayer's net worth. Compare
When Congress first enacted the predecessor of
We believe that when the State constitutional amendment invalidating the ad valorem property tax on individuals was upheld, petitioner's "liability" thereunder was voided, and the refund thereof was paid over to its shareholders, petitioner had a 73 T.C. 61">*68 "recovery" 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*56 sufficient to invoke the tax benefit rule. At that time, the payment which petitioner had originally made for its shareholders' benefit, and permanently put beyond itself, was turned over to its shareholders. At that time, the benefit which petitioner had intended to pay constructively to its shareholders was actually paid to them -- this time without the benefit of the
To hold otherwise would be to allow petitioner a deduction for a dividend distribution. Petitioner's payment of its shareholders' obligation to Illinois was not taxable as a dividend in 1972 only because it fell under the protection of
Indeed, the transfer of petitioner's erstwhile tax payment to its shareholders belies the assumption under which the original deduction was allowed, i.e., that petitioner was paying a State property tax. For Federal tax purposes at least we find it inescapable that, in order for petitioner's benefit to be paid to its shareholders in a form other than a discharge of their obligation to pay taxes, petitioner must first be deemed to have recovered its payments. "In a sense * * * [this recovery] is fictional but certainly no more so than the initial fiction" that petitioner would be allowed to deduct its payment of its shareholders' obligation to Illinois without, at the same time, its shareholders having income.
Our holding in
This Court's application of tax benefit theory to a case involving a deduction by one taxpayer and a recovery to a second taxpayer was not new to our decision in
Our conclusion is in line with the recent decision of the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois,
it is admitted that the plaintiff banking corporation accepted the benefit of deducting the tax payments in 1972. Accordingly, it would be anomalous to hold the bank free from taxation when the amount they paid and deducted is subsequently refunded. This is exactly the type of situation covered by the "tax benefit rule" and defendant must prevail.
While the refund check in that case was made payable jointly to 73 T.C. 61">*70 the shareholder and the bank, we do not believe this formalism to be dispositive. 5
In addition, while not determinative, our holding that, for Federal tax1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*61 purposes, petitioner had such an interest in the refunded taxes as to constitute a "recovery" for purposes of the tax benefit rule, also follows from local law.
Where a determination of local law is relevant to a Federal tax case, the Federal courts are bound to give "proper regard" to the ruling of lower State courts.
a refund1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*62 to the banks would be grossly inequitable. This would enable the banks to hold these refunds as part of their general assets which in turn would redound to the proportionate benefit of all shareholders, including those legal persons not individuals to whom the legislature never intended to make refunds. To sustain plaintiffs' contention but also to channel the refunds to the natural owners exclusively in accordance with the clear mandate of the constitutional referendum, as construed by the courts, the refunds would necessarily be made to the banks for the use and benefit of only the natural persons owning stock. This would present administrative and other problems which would best be solved by remitting the refunds directly to the individual owners entitled thereto. [
While the court's intendment on this exact point is not absolutely clear, we view this quote as recognizing that although the banks had an interest in the refund made to the individual shareholders, they would have been required to pay any amounts 73 T.C. 61">*71 received to their shareholders as a dividend, and accordingly, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 40">*63 a refund directly to the shareholders was appropriate. This interest of the banks in the refunds was often palpably recognized by the State by making the checks out to both the bank and the shareholder with the bank then automatically endorsing the check over to its shareholders. That this formalism was not followed in the case before us is irrelevant to the actual existence of the petitioner's interest in, and hence "recovery" of, the refunded taxes.
Different considerations apply to that part of the refunded amounts representing interest on the ad valorem taxes paid by petitioner, i.e., the $ 587.47. Petitioner never deducted this amount. The tax benefit rule and
*. By order of the Chief Judge dated June 20, 1979, this case was reassigned from Judge Bruce M. Forrester to Judge Samuel B. Sterrett for disposition.↩
1. The amount of this claimed deficiency was based on respondent's determination that petitioner had understated its income by $ 27,383.16. The parties have stipulated that respondent was in error to the extent of $ 685.37. Thus the amount of understatement that respondent now claims is $ 26,697.79 which consists of $ 26,110.32 in taxes paid by pettitioner on behalf of its individual shareholders, plus $ 587.47 in interest which accrued on, and was refunded with, these taxes.↩
2. The taxes are levied upon petitioner's shareholders on their interest as shareholders by Ill. Ann. Stat. ch. 120, sec. 557 (Smith-Hurd), which read at all relevant times herein in pertinent part as follows:
Sec. 557. Listing and valuing stock of State and National banks
The stockholders of every kind of incorporated bank located within this State, whether such bank has been organized under the banking law of this State, or of the United States, shall be assessed and taxed upon the value of their shares of stock therein, in the taxing district where such bank or banking association is located and not elsewhere, whether such stockholders reside in such place or not. * * * Such shares shall be listed and assessed with regard to the ownership and value thereof as they existed on the first day of April annually * * * [Sec. 557 was amended, in a way not material hereto, by Pub. Act 79-703, sec. 1, effective Sept. 3, 1975.]↩
3.
(1) the deduction allowed by subsection (a) shall be allowed to the corporation; and
(2) no deduction shall be allowed the shareholder for such tax.↩
4.
(a) General Rule. -- Gross income does not include income attributable to the recovery during the taxable year of a bad debt, prior tax, or delinquency amount, to the extent of the amount of the recovery exclusion with respect to such debt, tax, or amount.
(b) Definitions. -- For purposes of subsection (a) --
* * * * (4) Recovery exclusion. -- The term "recovery exclusion" * * * means the amount, determined in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary or his delegate, of the deductions or credits allowed * * * which did not result in a reduction of the taxpayer's tax under this subtitle * * * reduced by the amount excludable in previous taxable years with respect to such debt, tax, or amount under this section.
5. We also note that petitioner does not appear to have objected to the refund to the shareholders without even its name being on the refund checks. We believe that petitioner's inaction was itself a means of obtaining the desired result. Petitioner, in effect, stood by and let this benefit flow to the natural objects of its bounty, i.e., its shareholders.↩