The court, in
89 U. S. 22 wall.
604, when this case was then before it, passed upon the character
and effect of certain certificates therein described, which were
issued by a railroad company pursuant to a resolution passed by the
board of directors, Dec. 19, 1868, declaring that each stockholder
was entitled to eighty percent of his capital stock, the earnings
which the company, with a view to increase its traffic, had
thitherto expended in constructing and equipping its road and in
purchasing property. The Court adheres to its former ruling that
the certificates were dividends in scrip, within the meaning of
sec. 122 of the Act of June 30, 1864, c. 173, as amended by the Act
of July 13, 1866, c. 184, but further holds that the company could
show what were its earnings from Sept. 1, 1862, to Dec. 19, 1868,
when the income tax law was in force, as its earnings during any
other period were not subject to the tax in question.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
On December 19, 1868, the New York Central Railroad Company,
afterwards merged by consolidation into a new corporation, the
defendant in error, adopted a preamble, resolutions, and
certificate, of which the following is a copy:
"Whereas this company has hitherto expended of its earnings for
the purpose of constructing and equipping its road and in the
purchase of read estate and other properties with a view to the
increase of its traffic, moneys equal in amount to eighty percent
of the capital stock of the company, and whereas the several
stockholders of the company are entitled to evidence of such
expenditure and to reimbursement of the same at some convenient
future period, now therefore"
"
Resolved that a certificate, signed by the president
and treasurer of this company, be issued to the stockholders
severally declaring
Page 106 U. S. 110
that such stockholder is entitled to eighty percent of the
amount of the capital stock held by him, payable ratably with the
other certificates issued under this resolution at the option of
the company, out of its future earnings, with dividends thereon at
the same rates and times as dividends shall be paid on the shares
of the capital stock of the company, and that such certificates may
be, at the option of the company, convertible into stock of the
company whenever the company shall be authorized to increase its
capital stock to an amount sufficient for such conversion."
"
Resolved that such certificates be delivered to the
stockholders of this company at the Union Trust Company in the City
of New York on the presentation of their several certificates of
stock, and that the receipt of the certificate provided for in
these resolutions shall be endorsed on the stock certificate."
The certificate issued under this authority reads as
follows:
"Under a resolution of the board of directors of this company
passed December 19, 1868, of which the above is a copy, the New
York Central Railroad Company hereby certifies that being the
holder of ___ shares of the capital stock of said company, is
entitled to ___ dollars, payable ratably with the other
certificates issued under said resolution at the pleasure of the
company, out of its future earnings, with dividends thereon at the
same rates and times as dividends shall be paid upon the shares of
the capital stock of said company."
"This certificate may be transferred on the books of the company
on the surrender of this certificate."
"In witness whereof, the said company has caused this
certificate to be signed by its president and treasurer this
nineteenth day of December, 1868."
The resolution was carried into effect by an issue of the
contemplated certificates to the amount of $23,036,000, being
eighty percent of its authorized capital of $28,795,000. Dividends
were regularly paid to the holders of these certificates equal to
those declared and paid upon the capital stock until the
certificates were redeemed at par in the stock of the consolidated
corporation as then authorized by law. This consolidation took
place in 1872. On March 3, 1870, an assessment was made by the
proper officer of the internal revenue of a tax of five percent
upon the amount of these certificates,
Page 106 U. S. 111
being $1,151,800, with a penalty of $1,000 added, under sec. 122
of the Internal Revenue Act of 1864. 13 Stat. 223, 284.
From this assessment the railroad company appealed successively
to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Secretary of the
Treasury, upon which appeal a decision was rendered reducing the
assessment to the sum of $460,720.
This decision was based upon the ground that the issue of the
certificates was a scrip dividend within the meaning of sec. 122 of
the Internal Revenue Act of 1864, but that as it had been made to
appear that the earnings stated in the resolution to have been
expended, accrued during the entire period of fifteen years, from
1853 to 1868, of which only six years were covered by the income
tax law, which first took effect in September, 1862, the tax should
be apportioned
pro rata by remitting nine-fifteenths and
assessing the tax upon the sum of $9,214,400, the amount of
earnings assumed to have accrued during the period when they were
subject to the tax. The assessment upon this sum being $460,720,
with a penalty of five percent, being $23,036, and interest at the
rate of one percent per month, amounting to $64,153.48, were
exacted by the collector and paid under protest. To recover back
these sums as illegally exacted the defendant in error brought this
action against the collector of internal revenue who had collected
them.
On the first trial of the case, the circuit court charged the
jury that the assessment was wholly illegal and void, the
certificates not being a scrip dividend within the meaning of the
law and furnishing no basis for the assessment of any tax whatever,
and that consequently their verdict must be for the plaintiff.
There was a verdict accordingly, and the judgment thereon was
reversed and a new trial awarded upon a writ of error by this Court
in a decision reported in
89 U. S. 22 Wall.
604. The second trial, in the circuit court, resulted in a verdict
and judgment for the plaintiff below for $499,432.68. To reverse
that judgment is the object of the present writ of error.
The principal questions presented arise upon exceptions of the
plaintiff in error to the charge of the circuit judge to the jury,
and to his refusal to give certain instructions as requested. The
substance of the charge upon the main point was that
Page 106 U. S. 112
while the certificates constituted a scrip dividend, which
justified the assessment and constituted a complete
prima
facie defense to the action, nevertheless it was competent for
the plaintiff to show what amount of the earnings of the company
accruing from September 1, 1862, to December 19, 1868, was
represented by and included in the certificates, and that this
amount alone being subject to the tax, the plaintiff was entitled
to recover all in excess of that which had been exacted and paid.
The opposing proposition of the defendant below, the request to
give which as a charge to the jury was refused, was that the
certificates were conclusive upon the railroad company of the
amount of a scrip dividend subject to taxation without
deduction.
The counsel for the plaintiff in error now contend that their
position is established by the former decision in
89 U. S. 22 Wall.
604, to which we have already referred.
The actual and precise judgment of the court upon the former
writ of error is, however, completely satisfied by the charge of
the circuit court now in question, for the ruling on the first
trial held to be erroneous was that the certificates constituted no
basis whatever for taxation as a scrip dividend, and were not to be
admitted or considered even as a
prima facie defense to
the action. The reversal at that time did not and could not, upon
the record then presented, anticipate and prejudge the question now
raised, whether those certificates were conclusive as to the amount
of the taxable earnings represented by them.
There is nothing in the opinion of the Court then pronounced
which, properly understood, requires any conclusion to the
contrary.
In that opinion the nature of these certificates is described
and their character as scrip dividends defined. It is there stated
that
"interest certificates of the kind were issued as evidence to
the stockholders that an equal amount of the earnings of the
company beyond current expenses had been expended for the objects
stated in the preamble of the certificates, and to show that the
respective stockholders were entitled to reimbursement of such
expenditure at some convenient future period, and also to show that
the stockholders were entitled to dividends on the same whenever
dividends were paid on the shares of the capital stock, and that
the certificates were to
Page 106 U. S. 113
be paid out of the future earnings of the company, or to be
converted at the option of the company into stock if thereafter
authorized to exercise that function."
"Such a paper, therefore, by whatever name it may be called, is,
upon its face, evidence for each stockholder, to persons with whom
he may have dealings, of the amount of the previous net earnings of
the company; that such net earnings have been expended in
constructing and equipping the railroad, and in the purchase of
real estate and other properties appertaining to the same, and that
the holders of the certificates will be entitled to dividends
whenever dividends are paid upon the capital stock."
These certificates were considered to be a dividend declared, as
of profits which had been at some previous time, earned and
converted into capital by an investment in permanent improvements
of the railroad, and it was as representing such earnings that they
were considered the subject of a tax. Whether those profits had
been earned since or before the passage of the act of Congress
imposing such a tax does not appear from any recital in the
certificates, and they were dealt with by the government itself
upon the footing of not being taxable beyond the amount represented
by them, which had actually been earned after the taking effect of
the law. The Treasury Department, as has already been stated,
reduced the assessment to six-fifteenths of the face of the
certificates upon the hypothesis that an equal proportion of the
whole amount had accrued during each of the fifteen years since the
organization of the company in 1853, and in view of this reduction,
Mr. Justice Clifford, in the opinion referred to, added: "Whether
or not they are liable for the whole amount is not a question in
this case."
The question having thus been left open, it is now contended by
the counsel for the plaintiff in error that by the reason and terms
of the law, the certificates are taxable as a scrip dividend upon
the full nominal amount thereof.
The one hundred and twenty-second section of the Internal
Revenue Act of the said act of 1864, under which the question
arises, is as follows:
"SEC. 122.
And be it further enacted that any railroad,
canal, turnpike, canal navigation, or slackwater company indebted
for any money for which bonds or other evidence of indebtedness
Page 106 U. S. 114
have been issued, payable in one or more years after date, upon
which interest is stipulated to be paid, or coupons representing
interest, or any such company that may have declared any dividend
in scrip or money due or payable to its stockholders as part of the
earnings, profits, income, or gains of such company, and all
profits of such company carried to the account of any fund, or used
for construction, shall be subject to and pay a duty of five
percent on the amount of all such interest, or coupons, dividends,
or profits, whenever the same shall be payable,"
&c.
It is now urged in argument by the counsel for the plaintiff in
error that upon the express terms of this section, the certificates
in question, being a declaration of a dividend as part of the
earnings, profits, income, or gains of the railroad company, are
taxable upon the amount thereof without deduction; that the policy
as well as the language of the act fixes the charge upon the
declaration itself when made effectual as between the company and
its stockholders, and, for the purposes of taxation, concludes both
as to the amount subject to the tax, and that the rule is
reasonable as furnishing an obvious standard and the only safe
criterion for the assessment of the tax to prevent fraudulent
evasions, and consequently that when such a dividend has once been
declared and ascertained to come within the description of the law
as a subject of taxation, all the rest follows, and the amount
declared is necessarily established as the amount to be taxed.
The soundness of this mode of interpretation, and its
application to ordinary cases, may well be admitted, but it cannot
be applied to every case without a careful regard to its necessary
limitations.
It should be borne in mind in the first place that the tax
provided for in this section of the act is an annual income tax,
and its subject is the interest paid and profits earned by the
company for each year, and year by year, and that both by the
express letter of the law and its necessary implications, the tax
is not laid on any of these funds which came into being before the
time prescribed in the act. And in the ordinary execution of the
law it was contemplated that the funds to be taxed, and the tax
imposed upon them, would be concurrent as to each fiscal year, the
scheme of the statute being to levy the tax upon the income for the
year ending on the 31st of December next preceding
Page 106 U. S. 115
the assessment, and while it would be altogether admissible to
go back for the purpose of assessing a tax upon a proper fund which
had accrued during a previous year and escaped taxation,
nevertheless the tax imposed would be for the omitted year. But no
tax, in contemplation of the law, accrues upon the fund except for
the year in which the fund itself accrued.
It is also to be remembered that the subject matter of the tax
is the net earnings of the company for the year for which they are
taxed which have been actually realized by it or which the law
assumes to have been. We repeat here what was said by MR. JUSTICE
MILLER, speaking for the Court in
Railroad Company v.
Collector, 100 U. S. 595,
100 U. S.
598:
"The corporations mentioned in this section are those engaged in
furnishing roadways and waterways for the transportation of persons
and property, and the manifest purpose of the law was to levy the
tax on the net earnings of such companies. How were these
'earnings, profits, incomes, or gains' to be most certainly
ascertained? In every well conducted corporation of this character,
these profits were disposed of in one of four methods, namely
distributed to its stockholders as dividends, used in construction
of its roads or canals, paid out for interest on its funded debt,
or carried to a reserve or other fund remaining in its hands.
Looking to these modes of distribution as the surest evidence of
the earnings which Congress intended to tax and as less liable to
evasion than any other, the tax is imposed upon all of them. The
books and records of the company are thus made evidence of the
profits they have made, and the corporation itself is made
responsible for the payment of the tax."
It is true indeed that by the terms of the law, the amount paid
as interest on bonds is charged with a tax as part of the earnings,
although there may have been no net earnings out of which to pay
it; but the law proceeds upon a presumption which disregards what
is merely exceptional. And we have no hesitation in saying that in
reference to a dividend declared as of earnings for the current
year and paid as such to stockholders, whether in money or in
scrip, no proof would be admissible for the purpose of avoiding the
tax that no earnings
Page 106 U. S. 116
had in fact been made. The law conclusively assumes in such a
case that a dividend declared and paid is a dividend earned.
It follows also from this view of the purpose of the law that a
fund taxed in one year as the profits of a railroad company, used
for construction or carried to the account of any fund, has been
taxed once for all, and cannot, as part of the earnings of the
company, be assessed a second time. The tax for the year is upon
the whole amount of the net earnings, distributed and enumerated
under the heads pointed out in the statute, and when the tax has
been imposed and collected upon them or any specific part of them,
there is no authority to levy any further additional tax. The
profits that this year have been taxed as undivided and invested in
any corporate asset if in the succeeding year it is embraced in a
dividend declared and payable to stockholders, have already borne
all the burden imposed by the law, and cannot again be subjected to
an assessment for a new tax. There has been a difference of opinion
upon the point whether the tax imposed by this section is upon the
corporation on account of its net profits or upon the income of the
stockholder or bondholder, although in the present case it is
immaterial which of these alternatives is adopted. We are not
aware, however, that it has ever been suggested until now that it
might be both in succession -- one year a tax upon the income of
the corporation and the next upon the same fund as the income of
the individual. We do not think this an admissible
construction.
It is necessary in the application of these principles of the
circumstances of the present case to regard the special character
of the certificates in question. It will be seen that they do not
purport to be a declaration of a dividend as of the earnings of the
company during the year in which the tax was assessed, or indeed
for any particular year or series of years. The recital is that the
company
"has hitherto expended of its earnings, for the purpose of
constructing and equipping its road and in the purchase of real
estate and other properties with a view to the increase of its
traffic, moneys equal in amount to eighty percent of the capital
stock of the company."
It was quite legitimate for the assessor to treat this as
evidence
Page 106 U. S. 117
of an amount of earnings which had never been taxed, and make
the assessment accordingly. It was equally legitimate for the
Secretary of the Treasury, upon proof that the accumulation had
been going on from the organization of the company, in 1853 to
apportion the amount in equal proportions for each year, and to
deduct nine-fifteenths thereof for the years which had elapsed
before the taking effect of the act taxing incomes. And it is
entirely consistent with the declaration itself to show in point of
fact what was the amount of earnings accrued during the period
while the income tax act was in force which had not been assessed
for taxation as profits carried to construction or other account.
The declaration in the certificates could not be conclusive of
anything not inconsistent with it, for an estoppel only prohibits
contrary allegations. The proof admitted on the trial below did not
contradict the certificates, but only served to rebut a
presumption, which as matter of law was not conclusive. Its
tendency and effect were to exact from the company the full tax
upon every dollar of its earnings which had not previously paid its
proper assessment and which in any form was subject to taxation,
and to relieve it only to the extent to which otherwise it would
have been subjected to the payment of a second tax upon the same
fund. This result, and the process by which it was reached, seem to
us strictly to conform both to the letter and spirit of the law
governing the subject.
This conclusion disposes of the substance of the case, as it
sustains the rulings of the circuit court upon the main question.
There were other exceptions to the charge, and to the refusal of
the court to give instructions asked for by the plaintiff in error,
but they are either covered by what has already been said, or seem
to us not necessary to be specially mentioned. A point was raised
as to certain items claimed to be included in the sum for which
these certificates were issued, which, in the view we have taken,
becomes immaterial, for, as we have decided that the jury could
only consider the earnings realized in fact during the operation of
the law from 1862 to 1869, it was immaterial what items existing
prior to that period were also included in the aggregate sum for
which the certificates were issued. Some exception also was taken
to some
Page 106 U. S. 118
comment on the part of the circuit judge as to the state of the
evidence, but in our opinion the question which the jury had to
decide was left to them fairly.
Judgment affirmed.