Opinion
Nos. 31618 and 31619
Decided March 30, 1949.
Taxation — Intangible personal property — Unproductive shares of corporate stock — Appeal from valuation and assessment by Tax Commissioner — Section 5611, General Code — Board of Tax Appeals to consider evidence anew and fix valuation — Appeal to Supreme Court — Only question presented whether decision of board unlawful or unreasonable — Decision of board may be reversed, vacated or modified, when — Section 5611-2, General Code.
1. In an appeal from an assessment based on an alleged erroneous valuation of intangible personal property by the Tax Commissioner, the Board of Tax Appeals is required to consider the entire evidence anew and arrive at its own valuation based on the evidence before it.
2. Where there was no dispute in the evidence submitted and no controversy as to the rule of law applicable in the valuation of shares of corporate stock by the Board of Tax Appeals, the only question presented in an appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court is whether the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is unreasonable or unlawful.
3. Broad investigational powers are vested in the Board of Tax Appeals by Section 5611, General Code. Where, as a result of the board's consideration of all the evidence before it, it affirms an assessment by the Tax Commissioner and an appeal is taken to the Supreme Court from such affirmance, the court may, under Section 5611-2, General Code, reverse, vacate or modify the decision of the board only when the court is of the opinion that such decision is unreasonable or unlawful.
APPEALS from the Board of Tax Appeals.
In case No. 31618 the appellants are Morton L. Clark, Bernice M. Clark, Donald L. Clark and James L. Clark, all residents of the city of Lima, Ohio. In case No. 31619 the appellant is R.R. Trubey, a resident of the city of Fremont, Ohio. The appellee in each of these cases is C. Emory Glander, Tax Commissioner of the state of Ohio. The cases were heard together and decided in one journal entry by the Board of Tax Appeals and were likewise heard and submitted together in this court.
The appellants, the Clarks, filed a joint intangible personal property return for the year 1946, which return listed, as intangible personal property, 227,485 shares of the common stock of Artkraft Manufacturing Corporation, Lima, Ohio, hereinafter called Artkraft. No dividends having been declared on these shares during the previous year, they were listed as unproductive investments, at a value of $0.49 per share, or a total valuation of $111,467.65, and tax was paid thereon at the rate of $.002 as provided by law.
The Tax Commissioner issued his amended preliminary assessment certificate in which he increased the valuation of these shares to $2.50 per share, a total valuation of $568,712, and assessed the tax accordingly. An application for review and redetermination was duly filed, and upon a hearing the Tax Commissioner reduced the valuation, theretofore made, to $1.75 per share and issued a final assessment certificate, valuing these shares at a total of $398,099.
Thereafter, the taxpayers appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals, which affirmed the final assessment made by the Tax Commissioner.
The case is before this court on appeal by the taxpayers from the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals.
In case No. 31619 the record shows that the taxpayer, R.R. Trubey, filed his return of intangible personal property for the year 1945, disclosing that he was the owner of 155,625 shares of the common stock of the Clyde Porcelain Steel Corporation, Clyde, Ohio, hereinafter called Clyde, upon which no dividends were paid in the year 1944, and which shares he returned as an unproductive investment, with a valuation of $0.10 per share, a total value of $15,562.50.
Thereafter, an amended preliminary assessment certificate which raised the value of these shares to $2.125 per share, or $330,704, was issued. Upon an application for review and redetermination, the Tax Commissioner determined the value to be $1.10 per share, or a total of $171,188, and issued his final assessment certificate. An appeal was thereafter perfected to the Board of Tax Appeals from that assessment, which body affirmed the order of the Tax Commissioner.
Trubey also duly filed his return for the year 1946, disclosing that he was then the owner of 188,400 shares of common stock of Artkraft, which shares he listed as a nonproductive investment, with a value of $0.49 per share, a total valuation of $92,316.
This return shows that as of tax-listing day he was also the owner of 127,625 shares of Clyde, which shares he listed as a nonproductive investment, having a value of $0.82 per share, a total valuation of $104,652.50.
The Tax Commissioner issued an amended preliminary assessment certificate in which he changed the value ascribed to the shares of Artkraft from $0.49 to $2.50 per share, as he had done in the amended preliminary assessment certificate issued in the Clark case. The Tax Commissioner also in this amended preliminary assessment certificate increased the value of the common shares of Clyde, returned by the taxpayer, from $0.82 to $6.62 per share and entered a total assessment for Clyde shares in the sum of $844,877, and for Artkraft in the sum of $471,000.
An application for review and redetermination of the amended preliminary assessment was filed with the Tax Commissioner, who thereafter upon hearing reduced the valuation of the Clyde shares of $6.62 per share, made in the preliminary assessment, to $2.50 per share; reduced the valuation assigned to the Artkraft shares from $2.50 per share to $1.75 per share; and thereafter issued his final assessment certificate in which he assigned a total valuation to taxpayer's hares in Clyde of $319,062 and, to his shares in Artkraft, $329,700.
From this final assessment, Trubey perfected his appeal to the Board of Tax Appeals, which affirmed the action of the Tax Commissioner as shown by his final assessment certificate issued for the year 1946.
Trubey likewise perfected his appeal to this court from the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals affirming the assessments made for the years 1945 and 1946.
Messrs. Light Siferd, for appellants.
Mr. Hugh S. Jenkins and Mr. Herbert S. Duffy, attorneys general, Mr. Daronne R. Tate and Mr. W.H. Annat, for appellee.
Was the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals, approving the final determinations of the Tax Commissioner as to the true value of the shares in question, unreasonable or unlawful?
The taxpayers in each appeal offered evidence before the Board of Tax Appeals, which they claim proved that the true value of the common shares of Clyde, having a par value of $0.10 per share, was as of 1945 but $0.38 per share, and as of 1946 but $0.58, and that the true value of the common shares of Artkraft, as of 1946, which had also a par value of $0.10 per share, was $0.39 per share.
Testimony was offered which disclosed that the book value of Artkraft common was $0.39 per share on December 31, 1945, and the earnings of Artkraft were less than $0.01 per share; that the book value of Clyde common as of December 31, 1944, was $0.37, and as of December 31, 1945, before the renegotiation of contracts, $0.82, and after renegotiation, $0.58; and that the earnings of the corporation for the year 1944 amounted to $0.058 per share, and for the year 1945, before renegotiation, $0.102 per share.
Balance sheets and profit-and-loss statements for Clyde, for the year ending December 31, 1945 (both before and after renegotiation), and for Artkraft, for the year ending December 31, 1945, were admitted in evidence. A similar statement for Clyde, for the year ending December 31, 1944, was filed in this case, but the record does not disclose clearly that such statement was admitted in evidence. These statements substantiate the claims made as to the book value as of December 31, 1944, and December 31, 1945, respectively; and as of the latter date the statement of each corporation discloses substantial earned surplus exceeding the total common stock issued and outstanding.
The evidence shows that the shares in these corporations are closely held; that as of the dates in question, in Artkraft, four individuals held about 65 per cent of the shares and only ten to fifteen per cent of the total issue was owned by the public; and that, in the case of Clyde, 87 1/2 per cent belonged to individuals holding large blocks of shares, who had control, and the general public owned approximately 12 1/2 per cent.
The record shows that in July 1944 Clyde offered 100,000 shares in the market at $0.75 per share; that Clyde common had once reached a high of $12, and this stock was not listed on the exchanges; that in October 1945, 259,000 shares of Artkraft sold at $0.28 per share; and that at another time a block of 70,000 shares sold at the price of $1.50 per share.
The Tax Commissioner, in arriving at his valuations, considered, but did not adopt, recorded bid-and-asked prices of these shares as of December 31, 1945 and 1946. These quotations do not disclose regular sales of this stock and were offered without evidence showing that such quotations were generally accepted by the public as accurate or showing other qualifications thereof as proper evidence.
The taxpayers urge this evidence was incompetent and, therefore, their evidence being uncontradicted, the action of the Board of Tax Appeals in affirming the orders of the Tax Commissioner was erroneous.
In an appeal from an assessment based on an alleged erroneous valuation of intangible personal property, the Board of Tax Appeals is required to consider the entire evidence anew and arrive at its own valuation based on the evidence before it.
Section 5611, General Code, provides in part as follows:
"Upon the filing of such notice of appeal the Tax Commissioner shall certify to the Board of Tax Appeals a transcript of the record of such proceedings before him together with all evidence, documentary or otherwise, considered by him in connection therewith. * * * The Board of Tax Appeals may order the appeal to be heard upon the record and the evidence certified to it by the Tax Commissioner, but upon application of any interested party shall order the hearing of additional evidence; and it may make, or cause to be made, such investigation with respect to the appeal as it may deem proper."
Section 5611-1, General Code, provides in part as follows:
"The decisions of the Board of Tax Appeals may affirm, reverse, vacate or modify the tax assessments, valuations, determinations, findings, computations or orders complained of in the appeals or applications determined by it and its decisions shall become final and conclusive for the current year, unless reversed, vacated, or modified as in Section 5611-2 of the General Code of Ohio provided."
Broad investigational powers are vested in the Board of Tax Appeals by Section 5611, General Code. Where, as a result of the board's consideration of all the evidence before it, it affirms an assessment by the Tax Commissioner and an appeal is taken to this court from such affirmance, the court is governed by the provisions of Section 5611-2, General Code. That section provides:
"If upon hearing and consideration of such record and evidence the Supreme Court is of the opinion that the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals appealed from is reasonable and lawful it shall affirm the same, but if the Supreme Court is of the opinion that such decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is unreasonable or unlawful, it shall reverse and vacate same or it may modify same and enter final judgment in accordance with such modification."
Concededly, the proper rule of valuation was adopted by the Board of Tax Appeals and is stated in its entry as follows:
"Under our statutes and constitutional provision it is considered that true value in money' is not equivalent to market or book value. To repeat, it contemplates accuracy and is antagonistic to all that deviates therefrom. Market and book value are not fixed criterions, but valuable elements to be considered in arriving at 'true value.' Many things such as earnings, past and present, future dividend-earning power, future prospects, value of good will, management, financial soundness, closeness of ownership, quantities held, salaries paid, business policies, costs, obsolescence, tax burdens and interest charges, corporation reports, market reports of which we will hereinafter have more to say, and a host of other matters establish true value."
There is no dispute in the evidence submitted and no controversy as to the rule of law applicable in valuing these shares. The only question presented to this court is whether the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is unreasonable or unlawful. The evidence of appellants, alone, as shown by the foregoing statement of facts, amply supported the finding of the Board of Tax Appeals that the values fixed by the Tax Commissioner were not unreasonable or unlawful.
The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.
Decision affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., HART, ZIMMERMAN, STEWART, TURNER and TAFT, JJ., concur.