1. Under Treasury Regulations promulgated by authority of the
Revenue Act of 1921, the net amount of premium received by a
corporation from subscribers to its bonds is income. P.
284 U. S.
557.
2. The repeated reenactment of a statute without substantial
change is evidence of an implied legislative approval of a
construction placed upon it by executive officers.
Id.
3. Where a corporation issued its bonds at a premium, which was
received prior to the adoption of the Sixteenth Amendment, the
Page 284 U. S. 553
amount of the premium is income for the year in which it was
received, and no part thereof may be taxed by a subsequent income
tax act. P.
284 U. S.
557.
4. This conclusion is not affected by the provision of a
Treasury Regulation which directs that the amount of bond premiums
received by a corporation be prorated or amortized over the life of
the bonds.
Id.
5. The words of a statute are to be interpreted in their usual,
ordinary, and everyday meaning, and this rule applies to taxing
acts. P.
284 U. S.
560.
6. Under § 234 of the Revenue Act of 1921, which allows as
a deduction from the gross income of a corporation "all interest .
. . on its indebtedness," the word "interest" in the quoted phrase
means the amount agreed to be paid, which the contract denominates
"interest," and does not mean the so-called "effective rate" of
interest. Pp.
284 U. S.
559-561.
7. The fact that bonds of a corporation were issued at a premium
does not operate to reduce the amount deductible as interest on
indebtedness under the revenue acts. Pp.
284 U. S. 559,
284 U. S. 563.
8. Where the language of a tax statute is ambiguous, the Court
adopts that construction which is most favorable to the taxpayer.
P.
284 U. S.
561.
9. The rules of accounting enforced upon a carrier by the
Interstate Commerce Commission are not binding upon the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, nor may he resort to the rules of
that body, made for other purposes, for the determination of tax
liability under the revenue acts. P.
284 U. S.
562.
50 F.2d 896 reversed.
Certiorari to review a judgment of the circuit court of appeals
reversing a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals. The Board held
erroneous the Commissioner's finding of a deficiency in
petitioner's return for 1921. 18 B.T.A. 267.
Page 284 U. S. 554
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Revenue Act of 1921 defines gross income as including gains,
profits, and income derived by the taxpayer from any source
whatever, and provides that, in computing net income of a
corporation, "all interest paid or accrued within the taxable year
on its indebtedness" is deductible from such gross income. Treasury
regulations promulgated under authority of the statute state that,
if
Page 284 U. S. 555
bonds are issued by a corporation at a premium, the net amount
of such premium is gain or income which should be amortized over
the life of the bonds. [
Footnote
1]
In making return for 1921, the Old Colony Railroad Company
deducted from gross income the full amount paid during the year as
interest to holders of its bonds. These had been issued at various
dates between 1895 and 1904, and the subscribers had taken them at
prices in excess of par. The total of the premiums thus paid the
company was $199,528.08. At the dates of issuance of the bonds, and
until 1914, the company kept its accounts on a cash basis and
credited the sums so received in an account designated "Premium on
Bonds." In the last-named year, the Interstate Commerce Commission
ordered that they should be amortized over the periods of the
respective lives of the bonds. The company complied under protest,
extinguished by appropriate entries the ratable proportion of the
premiums for the years prior to 1914, and thereafter reported to
the Commission as income a yearly ratable proportion of the
remainder of the premiums, but entered the same on its books in the
profit and loss account (a surplus account), and not as income. The
proportion of the premiums attributable to 1921 and reported to the
Commission as income for that year was $6,960.64, but the company
did not in its tax return include this figure in gross income or
deduct it from the amount of interest paid on its bonds. [
Footnote 2] The Commissioner,
Page 284 U. S. 556
in his audit of the return, made no adjustment in the item of
interest paid, but added the sum of $6,960.64 to the company's
gross income for 1921 and found a resulting deficiency in the
amount of tax. Upon a petition for redetermination, the Board of
Tax Appeals held that the Commissioner erred in treating this
amount as taxable income of the year in question. [
Footnote 3]
The Commissioner asked reconsideration, asserting that the mere
form of the calculation by which he arrived at a redetermination of
the tax was immaterial, and that the result was correct since the
year's proportion of amortization of bond premiums was in reality a
deduction from the stipulated interest paid the bondholders. The
Board adhered to its ruling. [
Footnote 4] The circuit court of appeals adopted the
Commissioner's view and reversed the Board. [
Footnote 5] The court distinguished its earlier
decision in
Page 284 U. S. 557
Commissioner v. Old Colony R. Co., supra, note 3 stating that its attention had not
been called to the fact that the profit made in the years prior to
1913 was not being taxed, but was used only to determine the
expense of the payment of interest on the bonds for the year 1921.
We granted certiorari.
The regulations state that the net amount of premium is gain or
income. Necessarily, then, the premium is gain or income of the
year in which it is received. The provisions of the Revenue Acts of
1918, 1921, 1924, and 1926 are the same as respects gross income of
corporations and deductions therefrom. The regulations under the
relevant sections of the Acts of 1918, 1924, and 1926 employ
substantially the same phraseology as that found in those issued
under the 1921 Act. [
Footnote
6] The repeated reenactment of a statute without substantial
change may amount to an implied legislative approval of a
construction placed upon it by executive officers.
National
Lead Co. v. United States, 252 U. S. 140;
United States v. Farrar, 281 U. S. 624;
Poe v. Seaborn, 282 U. S. 101,
282 U. S.
116.
There is no ambiguity in the language of the regulation, which
defines a bond premium as income. As a corollary from this
definition, it follows that the petitioner received the income
represented by the premiums here involved prior to the adoption of
the Sixteenth Amendment, for these premiums could not be income for
any other year than that in which they were received. That income
had become capital prior to the adoption of the amendment, and
could not be reached by a subsequent income tax act. This
conclusion is not affected by the provision of the regulation which
allows the proration or amortization of this item over the life of
the bonds, and extends to the taxpayer the privilege of treating
the premium as income
Page 284 U. S. 558
received in installments instead of in a lump sum in the year of
its receipt.
Nor does the fact that the regulation thus ameliorates the
burden of the taxpayer authorize the use of the grant to convert
income of years prior to the effective date of the Sixteenth
Amendment into income assumed to have been received thereafter. The
amortization requirement may properly be applied to premiums paid
subsequent to March 1, 1913, but cannot operate to contradict the
definition of a premium as gain or income.
The government, however, insists that, notwithstanding the
regulation's designation of a premium paid by the subscriber to
corporate bonds as income, it is not such to the corporation, but
is in the nature of capital loaned which must be returned to the
lender during the life of the bonds. Reference is made to the
practice of bond buyers in determining the amount they will bid. It
is said that a purchaser, in arriving at the price he is willing to
pay for a bond, has regard to the current rate of interest for
money, and, if the bond bears a stipulated rate in excess of the
ruling rate, he will pay a premium. He does this although he knows
that, at maturity, he can only receive the par of the bond, but
considers that he will be repaid the premium by the excess of the
agreed rate of interest over the rate he is content to receive. On
the other hand, where the stipulated interest is less than the
going rate, bond buyers will bid less than the par of the bond by
such amount as is necessary to redress the difference between the
agreed rate of interest and the going rate which the subscriber
demands. The conclusion is that the actual return to one who pays a
premium is less than the nominal interest carried by the bond, and
to one who buys at a discount is greater than such nominal rate.
The argument is that, although the regulations are inaptly phrased
and are susceptible of the construction petitioner places upon
them, their real intent was to adjust the nominal
Page 284 U. S. 559
interest paid on a corporation's indebtedness to the actual
amount it is paying for the use of the money represented by the par
of the bond -- that is, to what accountants have called the
"effective rate" of interest. In this view, the government says
that each time the debtor pays an installment of stipulated
interest, what it in fact does is to pay interest at a lesser rate
on the par of the bond and return a ratable proportion of the
premium, which really constitutes a loan by the investor to the
debtor. Thus, that portion of the installment paid at each interest
date which is a return of the loaned capital represented by the
premium must be deducted from the nominal interest in order to
arrive at the "effective rate" of interest the debtor is really
paying. It is said the regulation is intended to afford a method of
adjusting the taxpayer's income in the light of these facts, and
that it is immaterial whether, as provided, the
pro rata
yearly return of capital loaned in excess of the face of the bond
is added to gross income or deducted from interest paid, for in
either case the result in dollars will be exactly the same.
Doubtless the premium received by the corporation is acquired
capital, rather than income. But, if this be admitted, the
concession does not answer the question whether a premium paid
prior to 1913 is taxable. Obviously therefore it is not enough for
the government's purpose to disregard the regulation which
designates this item as income or gain. The Commissioner must and
does go farther, and contend that the receipt of such a premium
reduces the item of interest paid, and renders the sum nominated as
such in the bond something different from the "interest . . . on
its indebtedness" mentioned in § 234 of the Revenue Act of
1921 as a permissible deduction from gross income.
In other words, the contention is that, by the use of the quoted
phrase, the statute did not intend to allow the deduction of the
amount agreed to be paid, which the contract
Page 284 U. S. 560
denominates "interest," but of a different sum to be ascertained
by a calculation which will allocate the payment between a partial
and ratable return of the premium and "effective" interest on the
par of the security.
Is this the reasonable construction of the language of the act
-- "all interest . . . on its indebtedness"? The rule which should
be applied is established by many decisions. "The legislature must
be presumed to use words in their known and ordinary
signification."
Levy's Lessee v.
M'Cartee, 6 Pet. 102,
31 U. S. 110.
"The popular or received import of words furnishes the general rule
for the interpretation of public laws."
Maillard
v.Lawrence, 16 How. 251,
57 U. S. 261.
And see United States v. Buffalo Gas Co., 172 U.
S. 339,
172 U. S. 341;
United States v. First Nat. Bank, 234 U.
S. 245,
234 U. S. 258;
Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.
S. 470,
242 U. S. 485.
As was said in
Lynch v. Alworth-Stephens Co., 267 U.
S. 364,
267 U. S.
370,
"the plain, obvious and rational meaning of a statute is always
to be preferred to any curious, narrow, hidden sense that nothing
but the exigency of a hard case and the ingenuity and study of an
acute and powerful intellect would discover."
This rule is applied to taxing acts.
De Ganay v.
Lederer, 250 U. S. 376,
250 U. S.
381.
Applying the accepted tests to the language of the statute, we
are of opinion that the construction contended for by the
Commissioner is inadmissible. In common parlance, the bonded
indebtedness of a corporation imports the total face of its
outstanding bonds, the amount which must be paid at their maturity.
The phrase is not generally used to connote par plus an unreturned
proportion of premium.
And, as respects "interest," the usual import of the term is the
amount which one has contracted to pay for the use of borrowed
money. He who pays and he who receives payment of the stipulated
amount conceives that the whole is interest. In the ordinary
affairs of life, no one stops for refined analysis of the nature of
a premium,
Page 284 U. S. 561
or considers that the periodic payment universally called
"interest" is in part something wholly distinct -- that is, a
return of borrowed capital. It has remained for the theory of
accounting to point out this refinement. We cannot believe that
Congress used the word having in mind any concept other than the
usual, ordinary, and everyday meaning of the term, or that it was
acquainted with the accountants' phrase "effective rate" of
interest, and intended that as the measure of the permitted
deduction.
In the present case, as with corporate obligations generally,
the bond has a par value, and each coupon stipulates that, on a
date therein mentioned the company will pay a named sum as interest
on the bond. Until the present contention was put forward, no one
supposed that the taxpayer was not entitled to deduct the entire
amount specified in the coupon and actually paid during the taxable
year as interest. The person who receives this sum certainly
considers it interest, and so, apparently, does the government,
which requires him to return it all as such, and does not permit
him, if he or his predecessor holder paid more than par for the
bond, to treat part of the sum received as a return of capital
loaned, and the remainder as interest received.
In short, we think that, in the common understanding, "interest"
means what is usually called interest by those who pay and those
who receive the amount so denominated in bond and coupon, and that
the words of the statute permit the deduction of that sum, and do
not refer to some esoteric concept derived from subtle and
theoretic analysis.
If there were doubt as to connotation of the term, and another
meaning might be adopted, the fact of its use in a tax statute
would incline the scale to the construction most favorable to the
taxpayer.
Gould v. Gould, 245 U.
S. 151;
United States v.
Merriam, 263 U.S.
Page 284 U. S. 562
179;
Bowers v. Lighterage Co., 273 U.
S. 346;
United States v. Updike, 281 U.
S. 489;
Burnet v. Niagara Falls Brewing Co.,
282 U. S. 648.
A further contention is advanced that, inasmuch as, by the
ruling of the Interstate Commerce Commission, the company was
compelled to designate the annual amount of premium amortization as
income, and under protest did so treat it in reporting to the
Commission, the ruling of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is
in conformity with the method of bookkeeping adopted by the
petitioner, and hence is justified by § 212(b) of the Revenue
Act of 1921, [
Footnote 7] which
provides that the net income of a corporation shall be computed in
accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed in
keeping the books of the taxpayer, and by § 213(a) of the same
act, which authorizes the accrual method of reporting income. This
position is inconsistent with the other arguments advanced. If the
amortized premium is to be deducted from interest paid by the
taxpayer, it is not income. If it is income, then, by hypothesis,
it is income received prior to the date of the Sixteenth Amendment,
and not income which accrues to the taxpayer from year to year.
Moreover, the rules of accounting enforced upon a carrier by the
Interstate Commerce Commission are not binding upon the
Commissioner, nor may he resort to the rules of that body, made for
other purposes, for the determination of tax liability under the
revenue acts.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v.
Commissioner, 52 F.2d 372;
cert. denied, post, p.
676. Compare Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Commissioner, 13
B.T.A. 988, 1027; Fall River Electric Light Co. v. Commissioner, 23
B.T.A. 168.
We conclude that the yearly
pro rata amortization of
bond premiums is not income received in the year to which
Page 284 U. S. 563
it is applicable, and that, so far as the deduction of interest
on indebtedness is concerned, the fact that a premium was paid does
not operate to reduce interest paid on bonded indebtedness within
the meaning of the revenue acts.
The judgment is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Act of November 23, 1921, c. 136, §§ 213, 234, 42
Stat. 227, 237, 254. Treasury Regulations 62, Art. 545.
[
Footnote 2]
By lease dated February 15, 1893, still in force, petitioner
leased all its property to the New York, New Haven & Hartford
Railroad Company; the lessee agreeing to operate and maintain
petitioner's railroad, to assume the payment of the principal of
and interest upon its bonded indebtedness and other obligations,
and to pay a certain additional sum as rental. Although the bonds
in question were issued after the effective date of the lease, they
were the direct obligation of petitioner, and it remained liable
for the payment of interest. Petitioner bases certain arguments
upon the fact that, in the tax year under review, it charged itself
with bond interest received from the lessee and took credit for the
same amount as interest paid to bondholders. These facts are
unimportant in the view we take of the case. We shall treat it as
if the lease were nonexistent, and the bonds had been issued by a
company operating its own property.
[
Footnote 3]
18 B.T.A. 267. In reaching this conclusion, the Board followed
its earlier decision in Old Colony Railroad Co. v. Commissioner, 6
B.T.A. 1025, wherein it had held that, under similar provisions of
the Revenue Act of 1918 and a like treasury regulation, the
premiums were income in the year in which they were received, thus
becoming a part of the company's capital prior to the adoption of
the Sixteenth Amendment, and not taxable.
See Doyle v. Mitchell
Bros. Co., 247 U. S. 179;
Lynch v. Turrish, 247 U. S. 221;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Lowe, 247 U.
S. 330;
Goodrich v. Edwards, 255 U.
S. 527. The Board's holding was affirmed in
Commissioner v. Old Colony R. Co., 26 F.2d 408.
See
also Chicago, R.I. & P. R. Co. v. Commissioner, 47 F.2d
990.
[
Footnote 4]
18 B.T.A. 267.
[
Footnote 5]
50 F.2d 896.
[
Footnote 6]
Regulations 45, Art. 544; Regulations 62, Art. 545; Regulations
69, Art. 545; Regulations 74, Art. 68.
[
Footnote 7]
Note 1 supra.