[go: up one dir, main page]

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
344 views1 page

Corporate Tax Evasion Case Analysis

The document discusses a case between Liddell & Co., a domestic corporation, and the Collector of Internal Revenue. Liddell & Co. stopped retailing cars and trucks in 1949 and instead conveyed them to Liddell Motors, Inc. which sold them at a markup. The Collector determined that Liddell Motors was an alter ego of Liddell & Co. and assessed a sales tax deficiency against Liddell & Co. based on Liddell Motors' sales to the public. The court ruled that Liddell Motors was the alter ego of Liddell & Co. as it was wholly owned by Frank Liddell and served no real business purpose.

Uploaded by

Charmila Siplon
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
344 views1 page

Corporate Tax Evasion Case Analysis

The document discusses a case between Liddell & Co., a domestic corporation, and the Collector of Internal Revenue. Liddell & Co. stopped retailing cars and trucks in 1949 and instead conveyed them to Liddell Motors, Inc. which sold them at a markup. The Collector determined that Liddell Motors was an alter ego of Liddell & Co. and assessed a sales tax deficiency against Liddell & Co. based on Liddell Motors' sales to the public. The court ruled that Liddell Motors was the alter ego of Liddell & Co. as it was wholly owned by Frank Liddell and served no real business purpose.

Uploaded by

Charmila Siplon
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

27. LIDDELL & Co., INC.vs.

THE COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE

Corporation Law; When corporate form may be ignored.

Facts: Liddell & Co. is a domestic corporation established in the Philippines, subscribed and paid
by F.Liddel and others. Its purpose was to engage in the business of importing and retailing Old
mobile and Chevrolet passenger cars and GMC and Chevrolet trucks.
Beginning January 1949, Liddell & Co. stopped retailing cars and trucks; it conveyed them
instead to Liddell Motors, Inc. which in turn sold the vehicles to the public with a steep mark-up.
Since then, Liddell & Co. paid sales taxes on the basis of its sales to Liddell Motors, Inc.
considering said sales as its original sales.

Upon review of the transactions between Liddell & Co. and Liddell Motors, Inc. the Collector of
Internal Revenue determined that the latter was but an alter ego of Liddell & Co. Wherefore, he
concluded, that for sales tax purposes, those sales made by Liddell Motors, Inc. to the public
were considered as the original sales of Liddell & Co. Accordingly, the Collector of Internal
Revenue assessed against Liddell & Co. a sales tax deficiency, including
surcharges, in the amount of Pl,317,-029.61.

Issue: whether or not Liddell Motors, Inc. is the alter ego of Liddell & Co., Inc such that there is
sales tax deficiency?

Ruling: Yes.
We are fully convinced that Liddell & Co. is wholly owned by Frank Liddell. As of the time of
its organization, 98% of the capital stock belonged to Frank Liddell. The 20% paid-up
subscription with which the company began its business was paid by him. The subsequent
subscriptions to the capital stock were made by him and paid with his own money.
As opined in the case of Gregory v. Helvering, the legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the
amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid them, by means which the law
permits, cannot be doubted. But, as held in another case, where a corporation is a dummy, is
unreal or a sham and serves no business purpose and is intended only as a blind, the corporate
form may be ignored for the law cannot countenance a form that is bald and a mischievous
fiction.
Consistently with this view, the US Supreme Court held that a taxpayer may gain advantage of
doing business thru a corporation if he pleases, but the revenue officers in proper cases, may
disregard the separate corporate entity where it serves but as a shield for tax evasion and treat the
person who actually may take the benefits of the transactions as the person accordingly
taxable.
Thus, we repeat: to allow a taxpayer to deny tax liability on the ground that the sales were made
through another and distinct corporation when it is proved that the latter is virtually owned by the
former or that they are practically one and the same is to sanction a circumvention
of our tax laws.

You might also like