190 S.W.2d 739 | Tex. App. | 1945
A. B. Frank Company, Incorporated, hereafter designated as the corporation, sued the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, and the State Treasurer, hereafter referred to as the State, to recover certain franchise taxes, interest and penalties, paid by it under protest, for the years 1933 to 1943, aggregating $1031.27. Trial was to the court without a jury and judgment rendered that the corporation take nothing; hence this appeal.
The controlling facts are without dispute. A charter amendment of the corporation in 1929 provided a capital stock of $1,200,000, consisting of 6,000 shares of preferred stock of the par value of $100 each; and 60,000 shares of common stock with a par value of $10 each. The charter also provided for redemption, on dividend paying dates, in whole or in part, of the preferred stock, and prescribed the manner for doing so. And for the purpose of retiring such stock, the charter further provided that on December 1, 1929, and each year thereafter, "so long as any of the preferred stock is outstanding," $12,000 should be placed by the directors in the hands of a named trustee for that purpose. Between 1929 and 1941, and in varying amounts each year, the corporation, under such charter provisions, had redeemed, retired and canceled 1,447 shares of such preferred stock, of the aggregate par value of $144,700. In its reports and franchise tax remittances to the Secretary of State from 1934-1944 *740 for the years 1933-1943, the corporation had deducted from its total authorized capital stock, the par value of the preferred stock so retired, and paid franchise taxes only on the remaining capital stock, plus the other items enumerated in Art. 7084, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. It is agreed that the corporation had not complied with the terms of Art. 1332, R.C.S., which provides the manner in which the capital stock of a corporation may be decreased. Nor had it amended its charter reducing the originally authorized $1,200,000 capital stock.
Pursuant to an opinion of the Attorney General, the Secretary of State demanded that the corporation pay a franchise tax covering said ten-year period, based upon the authorized capital stock of $1,200,000. That is, that for franchise tax purposes, and because the corporation had not complied with Art. 1332, R.C.S., the preferred stock which had been redeemed and retired by the corporation, was still "outstanding capital stock" within the purview and meaning of the tax statute, Art. 7084. Such is the question presented on this appeal.
As originally enacted in 1907 (R.C.S. 1911, Art. 7393) the franchise tax base was the authorized capital stock, plus surplus and undivided profits, under certain limitations therein prescribed. The 1919 amendment did not change such tax base, nor increase the rate, except to limit the computation thereof as against domestic corporations to the amount of business done by them within the State of Texas. Acts 1919, Ch. 60, p. 100. In 1930, Fifth C.S. 41st Leg., Ch. 68, p. 220 and in 1931, Reg.Sess. 42d Leg., Ch. 265, p. 441, the Legislature further amended the franchise tax law so as to include non par value stock, increased the rate and broadened the base on which the tax is levied, to include "outstandingcapital stock, surplus and undivided profits, plus the amount of the outstanding bonds, notes and debentures, other than those maturing in less than a year from date of issue," etc. (Italics ours.) Thus the language of former acts was changed from "authorized capital stock" to "outstanding capital stock" to which was added for tax purposes outstanding bonds, notes and debentures. Appellant urges that by the change from "authorized" to "outstanding" capital stock and the inclusion of other items composing the actual capital structure of the corporation, the Legislature evidenced a clear intent to tax only the actual capital structure being used by the corporation for doing business; and so to remove from the tax base capital stock which had been redeemed from surplus, retired and no longer a part of the corporation's capital structure. It urges that such is the purpose and import of the law; that the stock so redeemed and canceled by it was no longer outstanding and consequently not subject to the tax.
The question thus posed appears to be one of first impression in this state. Appellant relies, in support of its contention, primarily on Borg v. International Silver Co., 2 Cir.,
It may be conceded that shares of its own stock held as treasury stock by the corporation, or which have, as here, been redeemed from surplus and canceled, are not "outstanding" in the sense that they may be voted by the holder thereof, in any matter requiring a vote of the stockholders. Scheirich v. Otis-Hidden Co.,
"A corporation may decrease its capital stock by such amount as its stockholders may decide, by a two-thirds vote of all its outstanding stock, in like manner as is required for an increase. No such decrease shall prejudice the rights of any creditor of such corporation in any claim or cause of action such creditor may have against the company, or any stockholder thereof. Such decrease shall not become effective until full proof is made by affidavit of the directors to the Secretary of State of the financial condition of such corporation, giving therein all its assets and liabilities, with names and postoffice addresses of all creditors and amount due each; and the Secretary of State may require, as a condition precedent to the filing of such certificate of decrease, that the debts of such corporation be paid or reduced."
The general rule seems to be uniform that such a reduction is not effective unless and until the statute authorizing it has been strictly complied with. Shaw v. Lewis,
The only case we have been able to find in support of appellant's contention bearing directly upon the issue here presented is Superior Steel Corporation v. Commonwealth,
On the other hand, in cases involving the issue here presented, the holdings appear to be uniform that in order to claim a reduction of the tax based upon decreased capital, the statutes authorizing and providing the steps necessary to effectuate such reduction, must be strictly complied with. And unless and until they are, either the authorized or outstanding capital for franchise tax purposes is deemed to be that stated in the charter. Goldstein-Finberg Co. v. State Board of Assessors,
Appellant's other contention is that, as evidenced by the forms sent out by the Secretary of State on which corporations make franchise tax reports, the Secretary of State had construed Art. 7084 to mean that redeemed and canceled stock should be deducted from the capital stated in its charter in computing the amount of the franchise tax. These forms did provide a blank space, under deductions, for entering the amount of "preferred stock retired by cancellation." However, the head of the franchise tax division of the Secretary of State's office, though unable to state why the form for making reports contained a request for information as to canceled stock, testified that the departmental construction had consistently been that unless Art. 1332 had been complied with, the full amount of the capital stock, as evidenced by the charter, was used in computing the tax. The trial court so found. The only evidence to the contrary was the above quoted language of the form prepared by the Secretary of State and mailed to corporations for making reports. This, however, is not conclusive evidence of such a construction by the Secretary of State. Such request might as well have been intended by the Secretary of State to elicit such information, as shown by the corporation's books, for the very purpose of checking same against, or comparing it with, the proof of reduction required by Art. 1332, in order to ascertain whether the corporation had complied with that Article of the statute, so as to entitle it to a reduction of its franchise tax. That is, whether such asserted reduction of its capital were authorized.
The rule as to departmental construction of a statute is stated in 39 Tex.Jur., Sec. 126, p. 235. See also Franklin Fire Ins. Co. v. Hall,
For the reasons stated the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.