145 P. 506 | Cal. | 1914
Petitioner is a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Illinois, for the purpose of manufacturing and selling and generally dealing in china, glassware, pottery, restaurant supplies, and other merchandise. It manufactures none of the enumerated articles in the state of California. However, as it avers, in its petition, it has for a long time been engaged in interstate commerce in these goods and wares between the state of Illinois, the state of California, and other states of the United States. It maintains a branch office and place of business in the city and county of San Francisco, and sells its goods, wares, and merchandise in the city and county of San Francisco and in other states of the United States, and ships its goods, wares, and merchandise from the state of Illinois into the state of California *3 and into other states, and from the state of California into other states. It has tendered to the secretary of state for filing a certified copy of its articles of incorporation with other appropriate papers required by the laws of the state, and the secretary of state has refused to file the same excepting upon prepayment of the fee fixed by section 416 of the Political Code (now 409, Pol. Code), and the fee prescribed by section 2 of the act relating to revenue and taxation providing for a license-tax on corporations. (Stats. 1905, p. 493.) Petitioner, refusing to pay the fees, made application to the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco for mandate against the secretary of state directing him to file these papers without payment of the fee exacted by the terms of subdivision 4 of section 409 above cited and the corporation license-tax of 1905.
The secretary of state answered, setting forth that the petitioner, besides the conduct of interstate commerce in which it is admittedly engaged, transacts "a large volume of intrastate business within the state of California; that said intrastate business forms no part of and is neither inextricably nor necessarily connected with the interstate business of said company, and respondent further alleges that its said interstate business is nowise dependent upon the aforesaid intrastate business of said company; that the authorized capital stock of said company amounts to one million dollars." A general demurrer to this answer was interposed and sustained, and the trial court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, wherein it declared in accordance with the allegations of the petition and awarded the mandate prayed for. The secretary of state has appealed from this judgment.
Upon this appeal we are asked to distinguish this case from that of Mulford Co. v. Curry,
In Mulford Co. v. Curry this court expressed the reluctance it felt over the necessity of applying the principles of the WesternUnion Telegraph Co. v. Kansas and the other like cases to the fiscal and revenue laws of the state. It did so under the compulsion of its oath to uphold the constitution and laws of the United States as expounded by its highest judicial tribunal. If we were in error in our understanding of the law, if the supreme court of the United States has latterly thrown new light upon its own exposition of the law, or if it has receded from any of the views which it has expressed in the earlier cases, it is for this court to remodel its own decisions in swift conformity therewith.
It becomes necessary, therefore, even at the peril of prolixity, to set forth the understanding which this court had, and Which in Mulford Co. v. Curry it expressed, of the legal principles enunciated and the legal controversies decided in that series of cases beginning with the Western Union Telegraph Co. v.Kansas. By the law of Kansas every foreign corporation "seeking to do business in this state" was required to file a copy of its charter or of its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state, and, when so filing, to "pay to the state treasurer of Kansas, for the benefit of the permanent school fund, a charter fee of one-tenth of one per cent of its authorized capital upon the first $100,000 of its capital stock or any part thereof, and upon the next $400,000 or any part thereof one-twentieth of one per cent; and for each million or major part thereof over and above the sum of $500,000, $200." The Western Union Telegraph Company, a New York corporation, was conducting business in the state of Kansas. That business was both interstate, involving the reception within the state of messages from points outside of the state, and, conversely, the sending of messages from points within the state to points outside the state, and intrastate or domestic, consisting of the sending and reception of messages between different points wholly within the state. It refused to make the filing and pay the fee prescribed by the Kansas statute, and the state brought its action in one of its own courts against the company, seeking to oust and restrain it from doing anydomestic business within the state, such being one of the penalties by the laws of Kansas *5 prescribed. The state court rendered its decree of ouster and restraint as prayed for. The cause was transferred under writ of error to the supreme court of the United States, and there decided by a sharply divided court upon an elaborate opinion handed down by Mr. Justice Harlan. The Western Union Telegraph Company was capitalized for one hundred million dollars. The "charter fee" (such is the description of the fee used by the state of Kansas) in the case of the Western Union Telegraph Company amounted to twenty thousand one hundred dollars.
Amongst the contentions of the state of Kansas in support of the validity of the judgment of its court were that it had the absolute right to impose the terms and conditions upon which a foreign corporation might do a domestic business within its territorial limits; that the fiscal law under review imposed as such condition the payment of a charter fee based on or admeasured by the par value of the capital stock of corporations; that this was not a tax upon the property of the corporation either within or without the state, but was "a local police regulation on local business only"; that the fact that the statute might cause inconvenience to interstate business did not render it unconstitutional; and that the failure to comply with the law did not prevent the foreign corporation from continuing to the fullest extent in engaging in interstate commerce. The opposed contentions of plaintiff in error are set forth by the supreme court in the opening paragraph of the opinion which it rendered in that case. They are as follows:
"The contentions of the company, to which particular attention will be directed, are, in substance, that the requirement that it pay, for the benefit of the permanent school fund of the state,a given per cent of its authorized capital, wherever and however employed, as a condition of its right to continue to do domestic business in Kansas, is a regulation which, by its necessary operation, directly burdens or embarrasses interstate commerce, and, therefore, is illegal under the commerce clause of the constitution; further, that such a requirement involves the taxation not only of the company's interstate business everywhere, but equally the property employed by it beyond the limits of the state, a thing which could not be done consistently with the due process of law enjoined by the fourteenth amendment." *6
And, here, at the outset, it may be well to state that each and every one of these contentions is to the fullest extent sustained by the decision. It is to be remembered that the supreme court itself declares that these contentions are the ones to which particular attention will be directed. What the supreme court decides is, that without regard to the name by which the license, or fee, or excise, or impost, or occupation, or privilege tax may be called, when it takes the form that it took in Kansas, of an exacted payment of a given per cent of the authorized capital stock, this exaction accomplishes two distinct illegal and unconstitutional results. First, it is in legal effect a tax upon all of the property represented by the capital stock of the corporation, therefore a tax upon such parts of the property as were engaged in interstate commerce, and therefore an invalid tax under the commerce clause of the constitution of the United States; and, second, it is an attempt by the state to tax property beyond its territorial jurisdiction, and is therefore confiscatory in nature and violative of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution. That there can be no possibility of misunderstanding the meaning of the supreme court in this particular we shall employ a few quotations from its decisions. But before doing so we will quote one sentence from the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes in this particular case. Bearing in mind that the majority of the supreme court declared that the Kansas law imposed a tax, we note Justice Holmes in dissenting saying: "I assume that a state cannot tax a corporation on commerce carried on by it with another state, or on property outside the jurisdiction of the taxing state; and I assume further that for that reason a tax on or measured by the value of the total stock of a corporation like the Western Union Telegraph Company, is void." (Mr. Justice Holmes' argument proceeds upon the view that Kansas had not imposed a tax at all. "She simply has said to the company that if it wants to do local business it must pay a certain sum of money. . . . The whole matter is left in the Western Union's hands.") The prevailing opinion declared that there was no decision "holding that a state may by any device or in any way, whether by a license-tax in the form of a fee, or otherwise, burden the interstate business of a corporation of another state. . . . If the statute reasonably interpreted, either directly or by its necessary operation, burdens interstate commerce, it must be adjudged to *7 be invalid whatever may have been the purpose for which it was enacted, and although the company may do both an interstate and local business. This court has repeatedly adjudged that in all such matters the judiciary will not regard mere form, but will look through the form to the substance of things." Then says the court:
"Looking, then, at the natural and reasonable effect of the statute, disregarding mere forms of expression, it is clear that the making of the payment by the Telegraph Company, as a charter fee, of a given per cent of its authorized capital, representing, as that capital clearly does, all of its business and property, both within and outside of the state, a condition of its right to do local business in Kansas, is, in its essence, not simply a tax for the privilege of doing local business in the state, but a burden and tax on the company's interstate business and on its property located or used outside of the state. The express words of the statute leave no doubt as to what is the basis on which the fee, specified in the state statute, rests. That fee, plainly, is not based on such of the company's capital stock as is represented in its local business and property in Kansas. The requirement is a given per cent of the company's authorized capital, that is, all its capital wherever or however employed, whether in the United States or in foreign countries, and whatever may be the extent of its lines in Kansas as compared with its lines outside of that state. What part of the fee exacted is to be attributed to the company's domestic business in Kansas and what part to interstate business, the state has not chosen to ascertain and declare in the statute. It strikes at the company's entire business wherever conducted, and its property wherever located, and, in terms, makes it a condition of the telegraph company's right to transact purely local business in Kansas that it shall contribute for the benefit of the state school fund a given per cent of its whole authorized capital, representing all of its property and all its business and interests everywhere. . . . So, in the case now before us, the exaction as a condition of the privilege of continuing to do or doing local business in Kansas, that the Telegraph Company shall pay a given per cent of its authorized capital stock, is, for every practical purpose, a tax both on the company's local business in Kansas, and on its interstate business or on the privilege of doing interstate business; for, the statute, by its necessary operation, will accomplish precisely *8 the result that would have been accomplished had it been made, inexpress words, a condition of doing local business that the Telegraph Company should submit to taxation upon both its interstate and intrastate business and upon its interests and property everywhere, as represented by its capital stock. The exaction made by the Kansas statute is as much a tax on the interstate business of the company and on its property outside of the state as a fee or tax on the sale of an article imported only for sale or as a tax on the occupation of an importer would be a tax on the property imported."
In the course of its argument and in demonstration that its reasoning was not meant to apply exclusively to that class of corporations known as common carriers, it uses this illustration: "If a domestic corporation engaged in the business of soliciting orders for goods manufactured, sold and delivered in a state, should, in addition, solicit orders for goods manufactured in and to be brought from another state for delivery, could the former state make it a condition of the right to engage in local business within its limits that the corporation pay a given per cent of all fees or commissions received by it in its business, interstate and domestic? There can be but one answer to this question, — namely, that such a condition would operate as a direct burden on interstate commerce, and therefore would be unconstitutional and void. Consistently with the constitution no court could, by any form of decree, recognize or give effect to or enforce such a condition." And in announcing the familiar doctrine that Kansas might exact a license-tax of the corporation "strictly on account of local business done by it in that state," it couples this statement with the declaration: "But it is altogether a different thing for Kansas to deny it the privilege of doing such local business, beneficial to the public, except on condition that it shall first pay to the state a given per cent of all its capital stock, representing all of its property, wherever situated, and all its business in and outside of the state." And the opinion concludes as follows: "The right of the Telegraph Company to continue the transaction of local business in Kansas could not be made to depend upon its submission to a condition prescribed by that state, which was hostile both to the letter and spirit of the constitution. The company was not bound, under any circumstances, to surrender its constitutional exemption from state taxation, direct or indirect, in respect of its interstate business and its *9 property outside of the state, any more than it would have been bound to surrender any other right secured by the National Constitution."
The next case of Pullman Co. v. Kansas,
"The Charter Board, we have seen, gave it permission to engage in intrastate business in Kansas on condition that it should pay to the state treasurer for the benefit of the permanent schoolfund of the state, as a charter fee, the sum of $14,800, which is the prescribed statutory per cent of the company's authorized capital, representing all of its property and interests everywhere, in and out of the state, and all its business, both interstate and intrastate. It does not appear how much of the single `fee' demanded by the state is to be referred to the interstate business of the company nor how much to its property outside of the state, nor what part has reference to its intrastate business or to its property within the state." . . . "We hold (2) That the requirement that the company, as a condition of its right to do intrastate business in Kansas, should, in the form of a fee, pay to the state a specified per cent of its authorized capital, was a violation of the constitution of the United States, in that such a single fee, based as it was on all the property, interests and business of the company, within and out of the state, was, in effect, a tax both on the interstate business of that company, and on its property outside of Kansas, and compelled the company, in order that it might do local business in Kansas in connection with its interstate business, to waive its constitutional exemption from state taxation on its interstate business and on its property outside of the state and contribute from its capital to the support of the public schools of Kansas."
Mr. Justice White filed a concurring opinion in that case, in which, while assenting to the views of his associates, he carried the doctrine further than they, declaring, with unimpeachable logic: "It is not by me doubted that as a practical question the arbitrary prohibition against doing a local business imposed on one engaged in and having the right to engage in interstate commerce is to burden that business." Epigrammatically, *10 he presents the controversy in the following sentences: "The only right here challenged is the authority of a state to impose an unconstitutional tax and validate the tax by making the payment of the unlawful tax a condition of the right to do a local business. And this upon the false assumption that absolute power to exclude exists; that is, to impose an unlawful tax and sustain it by another unlawful assumption of power, a process of reasoning which, to my mind, must rest on the proposition that in deciding questions of constitutional power it is to be held that two wrongs make a right." Mr. Justice Holmes again dissented, reiterating in amplified form the views expressed in his earlier dissent, and concluding: "I think that the tax in question, forI am perfectly willing to call it a tax, was lawful under all the decisions of this court until last week." (The italics are ours.)
The next case was Ludwig v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
Again the question arose in International Textbook Co. v. Pigg,
And, finally, was decided Bucks Stove Range Co. v. Vickers,
We have now considered all of the decisions of the supreme court of the United States (saving the Massachusetts cases hereinafter to be reviewed) which can have any bearing upon the questions before us. It becomes pertinent here to take up for brief analysis the case of Mulford Co. v. Curry,
The Mulford Company, like the petitioner in the case at bar, was a commercial corporation organized to do, and doing, an interstate business and an intrastate business within the state *13 of California. Like the present petitioner, it objected to the payment of the fees exacted by our laws, and after tendering certain nominal filing fees sought mandate against the secretary of state to compel him to receive and file certain documents, the filing of which was called for by our laws. That part of our laws to which the Mulford Company in especial objected was section 416 of the Political Code (now 409). This law, it will be noted (as did the Kansas statute), imposes a single fee upon corporations which it is made mandatory upon the secretary of state to collect for filing their articles of incorporation, the other sections referred to requiring that such articles be filed. In addition to this law, requiring foreign corporations to pay this fee before they can engage in business in the state of California at all, we have upon our books another law designated in its title as "A license-tax upon corporations," requiring them to pay an annual license-tax for the right to continue in business. (Stats. 1905, p. 493.) It was the first license law which this court had under especial, consideration in the case of Mulford Co. v. Curry. This may be noted from the declaration in the case where the annual license-fee law is set out, that it is set out as "having further relation to the matter." It was not important to the decision in the Mulford Company case to elaborate our views upon these acts separately. The latter one was referred to: 1. Because it formed a part of the same fiscal system; 2. Because it, too, based its license fee charges upon the authorized capital stock of corporations, and, 3. Because the practical effect in the case of every foreign corporation seeking to engage in business in the state of California was to require it to pay two fees. To illustrate, if the Western Union Telegraph Company had undertaken to engage in business in California, an analysis and computation will show that it would have been required to pay a fee of ten thousand dollars under sections 409 of the Civil Code and 416 of the Political Code, and a fee of two hundred and fifty dollars under the corporation License Tax Act, or a total of ten thousand two hundred and fifty dollars in California, as compared with twenty thousand one hundred dollars in Kansas.
Turning to the judgment in Mulford Co. v. Curry, it will be found that the only judgment rendered is a declaration that the requirement of section 408 of the Civil Code, that the petitioner file its articles of incorporation, is a reasonable requirement, *14 but that the further requirement that as a condition of such filing the petitioner pay the fee exacted by section 409 of the Civil Code and 416 of the Political Code is illegal. Neither by the terms of the judgment nor by any express language in the opinion itself was the annual license-tax declared to be unconstitutional under the authority of the federal cases. But since the supreme court of the United States had declared that such fees, when based upon the total capital stock, were invalid exactions for the reasons given, the fear was felt and expressed that even the annual corporation license-tax so founded upon the total capital stock might fall under the same ban, and this court sought to advise the legislature as to what it conceived the supreme court of the United States had declared to be the limit of the law-making power in the matter.
What, then, did the supreme court of the United States decide in its cases?
It decided: (a) That it would review and consider the language of each state fiscal act and determine for itself, regardless of the determination of the states' legislative or judicial departments, what in fact the law did mean and what in fact it did accomplish, quoting with approval from Galveston, Harrisburgetc. Co. v. Texas,
These, then, were some of the conclusions which we drew from the decisions of the supreme court and which, with more or less completeness, we sought to declare in Mulford Co. v. Curry. One part of the judgment of the supreme court we conceived to be apodictic and that was that all the capital stock of such a corporation could not be subjected to any tax without doing violence to the constitution of the United States, and it was under this conviction that we sought in Mulford Co. v. Curry to enlighten our legislative department as to the danger which would attach to all laws basing license fees of a foreign corporation on this method of taxation.
There arose in Massachusetts two cases of similar import,Baltic Mining Co. v. Commonwealth,
These cases (Baltic Mining Co. and S.S. White Dental Mfg. Co.
v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
The supreme court of the United States adopts without reservation the determination of the supreme court of Massachusetts that this fee is an excise tax as distinguished from a property tax. It may at once be granted that it is that form of an excise tax which is frequently denominated a privilege or occupation tax, but it by no means follows that being an excise tax this is conclusive that it is not levied upon property. Indeed, many forms of excise tax are distinctly and admittedly levied upon property, and every definition of excise includes this kind of tax. An excise is "an inland impost levied upon articles of manufacture or sale and also upon licenses to pursue certain trades or dealing in certain commodities." (Patton
v. Brady,
We have said here, as well as in Mulford Co. v. Curry, that we sought to arrive at, and thought we had arrived at, the fundamental and governing principle of the decisions, which was that to tax the total capital stock of a corporation for the indicated purposes compelled the corporation paying the tax to submit to two unconstitutional burdens, and that while in dollars and cents the same charge might be imposed upon the corporation, this particular form of tax could not be permitted. It is apparent from the last decision of the supreme court that in some forms it is permitted, and only the supreme court of the United States can say what are the permitted forms. We have reached the point where, if it be said that the state occupation or privilege charge be an excise tax (and every one of them of necessity must be excise taxes) then it is not a property tax. And even if it be in terms a percentage tax *25 upon the capital stock of a corporation, if it be said that this is not a tax on the capital stock, but that the capital stock andper centum are taken as constituting merely a convenient measuring rod for fixing the tax, then the property is not taxed, and all constitutional objections are obviated.
Since these questions greatly affect the revenues as well as the rights of the states, since the determination of each one of them is to rest upon its facts, and since, in the event of a decision adverse to a state by its own courts, the state, because of a most unfortunate hiatus in the law, is deprived of a right of a review of the question by the supreme court of the United States, we are moved in the present condition of the decisions to hold and we do hold, that as to both of the license fees in question their payment is exacted as a privilege or occupation tax exclusively upon the right to do a domestic business within the state of California; that these taxes are excise taxes and not property taxes, and that the tax is not on, nor based on, the capital stock of the corporation, but is merely admeasured by that capital stock; that in every case, and so in this case, it is practicable (for what it may be worth) to segregate the strictly domestic business of a corporation from its interstate business; that the case of Mulford Co. v. Curry should no longer be regarded as an authority; that the respondent in this case should pay the fees prescribed by our law; that the general demurrer sustained to defendant and appellant's answer in the trial court should not have been sustained; that the judgment rendered in favor of respondent in the trial court should be reversed and the relief accorded it denied. And in conclusion we may add that if again we are mistaken, it is comforting to know that the doors of the supreme court of the United States are open for the correction of our error.
The judgment appealed from is therefore reversed, with directions to the trial court to proceed in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Lorigan, J., Sloss, J., Angellotti, J., and Sullivan, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. *26