184 Mass. 460 | Mass. | 1904
A domestic manufacturing corporation, having its home office and sole place of business in the city of Worcester, had purchased certain shares of its own stock as an investment, and they were held by a resident of that city as trustee for the sole benefit of the corporation. The only question is whether under R. L. c. 14, § 61, there should be credited and paid to the city the tax upon these shares.
The petitioner contends that such a corporation, having its home office and sole place of business in the city, is a person who resides in that city within the meaning of those words as used respectively in R. L. c. 14, § 61, and c. 12, § 23, cl. 5, and that consequently the tax upon these shares should be credited to the city.
Without doubt the language of the statute is broad enough to cover a corporation, but in view of the history of the legislation upon the subject of the taxation of the personal property of corporations and the decisions of this court as to the interpretation of the statutes, we are of opinion that the position of the petitioner is unsound.
In the early tax acts no mention is made of corporate stock by name. Bank shares are first mentioned in 1793, (St. 1793, c. 9, A,) “ shares or property held in any incorporate bridges or turnpike roads ” in 1801, (St. 1800, c. 77, § 2,) and “ shares in any other incorporated company possessing taxable- property ” in 1805, (St. 1804, c. 144, § 2.) Shares in insurance companies do not seem to have been mentioned specifically until the act of 1822, (St. 1821, c. 107, § 2.) In all cases the shares were to be assessed “according to the just value thereof” to the individual shareholders in the places where they respectively resided. There was no express provision for assessing the property of a corporation in any other way. An idea seems to have prevailed,
Finally-it occurred to the Salem Iron Factory, a domestic corporation, to test the validity of the tax assessed upon it. For several years between 1796 and 1810, the assessors of Danvers had assessed a tax upon this corporation for its real estate, “ consisting of the factory and the land under and adjoining the same,” situated in that town ; and also for the “ personal estate, used in and about the factory.” The corporation paid the taxes, and brought an action to recover back. It was argued for the plaintiff that the property of the corporation could not be lawfully taxed twice, and, since the stockholders were taxed for the- full value of the shares, the whole tax assessed upon the corporation, as well that part upon the real as that part upon the personal estate, was invalid. The defendant, not denying that if the tax was valid there was double taxation, maintained that this was a matter to be corrected by the Legislature and not by the courts. The court said there was no doubt that the “ property itself was a subject of taxation”, and that it depended “on the construction of the several tax acts, whether the taxes should be assessed on the plaintiffs as the legal owners of the specific lands and goods, or on the several stockholders and members of the corporation, as the persons beneficially interested in the property ”; and then stated that “ the latter course seems best to comport with the general scope and object of the successive statutes for the valuation and taxation of estates within the Commonwealth.” The shares being taxable to the individual shareholders in the towns where they respectively reside, the court proceeds to say that “ it appears unjust, and contrary to the spirit of our laws, that the corporation should also be taxed for the same property ”, and hence the tax upon personal property was illegal.
We have reviewed this case at some length because it shows the ground upon which a distinction was made for purposes of taxation between the real and personal estate of a corporation, and because it also shows that this distinction was not expressly stated in the statute, but is the result of a judicial interpretation of its general provisions. It is to be noted in passing, that the distinction is based in no respect upon any supposed difficulty in ascertaining for purposes of taxation of personal estate the residence of a corporation. Although this decision was made in 1813, no change material to this question appears in the language of the statutes until St. 1832, c. 158. By this statute it was provided that “ all the machinery employed in any branch of manufactory, and belonging to any corporation ... or persons of this or any other State ” should be assessed where such machinery was situated, and that in assessing the shares of a manufacturing corporation there should “first be deducted from the value thereof the value of the machinery and real estate belonging to such corporation otherwise specifically taxed.” Here first appears in the statutes the idea of subtracting for purposes of assessment the value of the machinery and real estate of a corporation from the value of the shares held by the stockholders. These provisions were re-enacted in Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 10, cl. 2, and Gen. Sts. c. 11, § 12, cl. 2; and they continued to be the law until the change hereinafter named.
In a word, the general provisions of law for the taxation of personal property were not applicable to corporations. Except as to machinery, which is specially mentioned, the personal property was reached through the shareholders. See in addition to the cases above named, Dunnell Manuf. Co. v. Pawtucket, 7 Gray, 277; Worcester Ins. Co. v. Worcester, 7 Cush. 600; Worcester County Institution for Savings v. Worcester, 10 Cush. 128, 129; Murray v. Berkshire Ins. Co. 104 Mass. 586, 589. And this interpretation, so far at least as respects domestic corporations, was adopted not upon the ground that it might be difficult to ascertain the residence of a corporation for purposes of taxation (although this consideration is sometimes alluded to), but plainly and simply upon the ground that the opposite interpretation would result in a form of double taxation.
Upon the facts appearing in this case the "shares in question became by the purchase in substance the personal property of the corporation, and if the corporation had taken the certificate in its own name it is plain that under the former system of taxation the general provisions of the statute that personal property
Inasmuch, however, as the certificate was not held by the corporation but by a trustee for its benefit, it may be urged by the petitioner that under the former system the stock would have been assessable to such trustee under Gen. Sts. c. 11, § 12, cl. 5 (now R. L. c. 12, § 23, cl. 5). But the same reasons which lead to the conclusion that the first and third clauses of that section are not applicable to corporations like this, lead also to a similar conclusion as to the fifth clause. As in the first and third clauses the word “ owners ” does not include corporations, so for the same reasons in the fifth the word “ person ” does not include them. Hence, even if it be assumed in favor of the petitioner that the shares in question had not been substantially withdrawn but were still outstanding, it seems plain that under the former system of taxation no tax could have been legally assessed on account of this stock, either upon the corporation under the first clause or upon the trustee under the fifth.
But for obvious reasons this method of reaching for taxation the property of corporations, especially that part represented by shares in the hands of non-residents, was defective ; and by Sts. 1864, c. 208, and 1865, c. 283, a change was made so far as respects corporations like the one in question. An excise tax was imposed upon the corporate franchise, and the stockholders were relieved from taxation upon their shares, Commonwealth v. Hamilton Manuf. Co. 12 Allen, 298, Manufacturers’ Ins. Co. v. Loud, 99 Mass. 146, and this system has ever since been continued. Pub. Sts. c. 13, §§ 38-40. R. L. c. 14, § 61. This excise tax is based upon a certain percentage of the actual cash value of the stock less the value of the real estate and machinery subject to local taxation, (R. L. c. 12, § 23, cl. 2,) and it is paid by the corporation to the State. In R. L. c. 14, § 61, is set forth the system for the distribution of this tax among the cities and towns. The clause upon which the petitioner relies is as follows: “ If stock is held by . . . trustees, the proportion of tax corresponding to the amount of stock so held shall be credited and paid to the cities and towns where the stock would have been
Petition dismissed.