237 A.D. 700 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1933
Lead Opinion
The Appellate Term has modified a judgment of the Municipal Court in- plaintiff’s favor, by strildng out the money award to plaintiff and by dismissing the complaint on the merits.
Plaintiff sued to recover the sum of $425 on a promissory note made by defendant. Admitting execution of the note, defendant set up as a separate defense that the note, which is a renewal of a note which had been given to plaintiff, was delivered in part pay
Section 270 of the Tax Law of the State of New York provides, inter alia, as follows:
“ § 270. Amount, of tax. There is hereby imposed and shall immediately accrue and be collected a tax, as herein provided, on all sales, or agreements to sell, or memoranda of sales and all deliveries or transfers of shares or certificates of stock, or certificates of rights to stock. * * * It shall be the duty of the person or persons making or effectuating the sale or transfer to procure, affix and cancel the stamps and' pay the tax provided by this article.”
It has been said that the tax which this section imposes upon all completed transfers of stock and other corporate certificates is “ in the nature of an excise tax.” (United States Radiator Corp. v. State of New York, 208 N. Y. 144, 148.) This section was interpreted in Travis v. American Cities Co. (192 App. Div. 16, 23; affd., 233 N. Y. 510) as “ designed to tax actual sales and transfers of stock.” It contemplates the physical act of delivery of the certificate. If this were an executory contract, the statute would not apply. (Phelps-Stokes Estates v. Nixon, 222 N. Y. 93, 100.) The transaction involved in this suit was admittedly an executed sale, transfer and delivery of a stock certificate and, therefore, taxable under this statute. The note sued on had for its consideration the actual sale of corporate stock, and it was conceded at trial that no stamp was affixed upon the stock or upon any memorandum of the sale or transfer thereof. The explanation offered by plaintiff for her failure to affix the transfer tax stamps was that when the sale was consummated, her husband and agent offered to defendant, who is a lawyer and was secretary of the corporation, shares of which were being sold, the sum of ten cents, the precise amount of the tax due, and that defendant replied, “ Never mind, I will put the stamp on myself.” Plaintiff’s version of this circumstance was accepted as true by the trial court, for it rendered judgment in her favor and, since her complaint has been dismissed, that fact must be deemed established.
Equitable considerations would ordinarily estop a defendant from taking advantage of his failure to keep his promise to affix the stamps whereby he misled the vendor to his own profit. But no
“ § 278. Effect of failure to pay tax. No transfer of certificates taxable under this article made after June first, nineteen hundred and five, on which a tax is imposed by this article, and which tax is not paid at the time of such transfer, shall be made the basis of any action or legal proceedings, nor shall proof thereof be offered or received in evidence in any court in this State.”
Failure to pay this transfer tax is matter for affirmative defense (Bean v. Flint, 204 N. Y. 153,164), and defendant having sufficiently pleaded it, is entitled to prevail. Even though there be no intent to violate the law, where the seller through ignorance of the law or mere inadvertence omits to pay the tax and comply with the statute, such failure precludes the right to a recovery in court, for proof of the transfer may not then be received in evidence under our statute. (Sheridan v. Tucker, 145 App. Div. 145.)
“ The object of all these tax provisions is to get money for the State” (Luitwieler v. Luitwieler P. E. Co., 231 N. Y. 494, 498), and for the better enforcement of the statute it is clearly commanded that the tax be paid and the stamps affixed and canceled at the time of the transfer. In this way only is the State adequately protected. The seller’s duty was to pay the tax; not only to procure and affix the stamps, but to cancel them as well. Even if it be that plaintiff acted entirely in good faith in the transaction and was misled by defendant, nevertheless to sanction recovery would be to deny effect to the scheme and spirit of the taxing statute.
The determination of the Appellate Term so far as appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Finch, P. J., Martin and Townley, JJ., concur; Merrell, J., dissents and votes for reversal.
Dissenting Opinion
This action is brought by plaintiff to recover upon a complaint is in the usual form. A copy of the note is set forth, and the execution and delivery thereof by defendant to plaintiff for value is alleged, with the usual allegations of presentment and
The facts leading up to the execution and delivery of the note in suit are as follows: The H. I. Cooper Realty Corporation is a domestic corporation. The defendant was and is its secretary. The defendant is and for over twenty-nine years has been a practicing attorney at law and had known plaintiff and her husband for many years. In August, 1931, the defendant agreed to purchase of plaintiff five shares of the stock of said corporation, which plaintiff then owned, and agreed to pay plaintiff therefor the sum of $2,000. The sale was consummated at the law office of the defendant, plaintiff being there represented by her husband as her agent, and also accompanied by her attorney. Plaintiff indorsed the certificate for the five shares of stock and the same was delivered to defendant, who thereupon paid plaintiff therefor $500 in cash and executed and delivered to plaintiff three promissory notes, each for $500, payable, respectively, on the 20th days of September, October and November, 1931. Prior to the maturity of the first of said notes the defendant paid plaintiff thereon the sum of $75. The said note maturing September 20, 1931, was then surrendered by plaintiff, the defendant then executing and delivering to plaintiff the note in suit for the balance of $425, which, by its terms, became due on September 20, 1931. The present action is brought upon defendant’s default in paying said note.
I think there was no merit in either of the defenses alleged in the answer of the defendant, and that, upon the proven facts, the judgment of the Municipal Court should be sustained.
The defendant’s denial that value was given for the note in suit, of itself, raised no issue. Consideration for the note was presumed. The note was negotiable. By section 50 of the Negotiable Instruments Law it is provided that “ Every negotiable instrument is deemed prima facie to have been issued for a valuable consideration.” It was unnecessary, therefore, for plaintiff, as a part of her
Nor do I think the failure to attach the stamp to the certificate of transfer prevented a recovery by plaintiff on the promissory note in suit. The pertinent provisions of the Tax Law which the defendant seeks to invoke to relieve him from payment of the note in suit are as follows: Section 270 of the Tax Law provides as follows:
*705 “ § 270. Amount of tax. There is hereby imposed and shall immediately accrue and be collected a tax, as herein provided, on all sales, or agreements to sell, or memoranda of sales and all deliveries or transfers of shares or certificates of stock, or certificates of rights to stock, * * * on each hundred dollars of face value or fraction thereof, two cents, * * *. Where the transaction is effected by the delivery or transfer of a certificate, the stamp shall be placed upon the surrendered certificate and canceled; * *
Section 272 of the Tax Law makes failure to affix the stamp required by section 270 a misdemeanor and imposes a penalty for violation of the provisions of that section. Section 278 of the Tax Law provides as follows:
“ § 278. Effect of failure to pay tax. No transfer of certificates taxable under this article made after June first, nineteen hundred and five, on which a tax is imposed by this article, and which tax is not paid at the time of such transfer shall be made the basis of any action or legal proceedings, nor shall proof thereof be offered or received in evidence in any court in this State.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
I do not think the transfer of the certificate of stock involved in the case at bar is the basis for this action. Certainly the plaintiff was not required to offer in evidence the -unstamped transfer of the stock certificate in question. This action was upon a promissory note given to secure the unpaid balance of a prior promissory note. Notwithstanding the failure to affix to the certificate transferred the stamp required by law, good and valid title to the stock passed from plaintiff to defendant. (Bean v. Flint, 204 N. Y. 154; Ambrosius v. Ambrosius, 167 App. Div. 244.) In Bean v. Flint (supra) Judge Hiscock, writing for the Court of Appeals, said (at p. 157): “ It certainly does not provide in terms that a person must pay this tax before he can make or enforce a contract for the transfer of stock. It does not create a new form of contract which involves prior payment of the tax as a necessary requisite to validity, for contracts in transfer of stock were made and recognized before the statute was passed. It does not inject such prepayment as an essential element into the execution of old contracts and declare invalid those not embracing it. It does not prescribe such prior payment as necessary to qualify one to make or enforce such a contract.” And, again, referring to the Tax Law, Judge Hiscock (at p. 161) further stated: “ It does not say that the purported transfer shall be void and utterly ineffective, for clearly it is not. But it provides that this failure shall be a bar to an attempt to
“ But as has been held in Bean v. Flint, 204 N. Y. 153, 97 N. E. 490, the sale was not void. The New York statute (section 278 of the Tax Law) forbids legal proceedings in the State courts based on the transfer of stock for which the notes were given and forbids receipt of proof thereof in evidence, but the notes showing the debt are not thereby invalidated and can be proved in bankruptcy.”
I am, further, of the opinion that the defendant is estopped from invoking section 278 of the Tax Law as a defense to plaintiff’s cause of action upon the note in suit. The defendant, having violated his
In New York Rubber Co. v. Rothery (107 N. Y. 310) the Court of Appeals stated: “ To constitute it, the person sought to be estopped must do some act or make some admission with an intention of influencing the conduct of another, or that he had reason to believe would influence his conduct, and which act or admission is
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the Appellate Term erred in striking out the money damages awarded plaintiff by the Municipal Court, and in dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint upon the merits.
The determination of the Appellate Term, in so far as appealed from, should be reversed, and the money judgment in favor of plaintiff awarded by the Municipal Court should be affirmed, with costs to the appellant in this court and in the Appellate Term.
Determination so far as appealed from affirmed, with costs and disbursements.