275 N.Y. 135 | NY | 1937
The appellant, Trinity Securities Company, a foreign stock corporation organized in Delaware, filed a claim against the estate of the decedent Edwin King Scheftel for the sum of $20,000 with interest, which it alleged was the balance due on a subscription for stock of the corporation. An answer was filed which set up as partial defenses, among others, that the appellant is a foreign corporation which did business in this State without qualifying as required by section 210 of the General Corporation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 23) and without paying the license tax required by section
The pertinent portions of section
"§ 181. License tax on foreign corporations. * * * Every foreign corporation * * * doing business in this state, shall pay for the use of the state, a license fee of one-eighth of one per centum for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchises or carrying on its business in such corporate or organized capacity in this state, to be computed upon the basis of the capital stock employed by it within this state, during the first year of carrying on its business in this state; which first payment shall not be less than ten dollars; * * *. The measure of the amount of capital stock employed in this state shall be such a portion of the issued capital stock as the gross assets employed in any business within this state bear to the gross assets wherever employed in business * * *. The amount of capital upon *140 which such license fees shall be paid shall be fixed by the state tax commission, * * * and the state tax commission shall have the same power to issue a warrant for the collection of such license fees, as now exists with regard to domestic corporations. Noaction shall be maintained or recovery had in any of the courtsin this state by such foreign corporation after thirteen monthsfrom the time of beginning such business within the state,without obtaining a receipt for the payment of the license feeupon the capital stock employed by it within this state duringthe first year of carrying on its business in this state." (Italics interpolated.)
Obviously this section imposes a license fee for the privilege of doing business in this State. Since 1895 license fees have been imposed upon certain foreign corporations for the privilege of doing business in this State. These statutes from the first have contained provisions barring recovery or the maintenance of actions by such foreign corporations without obtaining a receipt for the license fee. In 1907 the last sentence of this tax provision read as follows: "No action shall be maintained or recovery had in any of the courts in this state by such foreign corporation without obtaining a receipt for the license fee hereby imposed within thirteen months after beginning such business within the state, or if at the time this section takes effect such a corporation has been engaged in business within this state for more than twelve months, without obtaining such receipt within thirty days after such tax is due." (Laws of 1901, ch. 558; Laws of 1906, ch. 474.) In that year two cases involving this provision were decided by this court. In Wood Selick v.Ball (
Section
No pertinent change has been made in the statute since the decision of International Petroleum Co. v. Mexican SinclairPetroleum Co. (
In any event the contract in the case at bar does not fall within section 218 of the General Corporation Law. *143 That section provides that a foreign corporation doing "business in this state shall not maintain any action in this state upon any contract made by it in this state, unless before the making of such contract it shall have obtained a certificate of authority." This section has no application to contracts made by a foreign corporation before it commences doing business in this State. The subscription agreement became binding upon the decedent at the time the Trinity Company was organized, and the company cannot be said to have been doing business in this State at that time. The so-called opening of an account with a brokerage firm prior to the effective organization of the corporation, into which account no money was paid until after the decedent had subscribed for the stock, and the sale of its own stock by the corporation does not constitute "doing business in this state" within the meaning of that phrase as used in section 218.
The order of the Appellate Division and the decree of the Surrogate's Court so far as appealed from should be reversed and the claim allowed, with costs in all courts.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, HUBBS and LOUGHRAN, JJ., concur; RIPPEY, J., dissents.
Ordered accordingly. *144