The complaint shows that the plaintiff corporation is one organized under the laws of Alabama, and doing business herein. By the specific language of section 12 of the Revenue Act, an annual franchise tax básed upon the amount of paid-up capital stock is exacted of “all corporations organized under the laws of this state.” On the other hand, the franchise tax exacted of “all corporations organized under the laws of any other state, nation or territory, and doing business in this state,” is based upon the “actual amount of capital employed in this state.”
The tax thus exacted of domestic corporations is primarily a license tax for the continued exercise of their corporate franchises. — Southern Ry. Co. v. Greene,
In Delaware Railroad Tax,
In the much cited case of Horn Silver Mining Co. v. New York,
These authorities are, as we are constrained to think, conclusive of the federal questions presented by this appeal, and support the validity of the tax here complained of. Plantiff, however, relies for support upon the cases of Southern Ry. Co. v. Greene,
In W. U. Telegraph Co. v. Kansas, it was held that a state tax of one-tenth of 1 per cent, on the foreign telegraph company’s total capital stock of $100,000,000, nearly all of which was invested in other states, and devoted in large part to interstate commerce, though called a license fee for doing intrastate business, was in fact a tax on property beyond the state, and was an unlawful burden on interstate commerce, and hence violated the federal Constitution in both particulars. From the conclusion stated in this case, also, the Chief Justice and Justices McKenna and Holmes dissented, with whom was in agreement Justice Peckham, who however died prior to the decision. Whatever may be the scope of these decisions with respect to the right of foreign corporations, they do not, we think, involve the principles determinative of the present case.
The case of Galveston, etc., R. R. Co. v. Texas is clearly not conclusive, for there it was held merely that a state tax upon railroad companies “equal to 1 per cent of their gross receipts” is, as to companies doing an interstate business, a burden on interstate commerce, and hence unconstitutional. In this case, again, there was weighty dissent by the Chief Justice and Justices Harlan, White, and McKenna; the dissenting theory being that the tax, though measured by gross receipts, was in fact an occupation tax, and only incidentally affected interstate commerce. On the whole, our survey of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States expository of the principles that restrict state taxation of corporate franchises leads to the conclusion that the Alabama Kevenue Act is free from constitutional ob
Affirmed.
