169 Ky. 824 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
On July 2nd, 1913, the Louisville Gas Company and the Kentucky Heating Company, which were two corporations organized under the laws of Kentucky prior to the adoption of the present constitution, and the Louisville Lighting Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this state since the adoption of the present constitution, merged or consolidated and created the appellant, Louisville Gas & Electric Company, which is a corporation possesing the power to sue and be sued, to contract and be contracted with. On the day of its organization the directors of the three corporations, by whose consolidation it was- created, signed, acknowledged and delivered an agreement in writing, wherein the terms and conditions of the consolidation were set out, the mode of carrying it into effect and such other stipulations as were necessary to be contained therein, as provided by law, as well as the manner of converting shares of the old' corporations into shares of the appellant. The articles of agreement of consolidation were acknowledged and lodged for record in the office of the clerk of the Jefferson county court, in which county the chief office of appellant was situated, and on July 2nd, 1913, a duly certified copy
Three questions presented for determination upon this appeal are:
First: Was the money paid by appellant as an organization tax upon that part of the capital stock of the appellant corporation, which was composed of the stock of the Louisville Gas Company and the Kentucky Heating Company, “when no such taxes were- in fact due?”
Second: If paid under the circumstances alleged, is appellant entitled to require the Auditor to draw his warrant for it upon the Treasurer ?
Third: Is the proceeding a suit against the State, which can not be instituted nor maintained without the consent of the State?
Section 4225, Kentucky Statutes, which imposed the corporation tax, is not retroactive in its operation, and does not impose the organization tax upon any corporation, except such as are organized after that statute went into effect, or such corporations, although organized before the statute went into effect, as so changed their scope, rights and powers in such a substantial way as amounts to a radical or material change from its original plans and purposes, as to in fact create a new corporation. Com. v. Licking Valley Bldg. Association, 118 Ky. 791; Com. v. Southern Pacific Co., 164 Ky. 818; Bruner v. Louisville Packing Co., 144 Ky. 471; Ohio Valley Co. v. Bruner, 148 Ky. 358; Crecelius v. Carrollton S. & L. Association, 167 Ky. 817. An old corporation, by its acceptance of the present constitution, does not thereby render itself liable for the organization tax. Crecelius v. Carrollton S. & L. Association, supra. Section 4225, supra, provides, that if a corporation created before its enactment,
“Provided, that no consolidated company formed under this chapter or the laws of this State shall be required to pay any organization tax, except that, if in the consolidation, the capital stock of the consolidated company be increased, or be thereafter increased to an amount exceeding the aggregate capital stock of the constituent companies at the time of the consolidation, then in that event the consolidated company shall not have or exercise any corporate powérs until it shall have paid into the state treasury one-tenth of one per centum upon the amount of said increase, and upon payment shall have filed a statement thereof with the Secretary of State. * * *”
The above provision evidently refers to the consolidation of corporations, who have their homes in the state of Kentucky, as the remainder of the section quoted from bears upon the consolidation of a home corporation with one organized under the laws of another state. The Louisville Gas Company and the Kentucky Heating Company, before the consolidation, were not subject to the organization tax, and the statute controlling the consolidation of corporations organized under the laws of the State provides that the corporation created by their consolidation shall not be required to pay an organization tax, except to. the extent that the capital of the new corporation shall be in excess of the aggregate of the capital stock of the constituent corporations, and it shall be taxed upon the excess alone. A tax is never collectible except where the legislative authority has imposed it. This court, in the case of Southern Pacific Co. v. Com., 164 Ky. 825, with reference to sections 555 and 556, Kentucky Statutes, used language as follows:
“The absence of a purpose to levy such a tax upon old corporations is evidenced by sections 555 and 556, which permit the consolidation into a single corporation of two or more corporations organized under this chapter, or the laws of this or any other state. ’ ’ Then quoting the*829 portion of the section above quoted, the court said: “In that event an organization tax must be paid upon the excess or increase. There is nowhere an intimation of' an organization tax on the stock of a constituent Kentucky corporation which has not theretofore paid the tax. It is expressly provided, however, that if one of the constituents was organized under the laws of another state where no organization tax was required or paid, or where less tax is exacted than in Kentucky, then the organization tax shall be paid on that part of the stock of the consolidated corporation.”
Hence, we conclude that the money paid-by appellant as organization taxes upon the amount of capital stock of the constituent corporations, which were organized before the enactment of section 4225, supra, was paid when no taxes were really due. The organization tax was not required nor paid upon that part of the capital stock of appellant, which consisted of the stock of the Louisville Lighting Company, as it had once paid the organization tax, and hence the tax upon that portion of the stock is not in issue, in this suit.
Section 162, of Kentucky Statutes, is as follows:
“When it shall appear to the Auditor that money has been paid into the treasury for taxes when no taxes were in fact due, he shall issue his warrant on the treasury for such money so improperly paid, in behalf of the person who paid the same. Nothing herein contained shall authorize the issuing of any such warrant in favor of any person who may have made payment of the revenue tax due on any tract of land, unless it is manifest that the whole of the tax due the Commonwealth on such land has been paid, independent of the mistaken payment, and ought to be reimbursed. ’ ’
Section 163, of Kentucky Statutes, is as follows:
“He shall not draw his warrant for any money improperly paid for taxes, unless application be made in each-case within two years from the time when such payments were made.”
These statutes became a part of the law of this State in the year 1854. They evidence a continued legislative policy from that time until now. Construing these statutes, it has been held that the Auditor is not an assessing officer, and one claiming that his property has been erroneously assessed for taxation and valued too high, or some property included in the assessment which was
“It is a statute conferring special authority upon the Auditor, and it must be strictly followed, and a party claiming the benefit of its provisions is required to make •the application in the manner and at the time required by the statute. As we have said, the Auditor should issue the warrant to refund the excessive tax paid for the years 1897 and 1898, as the application was made at the proper time.”
That suit was to require the Auditor to draw his warrant in favor of the Bank of Commerce for the difference between a tax rate of seventy-five cents upon the one hundred dollars of taxable property and forty-two and one-half cents. The difference having been paid when it was not due, as under the law then existing, the bank was only required to pay at the rate of forty-two and one-half cents. In the case at bar, the appellant had organized a corporation by consolidation of three existing corporations ; its articles had been lodged for record in the office of the county court clerk and, also, in the office of the Secretary of State. Under the law, it could not do any valid act until the organization tax was paid. Under section 556, supra, it is specially provided that it could not have nor exercise any corporate power until it had paid into the state treasury one-tenth of one per centum upon the amount of the increase of the authorized capital stock above the aggregate capital stock of the constituent corporations, and have filed a statement of such payment in the office of the Secretary of State. It was denied the power to make such payment or to file such statement unless it should pay, in addition to the tax upon the increase, the tax upon the capital stock of the two constituent corporations, the Louisville Gas Company and Kentucky Heating Company, which was not due or owing. Under protest it did so. This can not, in this case, be deemed a voluntary payment. ,
The action is not a suit against the State, as was held in German Security Bank v. Coulter, and Louisville
Under the allegations of the petition, the demurrer should not have been sustained, but overruled, and the judgment is reversed for. proceedings consistent with this opinion.