49 A.D. 108 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This case is distinguishable from People ex rel. The Armstrong Cork Company v. Barker (157 N. Y. 159) in but a single feature.
We think that the same intent must be gathered in the present case from all the facts. For upwards of four years the relator has had a large and steady business in this State. It has now become thoroughly established here. Its warerooms for the sale of manufactured goods run from 122 to 130 Centre street in the city of New York. It has there a general manager and office force. It keeps a bank account in that city, in which it deposits remittances sent from the home office to £>ay the expenses 'of conducting its establishment here. It also has traveling salesmen, who are selling its goods throughout the State. These salesmen are employed and discharged by this general manager, and a considerable percentage of the goods sold by them is delivered from the establishment here. The office employees are also employed and discharged by its general manager. As a rule, the goods sold here are so sold upon a credit of from thirty to sixty days; and there was due to the establishment here, when the assessment was levied, some §80,000 for goods sold by it in this State during the previous three or four months. The relator keeps on an average $50,000 worth of property here “ waiting to be sold and delivered.” Thus it is evident, fo'st, that the relator’s
It is contended that compliance with the General Corporation Law in applying for and procuring the certificate referred to did not create an assessable condition under the Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 908); that the “ business ” spoken of in the one act has a different meaning from that referred to in the other; and consequently that, if the relator was not doing business in this State within the meaning of section 7 of the Tax Law prior to its application for and procurement of the certificate, its statutory declaration did not alter its actual condition. We need not discuss this contention for the reason that the assessable condition to which wd have referred is in entire harmony with the declaration. The latter certainly negatives whatever possible doubt there might otherwise have been as to the permanency and continuity of the business conducted here.
In the Sherwin-Williams case the foreign corporation had a salesroom here to which it sent manufactured goods for sale. The proceeds, however, were at once remitted to the home office. No other business was done here save to sell the goods and remit the proceeds. Upon these facts we held that the relator was within the principle of the Parker Mills case ; that its business was not a continuous or permanent one; and that its property was sent here transiently and only to a market for sale. The facts in the case at bar, while in some respects like those of the Parker Mills and Sherwin- Williams cases, vary materially, as we have seen, in several essential and controlling particulars. Upon all the facts here pre
The order appealed from should be modified as indicated in this-opinion, and the assessment reduced accordingly, without costs of this appeal.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, Patterson and McLaughlin, J.L, concurred.
Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed,, without costs of appeal.