77 N.Y.S. 398 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The relator is a domestic corporation and has its principal office in the town of Bethany, Genesee county, N. Y. It has a capital stock of $300,000, and for the year ending October 31, 1899, paid twenty-three per cent dividends upon its said stock. During
The Comptroller did not impose a tax on the relator under section 184 of the Tax Law. That section expressly states that the gross earnings on which the tax therein provided is to be based “ shall not include earnings derived from business of an interstate character.” Section 182 of the Tax Law provides: “ Every corporation * * * organized * * * by or pursuant to law in this State shall pay to the State Treasurer annually an annual tax to be computed upon the basis of the amount of its capital stock employed within this State * * The words “ capital stock,” as used in that part of section 182 quoted, refer to the capital or property of the corporation, and not to the “ share stock.” In the case of a domestic corporation the purpose is to tax that intangible property belonging to it which is frequently of great value, and rests wholly in its right to exist and carry on its business (People ex rel.
The only question for consideration in this case, therefore, is whether the fact that the vessels were entered at the port of Buffalo and occasionally touched at ports within this State, and that about two per cent of the mileage while engaged in such transportation business was within the boundaries of the State of New York, make such vessels wholly “ employed within this State,” within the meaning of said section 182. An independent trip by either of said vessels between 'Cleveland and Duluth, or between other ports of the Great Lakes outside of the State of New York, would' make such vessels to the extent of the time so employed wholly and continuously without the State. The vessels were employed in a series of independent trips, based upon independent contracts of employment. Each employment was either for transportation wholly without the State or partly without the State, and such part or proportion is easily ascertainable. The record presents a case entirely different from one where vessels occasionally depart from the State' as a mere incident, to the main business within the State.
The determination of the Comptroller should be reversed and the matter remitted to him for readjustment of the tax.
All concurred, except Smith, J., not sitting.
Determination of the Comptroller reversed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements, and matter remitted to him for readjustment of the tax.