196 A.D. 213 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The proceedings were instituted to review an assessment of $500,000 on the capital stock of the relator for the year 1919, imposed as of October 1, 1918, pursuant to article 1, section 12, of the Tax Law. The relator claims that the assessment is illegal and void, on the ground that it is a manufacturing corporation within the meaning of article 9-A of the Tax Law, and, therefore, exémpt from local taxation under section 219-j of that article. The return denies that the assessment was erroneous, illegal and void. The learned Special Term justice held that the relator was not a manufacturing corporation and did not come within article 9-A of the Tax Law, under the authority of People ex rel. Post & McCord, Inc., v. Cantor (108 Misc. Rep. 632; affd., by this court without opinion, 194 App. Div. 961). Both sides agree that if the relator is a, manufacturing corporation within the meaning of article 9-A, then under section 219-j of article 9-A of the Tax Law it was exempt from local assessment for personal taxes for the year 1919, and that the assessment should be canceled.
The evidence is that in the years 1917 and 1918 the relator was principally engaged in the business of constructing concrete-buildings, including the installation of elevators and sprinklers; and the doing of the glazing, roofing, plumbing and electrical work through subcontractors; that the company did not. maintain any shops where any articles used in its business; were manufactured, except a small woodworking -mill in Brooklyn, where it principally manufactured fire doors, which, however," it is conceded was but an insignificant feature of
Appellant relies upon Friday v. Hall & Kaul Company (216 U. S. 449, 455), in which the court was called upon to decide whether a corporation engaged in work identical to that of the relator was a manufacturing corporation within the meaning of the United States Bankruptcy Act, which provided inter alia that “ any corporation engaged principally in manufacturing * * * may be adjudged an involuntary bankrupt,” etc. (30 U. S. Stat. at Large, 547, § 4, subd. b, as amd. by 32 id. 797, § 3.)
Article 1, section 12, of the Tax Law provides for the local taxation of a corporation based upon the assessed value of its capital stock. Article 9-A was added to the Tax Law by the Laws of 1917, chapter 726, and provides for a tax on the income of manufacturing and mercantile corporations. It was amended by the Laws of 1918, chapter 417, section 1, by striking out subdivisions 3 and 4 of section 208 of the Tax Law, as added by the act of 1917, which read as follows:]
“ 3. The term ‘ manufacturing corporation ’ means a corporation principally engaged in the business of manufacturing tangible personal property for itself or for others;
“ 4. The term ' mercantile corporation ’ means a corporation principally engaged in the business of buying or selling tangible personal property for itself or for others.”
The effect of the amendment which excised subdivisions 3 and 4 was to leave but two definitions under section 208 of article 9-A, the first of which defined the term “ corporation ” as used in that article, and the second, the term “ tangible personal property.” Why the Legislature amended section 208 by eliminating subdivisions 3 and 4 does not appear.
But for this amendment, we would have contented ourselves with affirming the order appealed from upon the authority of the Post & McCord Case (supra).
A study of article 9-A reveals that the elimination of the definitions óf the terms “ manufacturing corporation ” and “ mercantile corporation ” should not change the conclusions which we reached under the former act. That the tax was intended to be limited to corporations engaged in the manu
“ 4. The average monthly value for the fiscal or calendar year of bills and accounts receivable for' (a) personal property sold by the corporation from merchandise manufactured by it within this State; (b) personal property sold by the corporation from merchandise owned by it and located within the State at the time of the acceptance of the order, but not manufactured by it within this State; and (c) services performed, based on all orders received at offices maintained by the corporation within this State, excluding bills and accounts receivable arising from sales made from a stock of merchandise or other property located at a place of business maintained by the reporting corporation within this State. Also the average total monthly value for the fiscal or calendar year of bills and accounts receivable for (a) personal property sold by the corporation from merchandise manufactured by it, within and without the State; (b) personal property sold by the corporation from merchandise owned by it at the time of the acceptance of the order but not manufactured by it; and (c) services performed, based on orders received at offices maintained by the corporation, excluding bills and accounts receivable on orders filled from a stock of merchandise or other property maintained by the reporting company. In case of a corporation organized under the laws of another country a statement shall be made showing its entire net income.”
We have thus the clearest evidence of the intention of the Legislature that only such manufacturing corporations as are engaged in the manufacture of personal property as differentiated from real estate, and those corporations which are engaged in the buying and selling of such manufactured goods were intended to be included under the act. The personal property idea underlying this Tax Law is also apparent from the exemption clause, section 219-j (as amd. by Laws of 1918, chap. 271),
It seems to us that the relator, so far as- the Tax Law is concerned, is to be regarded simply as a corporation engaged in the construction of buildings. Such a corporation does not come within the provisions of article 9-A. (People v. New York Floating Dry Dock Company, 92 N. Y. 487.) That was an action to recover taxes imposed under chapter 542 of the Laws of 1880, which contained a section (§ 3) exempting manufacturing corporations from its provisions. A corporation was incorporated for the purpose of constructing dry or wet docks or other conveniences and structures for building, raising, repairing or coppering vessels or steamers of every description. The court held that the corporation was not a manufacturing corporation, and in the course of its opinion stated: “ The term ' manufacturing corporation/ cannot, we think, be considered as comprehending the business of the defendant, if the words employed are interpreted according to the common understanding of such language. While the act [of incorporation] provides for the constructing, using and providing one or more dry or wet docks or other conveniences and structures for the purposes named, its main object evidently is building, raising, repairing and coppering vessels. * * * The constructing, using and providing of one or more docks, * * * is no more a manufacturing within the meaning of that word than would be the building of warehouses and elevators for the carrying on of the business of warehousemen or the erection of buildings or residences.” It seems to us that the relator is engaged in the business of erecting buildings and is not taxable under article 9-A of the Tax Law (as amd. supra). The law applicable here has been since modified by providing for a “ franchise tax on business corporations.” (See Tax Law, art. 9-A, as since amd. by Laws of 1919, chaps. 138, 628, and Laws of 1920, chaps. 113, 640.)
The final order confirming the assessment should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Since amd. by 36 U. S. Stat. at Large, 839, § 4.—[Rep.