46 N.Y.S. 570 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This is a proceeding to review the determination of the Comptroller in assessing a corporate, franchise tax .against the relator for the year ending November. 1, .1895, at $290.10 .on the sum of $193,400, which he held was the value of its. property employed in this State.
Section 11 of chapter 542, Laws of 1880, as added thereto by chapter 501, Laws of 1885, provides as follows: “ The amount of capital
The original report and the statement and affidavit on the part of the relator presented to the Comptroller on the rehearing, set forth that all the property, real and personal, employed by it in this State or elsewhere during the year in question amounted in value to the sum of $305,445.09, and that during said period its debts and liabilities averaged the sum of $189,343, leaving the net assets of the company $116,102.09, of which assets $18,102 was the value of the manufacturing property of the corporation at Bridgeport, Connecticut, which was employed in that State and not in ReW York, deducting which from the above-mentioned $116,902.09 leaves a balance of $98,000.09. Of the said assets also $30,700 was composed of merchandise imported and in original unbroken packages; accounts arising from the sale of original, unbroken packages imported by the company and a bank balance which arose from such sales. The relator, urged that said sum of $30,700 should be deducted from the said balance of $98,000.09, leaving the sum on which it should be assessed $67,300.09.
I am not prepared to. say that the Comptroller, in computing the franchise tax against relator, was compelled to exclude that portion of its assets invested in merchandise imported by it and remaining in the original, unbroken packages, or accounts of money arising from the sales thereof. The tax authorized by chapter 542, Laws of 1880, and the several acts amendatory and supplemental thereto,
Although Wiebusch was the president of the relator and its largest stockholder, I am unable to see On what ground the Comptroller could disregard his .statement and affidavit. Ho facts are stated - or shown in the papers authorizing such action on the part of the Comptroller.
Such being the case, it was shown on the proceeding for a rehearing that the capital stock employed by the relator in this State, after deducting the debts and liabilities,, was $98,000.09.
It will not be doubted that in estimating the amount of capital stock employed in the State by a corporation, under the provisions of section 11, chapter 542, Laws of 1880, as added thereto by chapter 501, Laws of 1885, the debts and liabilities of a corporation must be taken into account. ■ The ■ actual amount employed" is the net amount. “ In determining the actual capital of a corporation the purpose of general taxation, the true value of its corporate .assets, less the debts and obligations,, and not -the market value
The same rule must apply to an assessment by the Comptroller nnder the act of 1880. The amount of the capital stock employed in this State by a corporation, under the provisions of the act in question, must be deemed , the actual value of such property, that is,, the gross value, deducting the .amount of its debts and liabilities! (See People ex rel. Seth Thomas Clock Co. v. Wemple, 133 N. Y. 323 ; People ex rel. Singer Mfg. Co. v. Wemple, 150 id. 46, 51.)
I conclude that the Comptroller should have assessed the franchise tax against the relator for the year in question on the sum of $98,000.09 (with perhaps the value of the good will, whatever it was, added) instead of $193,400; and hence that his determination should be reversed,, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Determination of Comptroller reversed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.