45 Cal. App. 2d 474 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1941
The defendant company appeals from a judgment in favor of the State determining that defendant as surety for the Bailey Brewing Company is liable for taxes assessed by the State Board of Equalization under the California Beverage Tax Act (Stats, of 1933, chap. 178, p. 625), in connection with the sale of beer manufactured by the Bailey Brewing Company and sold by the receiver of that company pursuant to a court order of the bankruptcy court.
The facts giving rise to the present proceeding were stipulated to by the parties. It appears that prior to April 1, 1935, the Bailey Brewing Company, a California corporation, was duly licensed to manufacture and sell beer. Pursuant to the provisions of section 2 of the California Beverage Tax Act, supra, the company had secured from defendant and delivered to the state board a $1,000 surety bond conditioned as set forth in the section. While the license and bond were in full force and effect, on April 1, 1935, a petition in involuntary bankruptcy was filed against the Bailey Brewing Company, and on the same day one Hubert F. Langham was appointed receiver for the company. At the time that Lang-ham was appointed the brewing company had on hand over 1200 barrels of beer manufactured by it. On April 4, 1935, Langham petitioned the bankruptcy court for authority to sell the beer. Among other things, the petition recited that the sale of the beer would be subject to the sixty-two cents per barrel state tax, and that the receiver did not intend to operate the brewery. It was also recited that the tax would be paid from the purchase price received. This petition was granted and the beer sold. Neither the receiver, the Bailey Brewing Company, nor the defendant surety has paid the state tax on this sale, nor was the tax paid in the bankruptcy proceeding. , After the sale of the beer, a trustee in bankruptcy was appointed and the Bailey Brewing Company has since been discharged as a bankrupt.
On this state of facts the trial court concluded that the tax, amounting to $641.67, plus interest, was properly assessed against the Bailey Brewing Company, and that the defendant surety company is liable therefore on its bond.
It is appellant’s theory that the license of the Bailey Brewing Company to manufacture and sell beer, or the right to exercise that license, terminated with the appointment of the receiver, with the result that the beer was not sold under the license, so that the tax was not due either from the brewing company or its surety. It is the basis of appellant’s position that the receiver in making the sale was not the agent or representative of the Bailey Brewing Company, but either the agent or representative for the creditors, or acting independently of the corporation and the creditors. This position is unsound. The beer had already been manufactured by the licensee under the license. The receiver acted for and on behalf of the corporation in making the sale, as well as on behalf of the creditors. The receiver acted in place of the board of directors. The powers of the board of directors were immediately suspended upon the appointment of the receiver. The receiver, by virtue of his appointment,
In City of Montpelier v. National Surety Co., 97 Vt. 111 [122 Atl. 484, 33 A. L. R. 489], a bond was given to secure performance of construction work. The company went into receivership, and the receiver continued the work. An action was brought against the receiver for violation of the contract in a portion of the work performed by him. Against objections very similar to the ones urged by appellant in the present ease, the court held that the bond applied and that the surety was liable. The same rule was applied in United States v. Bailey, 178 Fed. 302, where the surety had executed a bond to indemnify the United States for damage to public property growing out of the operation of the railroad. The corporate principal went into receivership, and the bond was violated by negligent injury to public property after the receiver had taken possession. The surety was held liable.
None of the cases cited by appellant compels or even suggests a contrary result. Rumford v. Boston Grocery Co., 111 Me. 116 [88 Atl. 394], involved a situation where the defendant secured a license to keep a pool hall and filed a bond conditioned that gambling would not take place therein, and that the pool hall would not remain open after certain hours. Thereafter, the defendant rented the premises and equipment to a third person, who violated the provisions of the permit. It was held that the bond did not cover operations of the tenant. Lyman v. Cheever, 168 N. Y. 43 [60 N. E. 1047], also cited by appellant, involved a situation where a bond was required to secure a liquor license. The licensee surrendered his license, and thereafter violated the conditions of the permit. The court properly held the surety was not liable. These cases are obviously not in point.
Appellant also cites United States v. Whitridge, 231 U. S. 144 [34 Sup. Ct. 24, 58 L. Ed. 159], which held that a corporation operated by a receiver in bankruptcy was not subject to the excise or privilege tax imposed by the United States Corporation Laws of 1909 upon the carrying on or doing business by a corporation, for the reason that the receiver was acting as an officer of the court and not as an officer of the corporation, and that the appointment of the receiver constituted an ouster of corporate management. That case, decided in 1913, turned upon the language of the particular statute involved, and upon the legal situation that existed before the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.
There is nothing in the decision of In re California Pea Products, 37 Fed. Supp. 658, cited at the oral argument, that assists appellant. It held that a liquidating receiver could not be compelled to .secure a license under the Cali
Appellant’s suggestion that the receiver’s bond should be held liable and not the surety for the licensee is clearly without merit. If the surety for the manufacturer is not liable it would be only because the tax is imposed on a manufacturer and seller of beer, and the licensee manufactured the beer in question but did not sell it. By the same reasoning, the receiver sold the beer but did not manufacture it. As a result of such reasoning, neither surety would be liable, and the state would lose the tax. The very purpose of the bond provision in the statute is to assure the state that the tax will be paid.
It is our view, that, under the terms of the statute, considering its language and purposes, and under the rule laid down in the above-cited cases, the receiver was acting under the license in selling the beer already manufactured by the licensee, and that the appellant surety is liable for the tax.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Knight, J., and Ward, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 19, 1941, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 18, 1941. Curtis, J., and Edmonds, J., voted for a hearing. Traynor, J., did not participate therein.