98 Ky. 294 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1895
delivebed the opinion oe the cotjbt.
This appeal involves the constitutionality of the statute requiring every foreign building and loan association doing ^business in the State to pay into the treasury annually $2 on every $100 of its annual gross receipts. (Kentucky Statutes, (section 4228.)
The law is assailed as being, (1), in violation of section 174 of the State constitution; (2), as impairing the obligation of contracts in existence when the law became operative; (3), as an unwarrantable interference with the freedom of commerce between the States; and (4), as denying to the association the equal protection of the laws.
It is apparent that a brief inquiry into the nature of the business done by the association is pertinent to a proper understanding of each of these contentions, and especially in so far as the business is supposed to be affected with an interstate character. We say brief inquiry because the general characteristics of these associations are alike, and in recent years have become well known.
The appellant’s principal office is at Knoxville, Tennessee. Its course of business is this: Each subscribing member ¡contracts to contribute each month a stated sum, which the Company agrees to invest on bond and mortgage, collecting the interest monthly and reinvesting at frequent intervals the entire moneys received from all sources for the benefit of the stockholders, share and share alike. These contribu
Prior to the 11th of November, 1892, when the law in question became operative, none of the stock had matured, though the appellant had been doing business in the State and had made numerous contracts. From the date named until June 1,1893, the gross receipts of the association were $93,057.60, but how much of this was old and how much was new business does not appear.
(1). Is the statute in conflict with section 174 of the State constitution? The section reads as follows: “All property, whether owned by natural persons or corporations, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, unless exempted by this constitution; and all corporate property shall pay the same rate of taxation paid by individual property. Nothing in this constitution shall be construed to prevent the General Assembly from providing for taxation based on income, licenses or franchises.”
In this connection it is pertinent to read a portion of section 181 of the same instrument: “The General Assembly may, by general laws only, provide for the payment of license fees on franchises, stock used for breeding purposes, the various tradés, occupations and professions, or a special or excise tax.”
It is said that the imposition of the levy of two per cent, on the gross receipts of the association is not in the nature of a license tax, because, as those terms imply, such a tax is enforced to obtain a license to do business in the future, and can not, in the nature of things, be an exaction on past business. A license, it is said,is a permission, and the payment of
The conclusion is reached, therefore, that the statute imposes a tax on the business of the association. As this business in this State consists solely in selling shares of stock to Kentucky members, it is manifest the company can have no gross receipts except from payments made by its Kentucky subscribers. These subscribers, under section 4093, Kentucky Statutes, are required to pay taxes on their shares of building and loan association stock as on other individual personal property. Therefore, say counsel, undisguised double taxation, and hence taxation not in proportion to its 'value, is imposed, not as sometimes unavoidably happens on the same property in the hands of different owners, but double taxation of the same property in the hands of the same owners, because the association is a purely mutual one, and the assets belong exclusively to the shareholders.
The fallacy of the argument, it seems to us, lies in the assumption that this statute imposes a tax on property at all. Certainly it is not an ad valorem tax. The associations of the kind described generally have no tangible property within the State, and we do not regard the purpose of the statute to be to force an artificial situs on the obligations due the association from its members for stock, dues, etc. Indeed those contracts can not be said to have any certain value. The members owe the contracts of subscription, it is true, but upon notice they may retire from membership and withdraw the value of their payments, subject to conditions .not necessary to notice. The business, nevertheless, is a valúa
In the earlier cases a tax upon the gross receipts of a railroad company was held not to be a direct tax on the property, but a tax upon the franchise of the corporation, measured by the extent of its business. (State Tax on Railway Gross Receipts, 15 Wall., 284.) But subsequently the same court, in Fargo v. Michigan, 121 U. S., 230, and Philadelphia, &c. v. Pennsylvania, 122 U. S., 326, modified or rather denied the right of the State to thus tax an interstate agency under such a guise.
With this feature of the taxing power, however, we have nothing to do here. To the extent that such a claim is urged by counsel we shall notice presently. Regarded as a tax for doing business in the State, we see at once that the plea of want of uniformity and failure to tax in proportion to value becomes unavailing. So also the contention that there is double taxation. If the tax is found to be in effect a franchise tax, the complaint can not be made that the property of the corporation is otherwise taxed or is non-taxable. (Society for Savings, &c. v. Coite, 6 Wall. 594; People v. Home Ins. Co., 92 N. Y., 328.)
In our opinion, however, there is, in fact, no unequal or double taxation imposed. So far as borrowing members are
(2.) Counsel say that, viewed from the standpoint of the company, the subscriptions may be regarded as choses in action, and, having no situs in this State except the artificial • one created by this statute, the contracts of subscription, made before the law was passed, are impaired to the extent of the tax imposed.
In De Vignier v. City of New Orleans, 16 Federal Rep., 11 (the case relied on by counsel), it was held that “in the absence of any provisions of the statute which had entered into and formed part of the contract, giving the right to impose a tax, bonds, or other obligations of a city which be long to non-residents, can not be taxed without impairing the force of the obligation itself.”
But we have seen that there is no purpose here to tax the property of the corporation or impart to its property a forced location contrary to the settled rules which govern that class of property. The principle announced in the case is not applicable.
Finally (3 and 4) it is said that the freedom of commerce between the States is interfered with, and the equal protection of the laws denied the corporation.
The statute, whatever may be said of the nature of the tax it imposes, in express terms affects only business done within the State. The business traffic or commerce, if you please so to term it, of the corporation is purely internal or domestic.
This case is decisive also of other contentions made by the appellants here. The tax under consideration was one on the gross receipts of a foreign corporation, and it was contended that the act violated “the requirements of uniformity and equality of taxation prescribed by the constitution of Missouri,'and thereby denied to the complainants the equal protection of the laws of the State, which the fourteenth amendment to the constitution. guarantees shall not be abridged by State action.”
The court said, that it had repeatedly “laid down the doctrine that diversity of taxation, both with respect to the amount imposed and the various species of property, selected either for bearing its burdens or for being exempt from them, is not inconsistent with a perfect uniformity and eanalty of taxation in the proper sense of those terms.” (Citing Bell’s Gap Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S., 232,
The perfect application of these principles to the case at hand becomes apparent when we observe the substantially perfect identity between our statute and the Missouri statute. For not only was the complainant a foreign corporation, and the tax one on its gross receipts on business done in the State, but the rate was $2 on the $100 of such receipts taken in for one year next preceding a time certain fixed in the statute.
The court further proceeds to demonstrate that the manner of taxing the express company, which had no tangible property in the State of consequence, was necessarily different from that of other corporations, but there was no unjust discrimination on that account.
We may observe here that the burdens imposed on appellant by the statute under consideration are substantially the same as those imposed on other similar corporations similarly situated.
In the case of Philadelphia Fire Association v. New York, 119 U. S., 110, relied on by the appellant, the plaintiff in error was a fire insurance company of Pennsylvania, doing business in the State of New York, and the question was. what effect the fourteenth amendment of the constitution should be given in the matter of taxing the foreign corporation? The court first decided that “issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of commerce.”
The case of Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall., 168, was also distinctly approved, wherein it was said: “Having no absolute right of recognition in other States, but depending for such recognition and the enforcement of its contracts upon their assent, it follows as a matter of course that such assent may be granted upon such terms and conditions as those States
The right to impose the tax in the case at hand does not depend, it seems to us, on its being paid as a condition precedent to the entrance of the corporation into the State. If the corporation, by the diligence of its agents, entered the State before any law was enacted to exclude it, or tax its privil- . eges, it still can not be said that the State assented to such .entrance or gave it any official recognition, whereby it was precluded from imposing a reasonable tax on its right to transact business, and rating it according to the amount of business done after the enactment of the law.
It was at last a tax on the privilege of doing business after the enactment of the law, and its collection postponed in order that the sum of it might be fixed with regard to the amount of business done. It might have been fixed without regard to such amount.
It may be observed finally that while the language of some' of the cases cited and others not referred to sustain the position that the State may favor its own corporations or impose a less tax on them than on foreign ones, the assertion of that principle is not necessary here to sustain the statute in question. It does not follow, because different plans of taxation are adopted with respect to the two classes, that there is a discriminaton against either. It is practically impossible to compare a tax rate, fixed on property on the ad valorem system, wth a rate fixed without reference to the value of property, but as a tax on the privilege of doing business. But an examination of our various statutes will, we think, show no discrimination against the nonresident corporation.
The judgment dismissing the petition is affirmed.