93 So. 595 | Ala. | 1922
The state of Alabama sued, in assumpsit, Lee C. Bradley, as receiver of the Birmingham Railway, Light Power Company, a domestic corporation, to recover the amount of "franchise taxes" incepting and accruing pending the receivership for the calendar years 1920 and 1921, with statutory penalties for defaults in payment beyond 30 days after January 1st of the respective calendar years 1920 and 1921. The complaint avers that during those years the corporation was and continues to be an existing corporation with a paid-up capital stock of $7,400,000. Defendant's demurrer being sustained to the entire complaint, the state suffered nonsuit, and appeals.
The receivership was created by the District Court of the United States, sitting for the Northern district of Alabama.
The appointment of the receiver did not dissolve the corporation. Railroad Commission v. Alabama Great Southern R. Co.,
A receiver appointed by a District Court of the United States may be sued without previous permission of the court making the appointment. His liability in the particular action is, of course, another matter.
"Actions against the receiver are in law actions against the receivership, or the funds in the hands of the receiver, and his * * * liabilities are official and not personal, and judgments against him as receiver are payable only from the funds in his hands." McNulta v. Lockridge,
Since under this complaint the only judgment possible to enter must be against the estate of the corporation, the subject of the receivership, for a liability of the corporation, not against the receiver personally in any event, the grounds of demurrer taking the objection that the state's annual franchise tax is not imposed upon a receiver eo nomine of a corporation, or upon a corporation in the hands of a receiver, are without merit. To conclude otherwise would involve sanction of the proposition that, though imposed by Constitution and statute upon all domestic corporations (not excepted), a "franchise tax" might be avoided by the creation of a receivership.
It is the manifest duty of a receiver of an existing domestic corporation to satisfy out of the funds in the receiver's hands all valid taxes or governmental impositions in that nature imposed by the corporation's creator that would have been demandable of the corporation had the receivership not been created. In re U.S. Car Co.,
By section 229 of the 1901 Constitution of Alabama it is provided:
"The Legislature shall, by general law, provide for the payment to the state of Alabama of a franchise tax by corporations organized under the laws of this state, which shall be in proportion to the amount of capital stock; but strictly benevolent, educational, or religious corporations shall not be required to pay such a tax."
This provision is mandatory; and the Legislature has conformed to the mandate thereby given. State ex rel. v. Elba Bank Trust Co. (Ala.App.)
A duty "is ministerial when the law exacting its discharge prescribes and defines the time, mode, and occasion of its performance with such certainty that nothing remains for judgment or discretion. Official action, the result of performing a certain and specific duty arising from fixed and designated facts, is a ministerial act." Grider v. Tally, supra.
In ascertaining the sum of the paid-up capital stock for the calculation of the amount of the "franchise tax" demandable of a domestic corporation, no judicial discretion or judgment is left to the body charged with that duty. The fact that by section 21 of the Revenue Law of 1919 processes common to proceedings judicial in nature are expressed in terms customarily employed in prescribing and defining proceedings of that nature does not effect to change the nature of the act, in respect of domestic corporations, from a ministerial to a judicial act. Likewise the provisions (section 22 of the 1919 Revenue Act) authorizing "appeals" by the state and the domestic corporation do not alter the nature of the act of ascertaining the amount of the paid-up capital stock or the amount of the "franchise tax."
The Court of Appeals, in State ex rel. v. Crane Co. (Ala.App.)
The subject of the creator's imposition of this "franchise tax" is the existence of the corporation, not the "continued exercise of the corporate franchise." K. C., M. B. R. Co. v. Stiles,
These considerations dispose adversely to the appellee of all grounds of the demurrer except those grounds questioning some of the counts of the complaint wherein recovery of the statutory penalty for default in seasonably paying the annual "franchise tax" is sought. In the report of the appeal section 24 of the 1919 Revenue Act is reproduced. The section (24) providing the penalty, designed to coerce payment of "franchise tax," is valid. W. U. Tel. Co. v. Indiana,
The demurrer was erroneously sustained. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.