UNION OIL ASSOCIATES (a Corporation), Respondent, v. CHARLES G. JOHNSON, State Treasurer, Appellant.
L. A. No. 14286
In Bank
March 26, 1935
727
Also: “When the people rely upon circumstantial evidence to convict the defendant, every link in the chain of circumstances necessary to a conviction must be established by the evidence to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The trial court also defined to the jury, in the language of the statute, the term “reasonable doubt“. The rule is too well established to require the citation of authority, that it is not error to refuse a requested instruction if it has been covered by those already given.
Appellant‘s final point is that the venue was not proved, and it is suggested that the murder might as well have been committed in Arizona and the body brought to where it was found. The coagulated blood on the ground underneath the head of deceased dispels the suggestion that the deceased was killed at some remote place, and the point is therefore without merit.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Seawell, J., Shenk, J., Waste, C. J., and Curtis, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Andrews & Andrews, Paul M. Gregg and L. W. Andrews for Respondent.
Hahn & Hahn, A. Hale Dinsmoor, Theodore L. Breslauer, Claude I. Parker, Ralph W. Smith and Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro, as Amici Curiae on Behalf of Respondent.
Section 16, article XIII, state Constitution, as it read at the time of levy and payment of the tax herein, provided that “all financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business corporations doing business within the limits of this state, subject to be taxed pursuant to subdivision (d) of section 14 of this article (Article XIII), in lieu of the tax thereby provided for, shall annually pay to the state for the privilege of exercising their corporate franchises within this state a tax according to or measured by their net income. . . .” Plaintiff is a holding company organized under the laws of this state to own and hold stock of the Union Oil Company of California and distribute dividends paid thereon to its own stockholders. It is conceded that plaintiff is neither a financial, mercantile, nor manufacturing corporation. It contends that it is not a “business corporation” or “doing business” within the meaning of section 16, article XIII, and the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act enacted pursuant thereto. It is plaintiff‘s contention, sustained by the court below, that the phrases “doing business” and “business corporation“, as used in federal excise tax acts, have acquired a well-defined meaning through judicial interpretation, which precludes their application to a holding company such as plaintiff; and that in view of the history of the constitutional amendment (section 16, article XIII), and the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act, enacted pursuant thereto, said phrases must be given the same interpretation when used therein as in the federal statutes. Defendant State Treasurer contends that it was not the intention of the people or the legislature to adopt the federal construction; that when a corporation is doing the very
We have quoted above the provision of subdivision 2(a), section 16, article XIII, Constitution, providing for a tax to be paid by financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business corporations. Subdivision 5 of said section provides as follows: “The legislature shall define ‘corporations’ and ‘doing business‘. . . .”
The Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act, enacted in 1929 to carry the constitutional provision into effect, provided that every corporation “of the classes referred to in subdivision 2(a) of section 16 of article thirteen of the constitution of this state“, should pay annually to the state for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchises within this state a tax at the rate of four per centum upon the basis of its net income for the next preceding fiscal or calendar year. (Stats. 1929, p. 19, sec. 4.) In section 5 of the act the legislature defined the term “corporation” as follows: “The term ‘corporation‘, as herein used, shall include every financial corporation, other than a bank or banking association, and every mercantile, manufacturing and business corporation of the classes referred to in subdivision one (c) of section 5219 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.” “Doing business” is defined in said section 5 as follows: “The term ‘doing business‘, as herein used, means any transaction or transactions in the course of its business by a corporation created under the laws of this state, or by a foreign corporation qualified to do or doing intrastate business in this state.” (Italics supplied.)
In 1933 the act was amended by addition of the following provision in section 4: “Any corporation organized to hold the stock or bonds of any other corporation or corporations, and not trading in such stock or bonds or other securities held, and engaging in no other activities than the receipt and disbursement of dividends from such stock or interest from such bonds, shall not be considered a financial, mercantile, manufacturing or business corporation or a corporation doing business in this State for the purposes of this act.” (Stats. 1933, p. 693.) Plaintiff corporation, upon the basis of the allegations contained in its complaint, brings itself
Section 16, article XIII, state Constitution, and the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act also provide for “a tax according to or measured by their net income to be paid by banks and banking associations, both state and national.” (Subd. 1 [a], sec. 16, art. XIII.) In 1928, the tax commission appointed by the Governor pursuant to an act of the 1927 legislature reported that the existing share-tax method (subd. c, sec. 14, art. XIII, state Const.) as applied in this state to shares of stock in national banks was “probably invalid” as a result of several recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, commencing with Merchants National Bank of Richmond, Virginia, v. City of Richmond, 256 U.S. 635 [41 Sup. Ct. 619, 65 L. Ed. 1135], and including First National Bank of Hartford, Wisconsin, v. City of Hartford, 273 U.S. 548 [47 Sup. Ct. 462, 71 L. Ed. 767, 59 A. L. R. 1], and State of Minnesota v. First National Bank of St. Paul, 273 U.S. 561 [47 Sup. Ct. 468, 71 L. Ed. 774]. The commission found that unless an amendment to the state Constitution should be passed in the fall of 1928 to lay the foundation for a valid system of bank taxation, revenues paid to the state by the banks under protest in 1926 and 1927, and revenues which would become due from them for 1928, 1929 and 1930, to the extent of $22,050,000, would be jeopardized. (Special Report of the California Tax Commission, appearing in Final Report of the California Tax Commission, March 5, 1929, p. 243, particularly at pp. 247 and 250-264.) Before submission of the commission‘s report in August, 1928, the banks generally had brought suit to recover taxes paid under protest in 1926 and 1927. Acting upon the plea of the commission that
The state‘s power to tax national banks depends entirely upon
Both the constitutional provision and the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act provide that “financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business” corporations “doing business within the limits of this state” shall pay the tax. (Italics supplied.) Thus our state constitutional provision and legislation adopt the language of that portion of
The cases to which respondent has cited us to establish the federal definition of “business corporation” and “doing business” did not interpret those terms as used in subdivision 1 (c) of section 5219, adopted in 1926, but, rather, involved the federal excise tax acts of 1909, and of 1916 and subsequent years. The Corporation Tax Act of 1909 (36 U. S. Stats. at Large, chap. 6, pp. 112-117) provided for an excise tax to be paid by corporations “organized for profit” and “engaged in business in any state . . . with respect to the carrying on or doing business by such corporation . . . equivalent” to a stated percentage upon net income. The act of 1916 (39 Stats. at Large, chap. 463, p. 789) provided for a tax upon domestic corporations organized for profit “with respect to carrying on or doing business” at certain rates for a fair value of their capital stock, and exempted corporations “not engaged in business” during the preceding taxable year. Through decisions interpreting these excise tax acts it became settled that corporations which were mere holding companies were not subject to the tax. (Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U. S. 107 [31 Sup. Ct. 342, 55 L. Ed. 389, Ann. Cas. 1912B, 1312]; United States v. Emery, Bird, Thayer Realty Co., 237 U. S. 28 [35 Sup. Ct. 499, 59 L. Ed. 825]; Zonne v. Minneapolis Syndicate, 220 U. S. 187 [31 Sup. Ct. 361, 55 L. Ed. 428]; McCoach v. Minehill & S. H. Ry. Co., 228 U. S. 295 [33 Sup. Ct. 419, 57 L. Ed. 842]; Von Baumbach v. Sargent Land Co., 242 U. S. 503 [37 Sup. Ct. 201, 61 L. Ed. 460]; United States v. Hotchkiss Redwood Co., 25 Fed. (2d) 958; Rose v. Nunnally Inv. Co., 22 Fed. (2d) 102; Challam Lbr. Co. v. United States, 34 Fed. (2d) 944; Argonaut Consol. Min. Co. v. Anderson, 42 Fed. (2d) 219.)
There can be little doubt that the Supreme Court of the United States in construing the meaning of the terms “doing business” and “business corporations” in subdivision 1 (c) of
In the instant case our constitutional amendment and legislation were enacted to establish a mode of taxation which would comply with the federal permissive statute. The presumption that the adoption of the words of the federal enactment evinces an intent to adopt the federal construction thereof is even stronger than in the ordinary case where legislation of one jurisdiction is merely modeled after that of another. It is true that subdivision 1 (c) of section 5219 is not a restriction upon the classes of corporations which the state may tax, and does not proscribe a tax upon holding companies measured by net income. It simply provides that if a tax according to or measured by net income is levied on banks, the rate must not be higher than the rate on other financial corporations, nor higher than the highest of the rates assessed on mercantile, manufacturing and business corporations. Consistently with this restriction the state might have provided that holding companies should be subject to the tax along with other corporations, but the constitutional and legislative provisions are not subject to such construction. The proposed constitutional amendment submitted to the legislature by the tax commission provided that “corporations doing business in this state, of the class covered by subdivision (d) of section 14“, article XIII, should pay the tax, and omitted the modifying adjectives
In the light of this analysis the purpose of the legislature in adopting the 1933 amendment to sections 4 and 5 of the act, quoted earlier herein, and providing that such a holding company as plaintiff shall not be considered a “business corporation“, was to clarify the legislative intent by expressly declaring the meaning of the words used in the act. (Diethelm v. Rainey, 1 Cal. (2d) 245 [33 Pac. (2d) 1026]; 59 C. J. 1097; 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction, p. 777.) By the same amendment, holding companies, although not “business corporations“, were made subject to an annual tax of $25. Section 16 of article XIII was also amended in that year, and the authorization therein for corporate taxation does not limit the corporations to be taxed thereunder to financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business corporations. In an “Analysis of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act” submitted to the California Tax Research Bureau in the office of the state board of equalization in January, 1933, the authors point out that to tax holding companies under the act according to net income would drive them out of the state. (Traynor and Keesling, Analysis of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act, p. 46; see, also, 21 Cal. Law Rev., p. 545.)
The federal courts have declared that it is impossible in the nature of the case to prescribe fixed rules which may be applied in all cases to determine whether a corporation is a mere passive holding company, or a business corporation, and that each case must be decided on its particular facts. The judgment for plaintiff in the case herein was entered upon defendant‘s demurrer to the complaint. By the allegations of said complaint plaintiff brings itself clearly within
The judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Waste, C. J., and Langdon, J., concurred.
Preston, J., deeming himself disqualified, did not participate herein.
THOMPSON, J., Dissenting.--I cannot bring myself to concur in the prepared opinion.
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover from the defendant the franchise tax paid by the plaintiff in the year 1931, based upon its income for the year 1930. The demurrer of the defendant being overruled, and he declin-
By the complaint it is made to appear that the respondent was organized for the purpose of consolidating and maintaining in one holding or pool shares of the capital stock of the Union Oil Company of California. In return for shares of stock of the Union Oil Company it issued an equal or like number of its own shares. Its stockholders received all of the dividends paid on Union Oil Company shares minus such sums as were necessary to deduct in order to pay the corporate expenses of the respondent. Further, it is alleged that the only assets possessed by respondent, other than capital stock of the Union Oil Company, was its office furniture and equipment and from time to time small amounts of cash for the defraying of current corporate expenses. Its only income is from shares of stock of the Union Oil Company, none of which stock, it is alleged, has ever been sold, mortgaged or hypothecated.
Further allegations disclose that by action of the franchise tax commissioner, approved by the state board of equalization, respondent was obliged to pay the sum of $44,552.63, plus interest in the sum of $4,522.09, the amount of which tax was arrived at by estimating that of the sum of $4,872,864 paid to the respondent as dividends by the Union Oil Company, 29.643976 per cent thereof arose out of and was paid from income earned by the Union Oil Company in business transactions outside the state of California.
In 1928, section 16 of article XIII was added to the state Constitution and in its material parts provides as follows:
“2. (a) All financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business corporations doing business within the limits of this state, subject to be taxed pursuant to subdivision (d) of section 14 of this article . . . shall annually pay to the state for the privilege of exercising their corporate franchise within this state a tax according to or measured by their net income.
. . .
“5. The legislature shall define ‘corporations’ and ‘doing business‘; shall define ‘net income’ and may define it to be the entire net income received from all sources. . . .”
In 1929 there was passed the “Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act” (Stats. 1929, p. 19), the pertinent provisions of which are as follows:
“Sec. 4. Every financial, mercantile, manufacturing and business corporation doing business within the limits of this state, of the classes referred to in subdivision 2 (a) of section 16 of article thirteen of the Constitution of this state, shall annually pay to the state for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchises within this state, a tax according to or measured by its net income, to be computed, in the manner hereinafter provided, at the rate of four per centum upon the basis of its net income for the next preceding fiscal or calendar year.
“Sec. 5. The term ‘corporation‘, as herein used, shall include every financial corporation, other than a bank or banking association, and every mercantile, manufacturing and business corporation of the classes referred to in subdivision one (c) of section 5219 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.
“The term ‘bank‘, as hereinafter used, shall include national banking associations.
“The term ‘doing business‘, as herein used, means any transaction or transactions in the course of its business by a corporation created under the laws of this state, or by a foreign corporation qualified to do or doing intrastate business in this state.
“Sec. 6. The term ‘gross income‘, as herein used, includes gains, profits and income derived from the business, of whatever kind and in whatever form paid; gains, profits or income from dealings in real or personal property; gains, profits or income received as compensation for services, as interest, rents, commissions, brokerage or other fees, or otherwise received in carrying on such business; all interest received from federal, state, municipal or other bonds, and, except as hereinafter otherwise provided, all dividends received on stocks.
“Sec. 7. The term ‘net income‘, as herein used, means the gross income less the deductions allowed.”
In providing what deductions from the gross income shall be permissible, section 8 (h) reads:
“Dividends received during the taxable year from income arising out of business done in this state; but if the income out of which the dividends are declared is derived from business done within and without this state, then so much of the dividends shall be allowed as a deduction as the amount
of the income from business done within this state bears to the total business done. “The burden shall be on the taxpayer to show that the amount of dividends claimed as a deduction has been received from income arising out of business done in this state.”
That portion of section 5219 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, referred to in section 5 of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Act which is material to the present case, permits the states to tax national banking associations “according to or measured by their net income“, provided the following conditions are complied with: “. . . (c) In case of a tax on or measured by the net income of an association, the taxing state may, except in case of a tax on net income, include the entire net income received from all sources, but the rate shall not be higher than the rate assessed upon other financial corporations nor higher than the highest of the rates assessed by the taxing state upon mercantile, manufacturing, and business corporations doing business within its limits: Provided, however, that a state which imposes a tax on or according to or measured by the net income of, or a franchise or excise tax on, financial, mercantile, manufacturing, and business corporations organized under its own laws or laws of other states and also imposes a tax upon the income of individuals, may include in such individual income dividends from national banking associations located within the state on condition that it also includes dividends from domestic corporations, and may likewise include dividends from national banking associations located without the state on condition that it also includes dividends from foreign corporations, but at no higher rate than is imposed on dividends from such other corporations.”
It is respondent‘s first contention that it is not doing business in this state within the meaning of the constitutional section; that the legislature has not the right to create a liability by defining the words “doing business” and that by the adoption of the section of the Constitution we have adopted the construction placed upon the phrase “engaged in business” used in the federal acts referred to later in this opinion.
However, the mere recital of the constitutional provision, the sections of the legislative act and the material provisions of the federal act provokes two preliminary observations. First, it is to be noted that the tax here in question is one upon the franchise of domestic corporations and foreign corporations “doing business” in this state and not one upon the income of such corporations. Second, the enumeration of certain kinds of corprations in section 5219 of the Revised Statutes of the United States is in nowise restrictive of the corporate franchises which may be taxed by the state, but only that those enumerated must be taxed if a franchise tax measured by the net income is to be laid upon national banking associations. In other words, it was the congressional intention to prevent discrimination in favor of the designated corporations to the detriment of national banking associations. These observations suggest that the expression “doing business” was employed in the constitutional provision in order to include foreign corporations “doing business” of an intrastate character in the state. This thought is to a degree confirmed by decisions heretofore rendered to the effect that it is the exercise of the right by a foreign corporation to do intrastate business in the state which was the property to be taxed under article XIII, section 14, subdivision (d), of the Constitution providing that the franchises of all corporations except those otherwise mentioned in the section should be taxed at their actual cash value. (See People v. Alaska S. S. Co., 182 Cal. 202 [187 Pac. 742]; People v. Ford Motor Co., 188 Cal. 8 [204 Pac. 217].) In the first cited case this court said: “The theory that the potential unexercised right of a foreign corporation to do business in this state, which exists by comity only, constitutes taxable property within this state would lead to results ridiculous and absurd. Every corporation of any foreign state or country is privileged to enter this state and do business therein (herein). While it is doing such business, it is exercising corporate powers within this state, and the privilege of doing so becomes valuable, but before it exercises that power or when it ceases to do so, it is no longer possessed in this state of anything of value.” And in the second case cited we find the following persuasive language: “The right to be a corporation, or to do business as a corporation, is a franchise which ordi-
The respondent places great weight for its contention that the words “doing business” must be held to mean “the aggressive pursuit of gain” and not merely the receipt of the ordinary fruits incident to the ownership of property, upon decisions of the federal courts construing and applying the Corporation Tax Law (Act of August 5, 1909, U. S. Stats. at Large, vol. 36, chap. 6, pp. 11, 112-117) and the Capital Stock Tax Law of 1918 (40 Stats. at Large, p. 1126, sec. 1000) and 1921 (42 Stats. at Large, p. 294, sec. 1000), which levied a tax upon corporations “engaged in business” but excluded those not so engaged. Having before it the contention that the tax imposed by the act of 1909 was a direct tax upon property, the United States Supreme Court, in the case of Flint v. Stone-Tracy Co., etc., 220 U. S. 107 [31 Sup. Ct. 342, 55 L. Ed. 389, Ann. Cas. 1912B, 1312], at page 145, says: “While the mere declaration contained in a statute that it shall be regarded as a tax of a particular character does not make it such if it is apparent that it cannot be so designated consistently with the meaning and effect of the act, nevertheless the declaration of the lawmaking power is entitled to much weight, and in this statute the intention is expressly declared to impose a special excise tax with respect to the carrying on or doing business by such corporation, joint stock company or association, or insurance company. It is therefore apparent, giving all of the words of the statute effect, that the tax is imposed not upon the franchises of the corporation irrespective of their use in business, nor upon the property of the corporation, but upon the doing of corporate or insurance business and with respect to the carrying on thereof, in a sum equivalent to one per centum upon the entire net income over and above $5,000 received from all sources during the year; that is, when imposed in this manner it is a tax upon the doing of
As we have already indicated, the intention sought to be expressed in the constitutional provision, followed by the legislative enactment by the use of the words “doing business“, was to subject those corporations to a tax which are doing some substantial part of their ordinary business, or exercising some of the functions for which they were created (Estate of Wellings, 192 Cal. 506 [221 Pac. 628]), because
We have already observed that the expression “doing business” as construed by the federal courts is not in point because the tax there imposed was not upon the franchises of the corporations but upon the doing of corporate business. The constitutional amendment expressly declares against the adoption of the interpretation put upon the phrase by the federal courts when it says in subdivision 5 of section 16 of article XIII “. . . the legislature shall define . . . ‘doing business‘.” Following this declaration by the people that the legislature was to determine the meaning of the phrase “doing business“, the legislature, in section 5 of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act, already quoted, said: “The term ‘doing business‘, as herein used, means any transaction or transactions in the course of its business by a corporation created under the laws of this state or by a foreign corporation qualified to do or doing intrastate business in this state.” How can it be said, when the people have directed the legislature to define the phrase and the legislature has defined it, that the interpretation put upon the phrase by the federal courts when considering a different kind of tax was intended to be carried over into our act?
There is another reason why it seems to me impossible to escape the conclusion that the respondent fell within the provisions of the act and was taxable thereunder. In 1933, pursuant to the “Analysis of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act” submitted by Roger J. Traynor and Frank M. Keesling, and mentioned in the opinion prepared by Mr. Justice Seawell, the legislature adopted an amendment to the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act (see Stats. 1933, p. 692) in which, among other things, it is provided as follows:
“Any corporation organized to hold the stock or bonds of any other corporation or corporations, and not trading in such stock or bonds or other securities held, and engaging in no other activities than the receipt and disbursement of dividends from such stock or interest from such bonds, shall not be considered a financial, mercantile, manufacturing or
It was also provided that every corporation subject to be taxed pursuant to subdivision (d) of section 14 of article XIII of the Constitution and not otherwise taxed should pay annually to the state a tax of $25 in lieu of the tax on its general corporate franchise. In other words, the legislature, recognizing that by the terms of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act holding companies were taxed, by the amendment relieved them of such taxes and imposed an annual tax of $25. The amendment constitutes a legislative construction of the previous act and is entitled to weight in our determination of whether the respondent is subject to the tax.
Respondent also contends that it is not within the act because it is neither a financial, a mercantile, a manufacturing nor a business corporation. We may assent to the proposition that it is neither mercantile nor manufacturing in character. But we cannot agree that it is neither a business nor a financial organization. The expression “business corporation” signifies a corporation the purpose of which is that of personal material gain to its members. (National Bank Taxation in California, 17 Cal. Law Review, 456, at 493, and cases cited.) The respondent‘s articles of incorporation, by reference made a part of its complaint, disclose that it was formed for the purpose of buying or otherwise acquiring shares of stock of the Union Oil Company and of exercising all of the rights, powers and privileges of the ownership of such shares and to avail itself “of all benefits at any time offered to or conferred upon, or made available to, stockholders of said Union Oil Company of California“, and to vote the stock at meetings of the stockholders of the Union Oil Company. We cannot say to what degree the respondent controls the management of the Union Oil Company through its stockholders, but it is apparent that its purpose is the mutual protection and material, pecuniary gain of its members.
Respondent asserts that the act is unconstitutional because article XIII, section 16-2 (a), already quoted, provides that corporations “shall annually pay . . . a tax according to or measured by their net income” wherever the act says that the tax shall be “upon the basis of its net income for the
It is also claimed that the tax exacted from respondent constitutes a burden upon interstate business. The only argument advanced in support of this statement is that the tax “is based entirely upon income derived from the interstate business of the Union Oil Company-a tax with relation to interstate commerce alone“. A complete answer to this suggestion is found in Pacific Co., Ltd., v. Johnson, 212 Cal. 148 [298 Pac. 489], wherein it was held that the tax being upon the franchise of the corporation without reference to the character of the property in which its funds are invested, income from nontaxable securities might be used for the purpose of measuring the tax.
Finally it is said that the act is discriminatory in that personal corporate stockholders of the Union Oil Company are not taxed. A complete refutation of this assertion may be framed as follows: Every corporation of like class pays a similar tax upon its franchise, hence there is no discrimination. Individuals are not involved.
From what has been said it is evident that appellant‘s demurrer should have been sustained without leave to amend and judgment entered for the defendant.
Shenk, J., concurred.
