101 N.E. 783 | NY | 1913
The action is to recover from the state of New York a sum paid by the plaintiff, under protest and without prejudice to its rights, for stock transfer stamps.
The facts were agreed upon by the parties for submission to the Court of Claims. The plaintiff, a corporation, purchased certain assets of each of four corporations. Under the contracts of purchase, each of the four corporations was entitled to a designated number of shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff as a consideration for the sale. Each of the four corporations and a trust company entered into a lawful voting trust agreement, which provided that the trust company as voting trustee should hold and vote for a designated period the full number of the shares of stock to which the four corporations were so entitled and a certificate for those shares was issued by the plaintiff, upon the request of each of the four corporations, to the trust company, which thus became the record owner of the shares for voting purposes. Each of the four corporations (no condition forbidding) requested the issue to each stockholder therein by the trust company of a certificate for the number of shares proportionate to the number of the shares of its stock owned by him, and thereupon the trust company issued to each stockholder of the four corporations a certificate that he, the stockholder, was the owner of a designated number of shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff deposited with and to be held by the trust company under the agreement as voting trustee, and might transfer the certificate, and that all dividends received by the trust company should be paid to the holder of the certificate who should at the termination of the voting trust agreement, upon surrender of the certificate, be entitled to receive a certificate or certificates of the plaintiff *147
for said shares of capital stock. Pursuant to the decision of the comptroller of the state that the certificates of the trust company were taxable under section
The statutory provisions authorizing and regulating the procedure in the action are: Section
At the time of the transactions under consideration, section
The section imposes the tax upon all agreements or instruments for the transfer of shares of corporate stock. It is in the nature of an excise tax on the transfer. (People ex rel. Hatch
v. Reardon,
Each of the four corporations became, upon the transfer of its assets to the plaintiff, the owner of the shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff, which were the consideration for it. The transaction did not involve a transfer of those shares. The shares were not transferred to the vendor corporation by plaintiff; they were created by the transaction. At no time were they owned by the plaintiff. At the instant of their creation they were owned by the vendor corporation, which might at any time thereafter transfer them, and any transfer of them by it would be subject to the tax imposed by said section 270.
The four corporations did not transfer the shares owned by them to the trust company. They caused the record title to them to be placed in the trust company temporarily *151 and for an expressed and limited purpose. They remained the owners of the stock. Their ownership was subject to the right of the trust company to vote the shares at corporate elections, but the power to transfer the shares, subject to the right of the trust company to vote them, remained in the corporations. The trust company could not sell or agree to sell the shares. It had no assignable interest in them. It had evidence in the certificate that it as trustee held the legal title, but this was notice of the existence of the trust agreement which disclosed the ownership of the corporations.
The valid request of each of the four corporations to the trust company that it issue its certificate to each of the holders of shares of the stock of those corporations for shares of the stock of the plaintiff proportionate to his holding, and the compliance of the trust company, was a transfer of the shares by the corporations to their shareholders. Upon the completion of those acts the corporations ceased having the right to receive the dividends declared upon those shares and the shareholders acquired it. The ownership of the shares is in their stockholders severally, as certified by the trust company, by virtue of the assignment of it inherent in the request and the execution of the request by the trust company. The appellant does not assert or claim that the corporations own the shares. It, on the contrary, concedes that their shareholders are the owners, but asserts that they were such through and from the time of the purchase by the plaintiff of the assets of the corporations, and, therefore, there was no transfer of the shares from the corporations to them — an assertion erroneous, as already stated.
The appellant urges, with ability and earnestness, that if the four corporations did in the first instance own the shares, the transfer of them to the shareholders was a division among the true owners of their own property and, therefore, not a taxable transfer. Without deciding whether or not the conclusion correctly expresses the law, *152
it suffices in this case to point out that the premise given for its support is fallacious. While conditions may exist under which equity will consider the shareholders as the proprietors and the ultimate beneficiaries of the corporate interests, the fact is that a corporation is an individual being capacitated through statutory powers to acquire the title to, own and dispose of real and personal property, enter into contracts, engage in business, sue and be sued and taxed. It is the owner of all the corporate property, real and personal, and within the powers conferred upon it by the charter can deal with it as absolutely as a private individual can with his own. The whole title to it is in the corporation and the shareholders are neither tenants in common nor in any legal sense the owners of it. (Hyatt v. Allen,
The judgment should be affirmed, without costs.
CULLEN, Ch. J., WERNER, CUDDEBACK and MILLER, JJ., concur; GRAY and HISCOCK, JJ., dissent.
Judgment affirmed. *153