Woodsum Steamboat Co. v. Sunapee

69 A. 577 | N.H. | 1908

It has been decided in this state that corporations are not persons within the meaning of the statute for taxing polls and estates (R. S., c. 40, s. 1; P. S., c. 56, s. 1), but that their taxable estate is assessed by virtue of the act providing for its taxation where the corporation is situate (R. S., c. 40, s. 5) or is located (P. S., c. 56, s. 9). Nashua Savings Bank v. Nashua, 46 N.H. 389, 392. But whether the situs of a corporation is called its residence, or situation, or location, the result in the present case will be the same.

The plaintiff's property is taxable either under the law pertaining to vessels (P. S., c. 56, s. 12), or that as to boats and launches. Laws 1905, c. 25, s. 1. In either event it is to be taxed at the place of residence of the owner, if in the state; otherwise at the home port, or at the place where the property was on April 1. This property was at its home port in Sunapee on that date, and so was rightly taxed there if the corporation resided in that town, or if it had no residence in the state.

The plaintiff's claim is that it had a residence apart and distinct from the place where its business was executed, and that its property of this class should be taxed to it at such residence. This contention cannot be sustained. A voluntary corporation's residence (so far as it has one) is the town or city where its business is principally executed. A town where it merely maintains an office and holds meetings of stockholders cannot be its residence within the meaning of the statute. Kennett v. Company,68 N.H. 432.

The original voluntary corporation law of this state provided that the articles of agreement should state "the place within which its business is to be carried on," and that "it shall not do business in any other places than those mentioned in said articles." Laws 1866, c. 4224, s. 2. The articles were to be recorded in the "town in which the business is to be carried on." Ib., s. 1. Copies of all by-laws were to be filed in the office of the clerk of "each city or town where they transact their business." Ib., s. 5. A statement of its condition upon organization was to be filed with the clerk of the "town in which the association proposes to do business"; and a similar annual statement was to be "filed and recorded in the clerk's office of each town or city in which the association does business." Ib., s. 7.

The commissioners of 1867 provided that the articles should state "the place in which its business is to be carried on" (Comm'rs' Rep. G. S., c. 139, s. 2), and should be "recorded in the office of the clerk of the town in which the principal business is *497 to be carried on." Ib., s. 1. The prohibition against doing business elsewhere was omitted. Changes of capital stock were to be recorded in "the town where its principal business is carried on" (Ib., s. 4), statements of condition upon organization in "the town in which the corporation proposes principally to do business" (Ib., s. 5), and annual returns in "the town in which the corporation principally does business." Ib., s. 5. Taking these sections together, it is evident that the phrase "the place in which its business is to be carried on" means the place where the principal business of the corporation is executed. There is no evidence of any legislative intent to change the meaning then applied to the language which is still used in this statute. P. S., c. 147, s. 2; Ib., c. 150, ss. 8, 10, 14, 16.

There is other equally conclusive evidence that the words "the place where business is carried on" do not mean the place where a clerk's records are kept and stockholders' meetings are held. The clerk of every corporation must reside and keep his office the state (P. S, c. 148, s. 10), and all stockholders' meetings must be held in the state. 1 Thomp. Corp., ss. 694, 696. If a town became the place of business of a corporation by reason of keeping a clerk's office and holding stockholders' meetings therein, there could be no such thing as a New Hampshire corporation which had no place of business within the state. But the statutes provide that if any dividend-paying corporation "has no place of business in this state, all certificates and other papers required by law to be filed or recorded in the town clerk's office shall be filed or recorded in the office of the secretary of state." P. S., c. 150, s. 15. This provision applies to corporations that merely maintain a corporate organization here, but execute their business outside the state. They have no place of business in the state. "If nothing was done except to hold stockholders' meetings and make records of their proceedings, the corporation would not carry on the business for which it was formed." Kennett v. Company, 68 N.H. 432.

In 1895, and again in, 1897, the town in which records are to be made is referred to by the legislature as "the town which is its principal place of business." Laws 1895, c. 1, s. 2; Laws 1897, c. 49, s. 1. The last act was passed after the court had held in terms that the clerk's office and place where stockholders meet could not be deemed the place of business of the corporation, when its business was executed elsewhere. Kennett v. Company, supra.

The fundamental error in the plaintiff's argument is the assumption that its place of business was fixed by the declaration in the *498 articles of agreement, without regard to the facts as to where it was to do business. The statute demands a truthful statement of the fact. It requires the incorporators to disclose the actual situs of their proposed business. This duty is not performed by stating an imaginary situs. The location of the business is not changed by such an act. It is very likely true that the corporation would not thereafter be heard to deny that its situs was as it had stated, especially if others had acted upon the statement in good faith (Galveston R. R. v. Cowdrey, 11 Wall. 459), but this would be far from saying that its representation was binding upon those who were in no way parties to it. Detroit Transportation Co. v. Assessors, 91 Mich. 382. The authorities relied upon by the plaintiff (Union Steamboat Co. v. Buffalo,82 N.Y. 351; Pelton v. Company, 37 Ohio St. 450) may to a large degree be distinguished from the present case by differences in the statutes. In so far as they hold that a corporation can locate a fictitious place of business and thereby conclude other parties, they run counter not only to the decided law of this state, but also to that of other jurisdictions. Detroit Transportation Co. v. Assessors, 91 Mich. 382; Milwaukee Steamship Co. v. Milwaukee, 83 Wis. 590.

It is not necessary to now decide whether a corporation doing a substantial part of its business in each of several towns may select any one of the towns as its situs. If under the statute there are difficulties which beset incorporators in the matter of rightly selecting the location of the corporation from the towns of the designated class (i.e., those where it is to do business), the difficulty cannot be legally solved by declaring its situs to be a town wholly outside the class prescribed by the statute.

Upon the facts agreed to in this case, the principal place of business of this corporation was in Sunapee. If it might have chosen to be a "resident" of either Newbury or New London, it did not do so. If these facts do not make it a resident of Sunapee, then it has no residence. In any permissible view of the case, the property was rightly taxed in Sunapee.

Petition dismissed.

All concurred. *499

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