Albert Pick & Co. v. Jordan

145 P. 506, 169 Cal. 1, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 273
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6392.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 145 P. 506 (Albert Pick & Co. v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert Pick & Co. v. Jordan, 145 P. 506, 169 Cal. 1, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 273 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Petitioner is a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Illinois, for the purpose of manufacturing and selling and generally dealing in china, glassware, pottery, restaurant supplies, and other merchandise. It manufactures none of the enumerated articles in the state of California. However, as it avers, in its petition, it has for a long time been engaged in interstate commerce in these goods and wares between the state of Illinois, the state of California, and other states of the United States. It maintains a branch office and place of business in the city and county of San Francisco, and sells its goods, wares, and merchandise in the city and county of San Francisco and in other states of the United States, and ships its goods, wares, and merchandise from the state of Illinois into the state of California *3 and into other states, and from the state of California into other states. It has tendered to the secretary of state for filing a certified copy of its articles of incorporation with other appropriate papers required by the laws of the state, and the secretary of state has refused to file the same excepting upon prepayment of the fee fixed by section 416 of the Political Code (now 409, Pol. Code), and the fee prescribed by section 2 of the act relating to revenue and taxation providing for a license-tax on corporations. (Stats. 1905, p. 493.) Petitioner, refusing to pay the fees, made application to the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco for mandate against the secretary of state directing him to file these papers without payment of the fee exacted by the terms of subdivision 4 of section 409 above cited and the corporation license-tax of 1905.

The secretary of state answered, setting forth that the petitioner, besides the conduct of interstate commerce in which it is admittedly engaged, transacts 11 a large volume of intrastate business within the state of California; that said intrastate business forms no part of and is neither inextricably nor necessarily connected with the interstate business of said company, and respondent further alleges that its said interstate business is nowise dependent upon the aforesaid intrastate business of said company; that the authorized capital stock of said company amounts to one million dollars.” A general demurrer to this answer was interposed and sustained, and the trial court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, wherein it declared in accordance with the allegations of the petition and awarded the mandate prayed for. The secretary of state has appealed from this judgment.

Upon this appeal we are asked to distinguish this case from that of Mulford Co. v. Curry, 163 Cal. 276, [125 Pac. 236], where this court, in the matter of the exaction of taxes or fees upon corporations engaged in interstate commerce, sought (though perhaps in vain) to determine the underlying principles and to follow the rulings of the supreme court of the United States enunciated1 in that series of cases, beginning with Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kansas, 216 U. S. 1, [54 L. Ed. 355, 30 Sup. Ct. Rep. 190]. We are asked to do this because of the new light which it is said has been shed upon the legal questions involved by the cases of Baltic Mining Co. and S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Co. v. Common *4 wealth of Massachusetts, decided by the supreme court of the United States, and reported in 231 U. S. 68, [58 L. Ed. 127, 34 Sup. Ct. Rep. 15].

In Mulford Co. v. Curry this court expressed the reluctance it felt over the necessity of applying the principles of the Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kansas and the other like cases to the fiscal and revenue laws of the state. It did so under the compulsion of its oath to uphold the constitution and laws of the United States as expounded by its highest judicial tribunal. If we were in error in our understanding of the law, if the supreme court of the United States has latterly thrown new light upon its own exposition of the law, or if it has receded from any of the views which it has expressed in the earlier cases, it is for this court to remodel its own decisions in swift conformity therewith.

It becomes necessary, therefore, even at the peril of prolixity, to set forth the understanding which this court had, and which in Mulford Co. v. Curry it expressed, of the legal principles enunciated and the legal controversies decided in that series of cases beginning with the Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kansas. By the law of Kansas every foreign corporation “seeking to do business in this state” was required to file a copy of its charter or of its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state, and, when so filing, to “pay to the state treasurer of Kansas, for the benefit of the permanent school fund, a charter fee of one-tenth of one per cent of its authorized capital upon the first $100,000 of its capital stock or any part thereof, and upon the next $400,000 or any part thereof one-twentieth of one per cent; and for each million or major part thereof over and above the sum of $500,000, $200.” The Western Union Telegraph Company, a New York corporation, was conducting business in the state of Kansas. That business was both interstate, involving the reception within the state of messages from points outside of the state, and, conversely, the sending of messages from points within the state to- points outside the state, and intrastate or domestic, consisting of the sending and reception of messages between different points wholly within the state. It refused to make the filing and pay the fee prescribed by the Kansas statute, and the state brought its action in one of its own courts against the company, seeking to oust and restrain it from doing any domestic business within the state, such being one of the penalties by the laws of Kansas *5 prescribed. The state court rendered its decree of ouster and restraint as prayed for. The cause was transferred under writ of error to the supreme court of the "United States, and there decided by a sharply divided court upon an elaborate opinion handed down by Mr. Justice Harlan. The Western Union Telegraph Company was capitalized for one hundred million dollars. The “charter fee” (such is the description of the fee used by the state of Kansas) in the case of the Western Union Telegraph Company amounted to twenty thousand one hundred dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P. 506, 169 Cal. 1, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-pick-co-v-jordan-cal-1914.