American Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Everett
This text of 152 A.2d 295 (American Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY, a corporation of the State of New York, Plaintiff,
v.
Annabelle EVERETT, Individually and as State Treasurer of the State of Delaware, Defendant.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.
*296 William S. Potter and James L. Latchum (of Berl, Potter & Anderson) Wilmington, for plaintiff.
Wilfred J. Smith, Jr., former Deputy Atty. Gen., for defendant.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
Plaintiff, a New York corporation with its principal office in New York, N. Y., engages in the business of transmitting telephone messages[1] not only from state to state throughout the United States but also throughout most of the world in conjunction with its associates in the Bell Telephone System. Part of this business is the transmitting of telephone conversations into, from and through the State of Delaware.
The State Treasurer of Delaware has declined to honor plaintiff's protest that it is not subject to a State tax imposed under the terms of § 4102 of Title 30 Del. C. upon every person "* * * engaged in the telephonic business and owning, leasing, controlling or operating any line or lines of wire in * * *" Delaware, and defendant having threatened to distrain upon plaintiff's property in Delaware, this suit was filed for a judgment to the effect that such tax cannot be validly applied to plaintiff's business and property in Delaware. The complaint alleges that the imposition of such tax in plaintiff's case would burden an essentially interstate business in violation of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution of the United States, art. 1, § 8, cl. 3. Plaintiff contends that the tax sought to be assessed being a privilege rather than a property tax cannot be lawfully imposed on plaintiff's Delaware occupation of transmitting messages in interstate commerce.
Section 4102 of Title 30, Del.C. provides as follows:
"(a) Every individual, association of persons, firm or corporation engaged in the telephonic business and owning, leasing, controlling or operating any line or lines of wire in this State, which such individual, association, firm or corporation, or any other person or party, uses, or is entitled to use, either for the transmission of telephonic messages from any place in another State across any portion of this State to a place in another state, or for the transmission of telephonic messages between any two places wheresoever, shall be subject to taxation for the use of the State, in the manner prescribed in this section.
"(b) Each such individual, association, firm, or corporation, shall annually on the first day of July, pay to the State Treasurer for the use of the State, a tax of 60 cents per mile of wire for the longest wire within this State, a tax of 30 cents per mile of wire for the next longest wire within *297 this State, and 20 cents per mile of wire for each and every other wire within this State, owned, leased, controlled or operated by such individual, association, firm or corporation on the first day of June then last past, and which such individual, association, firm or corporation, or any other person or party, then used or was entitled to use, either for the transmission of telephonic messages from any place in another State across any portion of this State to a place in another State, or for the transmission of telephonic messages between any two places wheresoever; and shall also pay a further tax to the State Treasurer for the use of the State of 25 cents upon each and every telephonic transmitter in this State furnished or rented to any person or party whomsoever by such individual, association, firm or corporation.
"(c) Every individual, association of persons, firm or corporation engaged in the telephonic business and owning, leasing, controlling or operating any line or lines of wire as set forth in this chapter, shall annually on or before the first day of June, make and deliver to the State Treasurer a statement in writing verified by the oath or affirmation of such individual, or of one of the members of such firm, or the president, general manager or treasurer of such association or corporation, showing the total number of telephonic transmitters used in this State on the first day of May then last past and which telephonic transmitters were furnished or rented by said individual, association, firm or corporation, to any person or party for telephonic purposes, and also showing the number of miles of wire owned, leased, controlled or operated by said individual, association, firm, or corporation within this State on the first day of May then last past, which such individual, association, firm or corporation, or any other person or party then used or was entitled to use either for the transmission of telephonic messages, from any place in another State across any portion of this State to a place in another State, or for the transmission of telephonic messages between any two places wheresoever, and designating the length and location of the longest and of each and every other wire."
Defendant acknowledges that plaintiff's business in Delaware is essentially that of transmitting messages in interstate commerce and concedes that if the tax in question is in fact a privilege tax assessed against the operation of plaintiff's Delaware business, namely that of relaying telephone conversations into and out of as well as through Delaware, and not a property tax, it may not be lawfully collected from plaintiff. Both parties have moved for summary judgment.
Plaintiff is the parent corporation in a national system of associated operating companies, which local companies individually own and operate intrastate telephone systems within their respective territorial limits. In Delaware, such an intrastate business is carried on by an associated company known as the Diamond State Telephone Company. Plaintiff also owns or controls a number of other companies which either manufacture or own materials used in the telephone business, one of which companies is plaintiff's wholely owned subsidiary, American Telephone and Telegraph Company of Delaware, which owns practically all of the lines used by plaintiff within Delaware. This Delaware corporation has no income. However, its property in Delaware is assessed and taxed under applicable property taxes, including those of municipal corporations, which taxes, as well as such corporation's other obligations, are paid by plaintiff.
Plaintiff itself on the other hand maintains no office in Delaware, has no officers or employees regularly on duty in *298 the State, has not qualified to do business within the State, and does none[2] except that of sending messages into the State and carrying messages out of the State or through the State to their ultimate destination elsewhere. Plaintiff's rates are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, and no regulatory or judicial authority of Delaware has been concerned with such rates. When a telephone message originates or terminates in Delaware, the Diamond State Telephone Company receives or delivers the call, plaintiff merely furnishing the means for carrying such message from or into the State.
In the light of these facts, which are not disputed by defendant, the matter to be decided is whether or not the tax in question partakes of the nature of a property tax or the like.
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152 A.2d 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-telephone-and-telegraph-co-v-everett-delch-1959.