Bailey v. Railroad Co.

106 U.S. 109, 1 S. Ct. 62, 27 L. Ed. 81, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1520
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 18, 1882
Docket27
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 109 (Bailey v. Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Railroad Co., 106 U.S. 109, 1 S. Ct. 62, 27 L. Ed. 81, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1520 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

On Dec. 19, 1868, the New York Central Railroad Company, afterwards merged by consolidation into a new corporation, known as the New York Central .and Hudson River Railroad Company, the defendant in error, adopted a preamble, resolutions, and certificate, of which the following is a copy: —

“ Whereas this company has hitherto expended of its earnings for the purpose of constructing and equipping its road, and in the •purchase of real estate and other properties, with a view to the increase of its traffic, moneys equal in amount to eighty per cent of the Capital stock of the company; and whereas the several stockholders of the company are entitled to evidence of such expenditure, and to reimbursement of the same at some convenient future period: Now, therefore, —
Resolved, That a certificate, signed by the president and treasurer of this company, he issued to the stockholders severally, de *110 daring that such stockholder is entitled to eighty per cent of the amount of the capital stock held by him, payable ratably with the other certificates issued under this resolution, at the option of the company, out of its future earnings, with dividen thereon at the same rates and times-as dividends shall be paid on the shares of the capital stock of the company, and that such certificates may be, at the option of the company, convertible into Stock of the company whenever the company shall be authorized to increase its capital stock to an amount sufficient for such conversion.
Resolved, That such certificates be delivered to the stockholders of this company at the Union Trust Company, in the city of New York,’on the presentation of their several certificates of stock, and that the receipt of the certificate provided for in these resolutions shall be indorsed on the stock certificate.”

The certificate issued under this authority is as follows : —

Under a resolution of the board of directors of this company, passed December 19, 1868, of .which the above is a copy, the New York Central Railroad Company hereby certifies that , being the holder of shares of the capital stock of said company, is entitled, to dollars, payable ratably with the other certificates issued under said resolution, at the pleasure of the company, out of its future earnings, with dividends thereon at the same rates and times as dividends shall be paid upon the shares of the capital stock of said company.
“ This certificate may be transferred on the books of the company on the surrender of this certificate.
“ In witness whereof the said company has caused this certificate to be signed by its president and treasurer, this nineteenth day of December, 1868.”

The resolution was carried into effect by an issue of the contemplated certificates to the amount of $28,086,000, —being eighty'per cent of its authorized capital of $28,795,000; and the holders of them regularly received dividends equal to those declared and paid upon the capital stock, until the certificates were redeemed at par in the stock of the consolidated corporation, as then authorized by law. This consolidation took place in-1872.

On March 3, 1870, the proper officer of the internal revenue assessed a tax of five per cent upon the amount of these certifi-. *111 cates, being $1,151,800, and added a penalty1 of $1,000,_ under sect. 122 of the act of June 30, 1864, c. 173. 13 Stat. 223, 284.

From this assessment the company appealed successively'to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Secretary of the Treasury. Upon the appeal, a decision was rendered reducing the assessment to the sum of $460,720.

This decision was based upon the ground that the issue of the certificates was a scrip dividend, within the meaning of sect. 122 of the act of 1864; but that as it had been made to appear that the earnings stated in the resolution to have been expended, accrued during the entire period of fifteen years, —r from 1853 to 1868, — of which only six years were covered by the income-tax law, which first took, effect in September, 1862, the tax should be apportioned pro rata, by remitting nine-fifteenths, and assessing it upon $9,214,400, which was assumed to be the amount of earnings during the period when they were subject to the tax. The assessment' of $460,720, with a penalty of five per cent, being $23,036, and interest at the rate of one per cent per month, amounting to $64,153.48, were exacted by the collector; and paid under protest.

■ To recover back these sums as illegally exacted, the company brought this action against Bailey, the collector of internal revenue, who had collected them.

On the first trial of the case, the' court charged that the assessment was wholly illegal and void, the certificates not being a scrip dividend within the meaning of the law, and furnishing no basis for the assessment of any tax whatever, and that consequently the verdict must be for the plaintiff. There was a verdict accordingly, and the judgment thereon was, upon a writ of error, reversed, and a new trial awarded by this court, in the decision reported in 22 Wall. 604. The second trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the company, for $499,432.68. To reverse the judgment Bailey brought this writ of error.

The principal questions presented arise upon his exceptions to the charge to the jury, and to the refusal to give certain instructions as requested.

The substance of the charge upon the main point was, that *112 while the certificates constituted a scrip dividend, which justified the assessment and constituted a complete prima facie defence to the action, nevertheless it was competent for the plaintiff to show what amount of the earnings of the company, accruing from Sept. 1, 18G2, to Dec. 19, 1868, was represented by, and included in, the certificates, and that this amount alone being subject to the tax, the plaintiff was entitled'to recover all which in excess thereof had been exacted and paid. The opposing proposition of the defendant below, the request to give which as a charge to the jury was refused, was, that the certificates were conclusive upon the company of the amount of a scrip dividend subject to taxation without deduction.

The counsel for the plaintiff in error now contend that their position is established by the decision in 22 Wall. 604, to which we have already referred.

The actual and precise judgment upon the former writ of error is, however, completely satisfied by the charge of the Circuit Court now in question; for the ruling on the first trial, held to be erroneous, was that the certificates constituted no basis whatever for taxation as a scrip dividend, and were not to be admitted or considered even as a prima facie defence to the action. The reversal at that time' did not and could not, upon the record then presented, anticipate and prejudge the question now raised, whether those certificates were conclusive as to the amount of the taxable earnings represented by them.

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Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 109, 1 S. Ct. 62, 27 L. Ed. 81, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-railroad-co-scotus-1882.