Chase Manhattan Bank (National Ass'n) v. Cantrell

1972 OK 8, 493 P.2d 424, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 385
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 25, 1972
DocketNo. 43782
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1972 OK 8 (Chase Manhattan Bank (National Ass'n) v. Cantrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase Manhattan Bank (National Ass'n) v. Cantrell, 1972 OK 8, 493 P.2d 424, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 385 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

DAVISON, Vice Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, sustaining a general demurrer of the defendant, the Treasurer of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, John F. Cantrell, to the petition, as amended, of plaintiffs, Chase Manhattan Bank, a National Banking Association, As Trustee, and others. The plaintiffs, other than Chase Manhattan Bank, are the purchasers of bonds issued by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company under the Eleventh Supplemental Indenture dated September 1, 1968, in the aggregate principal amount of $10,000,000, authorized, executed and delivered by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, hereinafter sometimes called the Company. This supplemental indenture was executed pursuant to the Original Indenture of Mortgage dated February 1, 1944, authorized, executed and delivered by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company to the Chase National Bank of the City of New York, as Trustee, to secure a maximum principal amount of bonds not to exceed $100,000,000 at any one time outstanding. The Chase Manhattan Bank is the corporate successor to Chase National Bank. Plaintiffs’ action is for the recovery of $10,000.00 alleged to have been illegally exacted as a real estate mortgage tax plaintiffs paid under protest to the Treasurer of Tulsa County on the Eleventh Supplemental Indenture. Reference to the parties will be made by their trial court designations.

Including the facts hereinabove set forth, the petition, as amended, alleged in substance that the original indenture of February 1, 1944, as well as the supplemental indenture, established a mortgage lien upon substantially all of the properties, real, personal and mixed, and franchises then owned or thereafter acquired by Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, a public service corporation within the meaning of 68 O.S.1961, § 2442 (Supp.1968). The petition, as amended, alleged further that subsequent to the issuance of $10,000,000 aggregate principal amount of bonds under its Tenth Supplemental Indenture of May 1, 1965, the Company had made additional capital investments in facilities subject to ad valorem taxation in the amount of $25,096,367 through the end of its fiscal year ended August 31, 1968; that under the terms of the original indenture bonds could be issued against $10,260,639 of this additional capital investment as of August 31, 1968, and the bonds issued under the Eleventh Supplemental Indenture dated as of September 1, 1968, were issued against and are secured by such property.

The petition, as amended, alleged also that the Company’s outstanding bank loans [426]*426had increased by $15,000,000 between August 31, 1965, and August 31, 1968, primarily as the result of continually increasing capital investment in facilities subject to ad valorem taxation and the funds derived from the sale of $10,000,000 aggregate principal amount of bonds secured by the Eleventh Supplemental Indenture have been and will be used to retire $10,000,000 in the aggregate, of the short term bank loans; that the short term bank loans made by the Company were not secured by any form of mortgage against the Company’s property.

The petition further alleges that two electric utilities in Oklahoma, Public Service Company of Oklahoma, and Oklahoma, Gas and Electric Company, who employ the same method of financing with bonds as Oklahoma Natural Gas Company by using the bond money to satisfy previously incurred short term indebtedness used to construct new properties subject to ad valorem taxation are not required by the County Treasurer of Tulsa County to pay a real estate mortgage tax and that to require plaintiffs to pay such tax, under such facts and other facts alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, as amended, violates the constitutional rights of plaintiffs under Article X, § 5, of the Oklahoma Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The Secretary of State refused to record and file the Eleventh Supplemental Indenture until either a real estate mortgage tax in the amount of $10,000.00 was paid or a County Treasurer determined that such tax was not payable. The County Treasurer refused to make a determination that such tax was not payable and the bond purchasers then concurrently paid the real estate mortgage tax through plaintiff, the Chase Manhattan Bank, as Trustee, to the Treasurer of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, in the amount of $10,000.00. Notice of intention to file suit to recover real estate mortgage tax payment was properly and timely given.

To determine whether the judgment or the trial court is correct, we must determine the meaning, as applied to Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, of the following proviso appearing as the last sentence in 68 O.S.1961, § 1908 (1968 Supp.):

“* * * Provided, however, that where a mortgage, or deed of trust, is executed to secure the payment of bonds issued by any domestic railroad, transportation, transmission or industrial corporation and the money derived from the sale of said bonds so secured by said mortgage, or deed of trust, is to be used for the creation, construction, building, improving and erecting of property that will be subject to an ad valorem tax in the county where same is situated, there shall be paid a recording fee on said mortgage, or deed of trust, so executed for recording said mortgage, or deed of trust, the sum of twenty-five cents for first folio and ten cents for each additional folio and fifty cents for indexing and recorder’s certificate instead of the fees designated in this Article, and on payment of same shall not be subject to the penalties prescribed in this Article.”

Under the quoted proviso, should the defendant have ruled that plaintiffs, as the holders of bonds issued by the Company and secured by a mortgage on the Company’s real property, are required to pay only the recording fee prescribed in the proviso and are not required to pay a larger tax for recording their real property mortgages, prescribed by 68 O.S.1961, § 1904 (1968) ? The defendant, the Tulsa County Treasurer, ruled in effect that plaintiffs are required to pay the larger tax prescribed by § 1904. The larger tax paid by plaintiffs under protest is being held by defendant separate and apart from all other taxes collected by him until a final determination of the question is made.

Plaintiffs qualify for the smaller fee prescribed in the proviso if under the facts, as alleged, it is legally correct to say (1) the Company’s mortgage or deed of trust was “executed to secure the payment [427]*427of bonds issued by any * * * railroad, transportation, transmission or industrial corporation;” (2) “the money derived from the sale of bonds so secured by said mortgage, or deed of trust, is to be used for the creation, construction, building, improving and erecting of property that will be subject to an ad valorem tax in the county where same is situated.” (emphasis supplied)

Plaintiffs contend in the alternative that the company, being a public utility corporation engaged in the purchase and sale of natural gas throughout the State of Oklahoma, is either a transportation, or a transmission or an industrial corporation. Plaintiffs contend further that if the company is not included within any of such classifications that to exclude it denies to it (1) the uniformity of treatment accorded by Article X, § 5, of the Oklahoma Constitution; (2) the equal protection of the laws guaranteed to it by the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

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Related

Opinion No. 72-148 (1972) Ag
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1972

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 8, 493 P.2d 424, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-manhattan-bank-national-assn-v-cantrell-okla-1972.