Clark v. International Harvester Co.

115 S.W.2d 1022, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 1938
DocketNo. 8704.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 1022 (Clark v. International Harvester Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. International Harvester Co., 115 S.W.2d 1022, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 510 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

A very able motion for rehearing filed by the Attorney General and an exhaustive argument in support thereof filed by the franchise tax attorney for the Secretary of State have convinced us that our original disposition of this appeal was wrong. To avoid confusion and unnecessarily encumbering the official reports, we have concluded to withdraw our original opinion herein and to substitute this opinion in lieu thereof.

Suit was by the International Harvester Company, a foreign corporation, holding a permit to do business in Texas, against the Secretary of State, the State Treasurer, and the Attorney General, to recover $2,131.62 paid to the Secretary of State under protest and by him placed in a suspense account as provided by law in such cases. The sum involved was the amount demanded of appellee as penalties for alleged failure by it to pay, when due, its franchise taxes covering the calendar year 1936, and in addition the period from January 1, 1937, to May 1, 1937. From a judgment in a trial to the court without a jury in favor of appellee, the defendants, hereinafter for convenience designated as the state, have appealed. The questions involved present an interpretation of the franchise tax laws, chapter 3, title 122, R.S.1925, as amended, Vernon’:7 Ann.Civ. St. art. 7084 et seq., relating to foreign corporations when first obtaining permits to do business in this state.

The following material facts appear: Appellee was granted a permit on December 31, 1935, by the Secretary of State to do business in Texas. On March 15, 1937, it filed with the Secretary of State its first franchise tax return, but did not pay nor tender its franchise tax covering the period above noted. The Secretary of State did not acknowledge receipt of this return. On April 9, 1937, the Secretary of State notified appellee of the amount of the tax due by it, and that a 25 per cent penalty had been assessed against it (the amount here involved), under the law, for failure to pay its franchise tax when due. Thereafter, and prior to May 1, 1937, appellee. paid the tax levied, and the penalty under protest, which, as above stated, was deposited in a suspense account, the recovery of which appellee was awarded by the trial court.

• In the R.S. of 1925, art. 7084 levied a ■ franchise tax on domestic corporations and a separate article 7085 levied such franchise tax on foreign corporations granted permits to do business in Texas. In both cases such corporations were required to pay such taxes in advance on or before May 1st of each year. But as to foreign corporations granted a permit to do business in Texas, which had not theretofore done any business in this state, said article 7085 provided that “the franchise tax herein provided shall not be payable until the end of one year from the date of such permit.” This provision was manifestly necessary because the amount of the tax was in part made dependent upon the ratio that such corporation’s Texas business bore to its business done throughout the United States during this period, a matter that could not be ascertained until the end of the first year period. And article 7089, R.S.1925, provided that such corporation should file its first report with the Secretary of State “at the end of one year from the date of such permit.”

In 1930, Acts 5th Called Sess. c. 68, p. 220, the Legislature repealed articles 7088 *1024 and 7090, R.S.1925, consolidated into one article and amended articles 7084 and 7085, and amended article 7089; and again amended these articles in 1931, Acts 1931, c. 265, p. 441, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Arts. 7084, 7089. The latter amendment made no material changes in the 1930 amendments, so far as the issues here involved are concerned, and the 1931 amendment is the statute governing this controversy. This statute as amended, article 7084, requires the payment in advance .by every corporation, whether foreign or domestic, on or before May 1st of each year, of its franchise tax for the year following; but also provides that: “Where a foreign corporation applying for a permit has theretofore done no business' in Texas, such tax shall not be payable until the end of one year from the date of such permit, at which time the tax shall be computed according to first year’s business; and, at the same time, such corporation shall also pay its tax in advance, based upon the first year’s business, for the period from the end of the first year to and including May 1st following.”

Article 7089, which as enacted in the 1925 Revision required such first year foreign corporations, under penalty for failure or refusal to do so, to file their first year reports with the Secretary of State “at the end of one year from the daté of such permit” was amended in 1930 and also in 1931, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 7089, so as to provide that such corporation “shall file its first report as of the end of one year from the day such permit was granted, within ninety (90) days of such date.”

The Secretary of State interpreted these statutes to mean that as to such first year foreign corporations doing business in Texas, the 1925 R.S. statutes made such tax and report due at the end of the first year, but that the 1931 amendment to article 7089, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 7089, extended that period for a maximum of ninety days thereafter, prepared his forms and instructions for making such reports accordingly, and has held such corporations failing to pay such tax within ninety days of the end of such year subject to the penalty of 25 per cent under article 7091, which provides in part as follows: “Any corporation, either domestic or foreign, which shall fail to pay any franchise tax provided for in this chapter when the same shall become due and payable under the provisions of this chapter” shall be subject to a 25% penalty.

Article 7092 provides that the Secretary of State during the month of May of each year shall notify all corporations, both foreign and domestic, which have failed to pay such franchise tax “on or before the first day of May,” that unless such tax and penalty be paid before the -1st day of July following, their right to do business in Texas will be forfeited; and provides the method by which such right may be revived, etc.

Appellee contends that in the light of all these provisions, May 1st is the only definite date fixed by the statutes as a “dead line” for delinquencies; and that, consequently its failure to pay its tax did not incur the statutory penalty until the May 1st next following the end of its first fifteen months of business in Texas, that is, the May 1st following the end of the first year of its permit, plus the additional ninety days granted by the amended statute in which to make its first report.

At the request of the state the trial court filed his conclusions of law as follows:

“1. I conclude as a matter of law that, at the time plaintiff tendered its tax to. the Secretary of State on April 16, 1937, and at the time it paid said tax on April 30, 1937, the penalty provided by Article 7091 had not attached.
“2. While it is difficult to arrive at the exact meaning of the pertinent statutes, I conclude as a matter of law that the tax due by plaintiff in this case for its first year’s operations and for the period from the end of the first year to and including May 1st following did not become delinquent until May 1, 1937.

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115 S.W.2d 1022, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-international-harvester-co-texapp-1938.