Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Corporation & Securities Commission

88 N.W.2d 564, 351 Mich. 652
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1958
DocketDocket 44, Calendar 47,064
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 N.W.2d 564 (Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Corporation & Securities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Corporation & Securities Commission, 88 N.W.2d 564, 351 Mich. 652 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

(dissenting). Plaintiff filed its 1952 annual report as a mining company and paid a franchise tax for that year in the sum of $51,558.55. Defendant commission found that there was a deficiency of $62,525. Plaintiff appealed to the corporation tax appeal board and a hearing was had before said hoard on December 12, 1955. Plaintiff, on leave granted by this Court, appeals from the board’s determination that there was a balance due on said tax of $62,677.59.

Plaintiff, an Ohio corporation, came into being on July 9, 1947, when the former, the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company, was consolidated with the Cliffs Corporation. In applying, as a foreign corporation, for the privilege of doing business in this State, plaintiff made the following sworn statement as to its purpose and the kind of business it would engage in:

“Mining, dealing in and transportation of iron ore, coal and other minerals and metals; smelting, refining and manufacturing all or any of such ores or minerals, including the manufacture of iron and steel and products produced or manufactured from cutting, selling and dealing in standing timber, lumber and the products thereof, or in connection therewith; the conduct of any business and the doing of any act or thing necessary or incidental thereto.”

Plaintiff was qualified as a foreign corporation to do business in 12 States, with 4 operating departments, consisting of iron ore, coal, lake transportation and land and lumber.

*658 The executive, principal accounting, general business and sales office of the plaintiff are located in Cleveland, Ohio, and plaintiff’s general business and affairs are conducted and controlled by its board of directors and officers functioning from said Ohio office. None of its directors or officers were residents in Michigan during the years 1951-1952.

Plaintiff operated an iron ore department in Cleveland which was under the charge of a vice-president of its company. Local mine offices were established at Ispheming, Michigan, and at Iiibbing, Minnesota.

During 1951 and 1952 plaintiff operated a fleet of 23 boats transporting coal from Illinois ports on Lake Michigan and Lake Erie ports outside of Michigan to ports in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Canada and, also, transported iron ore, grain and' stone from ports in Canada, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan to lower lake ports in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio, New York and Detroit, Michigan. The coal handled, purchased and sold by Cleveland-Cliffs furnished much of the upbound lake cargo for these vessels, and the iron ore mined or purchased hy it in Michigan and Minnesota, or purchased by it in Canada, furnished much of the downbound lake cargo for these vessels.

Total shipments of iron ore produced by mines owned or managed by plaintiff amounted to 9,532,939 tons in 1951 and 7,908,320 tons in 1952. In both years approximately 50% was produced from Michigan mines.

Fifty-five % of plaintiff’s total sales of iron ore during 1951, and 52% of its total sales for 1952, were made to 5 purchasing customers, namely: Republic Steel Corporation; Jones feLaughlin Steel Corporation ; Wheeling Steel Corporation; Inland Steel Company; and Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company.

*659 Plaintiff’s ownership of stock in the companies and corporations listed in the paragraph above (and 1 other corporation), during the period from December 31, 1951, to June 30, 1952, was as follows: Follansbee Steel Corporation of Delaware 15 common shares; Inland Steel Company of Delaware 270,-200 common shares; Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation of Pennsylvania 155,918 common shares; Bepublic Steel Corporation of New Jersey 307,214 common shares; Wheeling Steel Corporation of Delaware 77,600 common shares; Youngstown Sheet •& Tube Company of Ohio 185,500 common shares; and 2,891 preferred shares of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation. These stocks were owned, kept and managed as a portfolio of corporate securities and stocks by plaintiff in its Cleveland office.

During the year 1951 Cleveland-Cliffs sold 34,000 shares of Bepublic Steel Corporation; 7,500 shares of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company; 10,300 shares of Inland Steel Company; 100 shares of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation preferred; and rights with respect to 77,600 shares of Wheeling Steel Corporation common to purchase convertible debentures.

During the year 1952 Cleveland-Cliffs sold 18,-100 shares of stock of Bepublic Steel Corporation; 5,000 shares of stock of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company; and rights with respect to 270,200 shares of Inland Steel Company to purchase convertible debentures.

The main question presented is whether the steel stocks above referred to should have been excluded by the commission in the computation of plaintiff’s 1952 franchise fee, and on this point the corporation tax appeal board made the following finding of fact:

“That the appellant has an investment portfolio which consists of substantial holdings in steel stocks; * * * that the appellant’s investment portfolio, *660 including its investments in steel stocks for the-period in question, was used generally in the appellant’s business, including the business activities of the appellant carried on within the State of Michigan ; that the record is void of any proof of disassociation of appellant’s steel stocks from its business-activities in Michigan, with the exception that in the-opinion of one of appellant’s officers it was not necessary to own the steel stocks for proper disposal of its iron ore in 1951 and 1952, although historically the ownership of steel stocks has been a factor in the-sale of iron ore.”

The record refutes any claim that plaintiff’s ownership of stock in the companies and corporations listed above was necessary to provide a market for plaintiff for the sale of iron ore, as the year in question (1951-1952) was a seller’s rather than a purchaser’s market, and there was a shortage of iron ore.

The stipulation of facts agreed to by plaintiff and defendant contains the following statement in regard to these steel stocks:

“Cleveland-Cliffs owned, kept and managed at its Cleveland offices a portfolio of corporate securities, a portion of which, consisting of stocks of steel companies (all of which are corporations foreign to-Michigan) is listed on exhibit A to exhibit 7 attached to the appeal in this case, which exhibit A is made a part hereof. All records with respect to these securities were kept in Cleveland, and the exercise of voting rights and all other rights under and incidental to-these securities was determined by the directors and proper officers of the company acting at the Cleveland office. Respective certificates evidencing these-corporate securities were kept in Cleveland. They were not mortgaged or hypothecated or pledged during the periods in question nor at any time since-July 9, 1947. All dividends paid on such securities. *661 were paid to Cleveland-Cliffs at its Cleveland offices.”

The 1952 dividends on the steel stocks amounted to $3,106,963.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.W.2d 564, 351 Mich. 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-cliffs-iron-co-v-corporation-securities-commission-mich-1958.