Commonwealth of Virginia v. J. Archie Cannon, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Miller Motor Line of North Carolina, Inc.

228 F.2d 313, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4396
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1955
Docket7063_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 228 F.2d 313 (Commonwealth of Virginia v. J. Archie Cannon, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Miller Motor Line of North Carolina, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Virginia v. J. Archie Cannon, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Miller Motor Line of North Carolina, Inc., 228 F.2d 313, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4396 (4th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from an order disallowing a claim in the reorganization proceedings in bankruptcy of the Miller Motor Line of North Carolina, Inc. The claimant is the Commonwealth of Virginia, which has asserted a claim in the sum of $10,799.27 for gross receipts road tax alleged to be due under the Virginia statute by the debtor, Miller Motor Line of North Carolina, for operation of trucks on the roads of Virginia for the period between January 1, 1951 and June 30, 1953. The trustee relying upon reciprocity arrangements in effect between Virginia and North Carolina during the period in question denies liability of the debtor for the claim thus asserted.

The debtor is a North Carolina corporation, having its principal place of business in North Carolina and operating trucks in interstate commerce, a portion of this operation being over roads of Virginia. The State of North Carolina, during the tax period here involved and for several years prior thereto, consistently followed a reciprocity policy by which it exempted from gross receipts taxes motor carriers of various states operating into or through North Carolina including motor carriers of Virginia. Under authority granted by the General Assembly of Virginia, Code'of Virginia of 1950, § 46-22, Governors of Virginia, acting upon recommendations of the reciprocity Board created by that legislation, on October 28, 1949 and January 22, 1952 issued proclamations extending reciprocity to all out of state motor carriers of freight operating interstate in or through Virginia provided their respective home states reciprocated by refraining from imposing like taxes on Virginia carriers. On June 25, 1952, a reciprocity proclamation was issued by the Governor pursuant to the statute revoking all prior reciprocity agreements covering the gross receipts road tax and providing for reciprocity commencing July 1, 1952, with certain exceptions, one of which, being the one here relied on, relates to operations by corporations the majority of whose stock is owned by citizens of Virginia. The pertinent portion of the exception is as follows:

“Provided, however, that reciprocity is not granted in the following cases and does not apply to:
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“(b) Revenue derived from the transportation of property by any motor vehicle, tractor, trailer or semi-trailer required to be registered and licensed in Virginia, or which is owned, in whole or in part, by a citizen of Virginia, or which is owned by a corporation incorporated in Virginia, or which is owned by a corporation a majority of whose stock is owned by citizens of Vir *315 ginia. Except that reciprocity-granted in the case of pick-up or delivery movements of property in interstate commerce by means of vehicles registered and licensed in Virginia, if the vehicles are owned and operated by the out-of-state carrier who transports the property into or out of Virginia, and if the carrier makes no separate charges for the pickup or delivery service.”

It will be noted that this proviso became operative July 1, 1952. At that time all of the stock of debtor was owned by a Virginia corporation, which sometime prior thereto had been operating as a carrier but which had then ceased such operation and was engaging in no business. 1 The stock of the Virginia corporation was owned in its entirety by one W. T. Miller who was not a citizen of Virginia but of North Carolina. Later, the debtor and the Virginia corporation carried through a reorganization which became effective June 30, 1953 as the result of which debtor acquired all the assets of the Virginia corporation and assumed its liabilities issuing its own stock to Miller.

In as much as the State of North Carolina was exempting Virginia carriers from the gross receipts road tax, there can be no question but that debtor was exempted from the Virginia tax under the express terms of the Virginia reciprocity proclamations in effect up until June 30, 1952. It is true that W. T. Miller, the owner of the stock of the Virginia corporation, who acquired it on February 3, 1951, was a citizen of Virginia from that date to July 1, 1951, when he became a citizen of Georgia, of which state he remained a citizen until July 1, 1952, when he became a citizen of North Carolina; and it is argued that during the period between February 3, 1951 and July 1, 1951, the ownership of stock in the Virginia corporation was in a citizen of Virginia, that the exception above quoted from the proclamation of May 25, 1952, was a mere embodiment of the policy theretofore followed by the state and that tax would be due at least for this period. The answer is that we must look to the proclamations of the Governors to determine what the policy of the state was, that these have the effect of statutory enactments, and that until the proclamation of May 25, 1952, which became operative July 1, 1952, they contain no such exception.

The only question worthy of consideration, therefore, is whether the ownership of debtor’s stock by the Virginia corporation after July 1, 1952, brings it within the terms of the exception contained in the proviso above quoted. We think it clear, however, that this question should be answered in the negative. While corporations are to be treated as citizens for some purposes, it is not reasonable to suppose that it was intended by the proclamation here under consideration that a foreign corporation which was in reality owned by a citizen of the foreign state of incorporation should be exempted from its provisions merely because a company holding the stock of such corporation happened to have been incorporated in Virginia. The policy embodied in the exception was to tax “hauling in Virginia, by vehicles belonging to Virginia owners”, 2 not to deny the benefits of reciprocity to a bona fide foreign corporation owned by non-residents. It is na *316 answer to this to say,that the stock of the foreign corporation was in fact owned by the Virginia corporation, since the latter was nothing more than a holding company for the stockholder who was a non-resident. This is m accord with the policy embodied in reciprocity, which, to use the language of Mr. Justice Sprat-ley in Atlantic & Danville Ry. Co. v. Hooker, 194 Va. 496, 74 S.E.2d 270, 280, is “the policy of allowing residents of other states the free use of roads of Virginia when the home states of such nonresidents allow the free use of their roads to residents of Virginia”.

In Baggett Transportation Company, Inc., v. Commonwealth, 195 Va. 359, 78 S.E.2d 702, 706, it was held that an Alabama corporation operating vehicles leased from one Toone, a citizen of Virginia, was not entitled to the reciprocity exemption with respect to such vehicles. In dealing with the policy embodied in the reciprocity agreement, Chief Justice Hudgins speaking for the court said:

“Commissioner Ralph T. Catterall, the draftsman of the above agreement, testified in that case, and in stating the purpose of the re-draft said:

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Bluebook (online)
228 F.2d 313, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-virginia-v-j-archie-cannon-trustee-in-bankruptcy-for-ca4-1955.