Commonwealth v. Craddock-Terry Co.

105 S.E. 576, 129 Va. 62, 1921 Va. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 20, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 S.E. 576 (Commonwealth v. Craddock-Terry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Craddock-Terry Co., 105 S.E. 576, 129 Va. 62, 1921 Va. LEXIS 76 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered, the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by the State for the recovery of the taxes on capital alleged to have been omitted by the Craddock-Terry Company, as manufacturers of shoes, for the years 1903-1915, inclusive, and under the authority of chapter 45 of the Acts of Assembly of 1916, p. 729. There is no controversy as to the facts, and both litigants rely upon the same circumstances to justify their respective claims.

The Craddock-Terry Company, a corporation, commenced its business in the city of Lynchburg as a wholesale shoe merchant in the year 1898, purchasing all of its goods, from manufacturers and reselling the same as wholesale merchants to other dealers. Nearly fourteen years later, about the year 1901, the company commenced the business of manufacturing a portion of the shoes which it sold as a merchant. -It increased its business of manufacturing shoes and related goods rapidly, so that soon it manufactured the larger part of the merchandise which it also sold, as a wholesale merchant, and at the time this controversy arose the proportion of goods thus annually manufactured by it greatly exceeded the proportion bought by it for sale from other manufacturers.

The true amount of its capital invested in its manufacturing business, which is liable to the State . for an ad valorem tax, is to be determined. Its method was to treat the manufacturing business as separate in every respect from its mercantile business, there being different places of business, a separate organization and a different set of books for each branch of its business. For the State it is claimed that the goods so manufactured by the company and actually transferred from its factories to its mercantile establishment nevertheless continued to be capital of the [65]*65company invested in its manufacturing business and taxable as such until sold, whereas the company claims that when it thus delivered the manufactured goods to its mercantile establishment for sale, they became thereafter a part of their stock in trade as merchants, commingled with the goods which it bought from other manufacturers, and that therefore they no longer represented capital invested in the manufacturing business.

[1] The question thus raised must be determined by the true construction to be put upon certain taxing statutes. We are not authorized to determine what would be a good or better method of taxation, or whether the method prescribed by law affords to a manufacturer who is also engaged in the mercantile business an opportunity to reduce the gross amount of his taxes by such a method of conducting the several branches of his business,, but simply to inquire what the statutes require or permit, and in such an inquiry all fair doubts must be resolved in favor of the taxpayer, for no tax can be collected by the State except such as is authorized by law.

Having commenced business as wholesale merchants, the company has from the inception of its manufacturing business always claimed the right to allocate a certain part of its capital to the manufacturing branch, and has paid taxes upon the ad valorem basis upon the amount of its capital so allocated. This was not a bookkeeping method merely adopted by the company as a means of evading or’ reducing its tax obligations. It became necessaiy in order to comply with the taxing statutes, for while authorized to conduct both branches of business, that portion of its capital which was employed in manufacturing, was subjected to an ad valorem tax, while that employed in the mercantile business was not; so that the true amount of the capital thus employed in its manufacturing business could not have been determined unless this, or some other adequate method, had [66]*66been devised which would truthfully show the amount of its capital which was thus diverted from its mercantile business. This severance of capital was, however, not made in an accurate or proper way, for it appears that after this controversy arose, but before this suit was instituted, the company accepted the privilege afforded by the act of March 22, 1916 (Acts 1916, p. 826), amending section 508 of the Code, and voluntarily disclosed certain sums as omitted capital for the years referred to. These voluntary returns have been accepted as correct by the local board of review and by the trial court, which entered a decree adjudging, “that the capital of the defendant company invested in its manufacturing business is taxable on the valorem, basis, and that the method adopted by the local board of review in ascertaining the amount of the same for taxation for the year 1915, and also in ascertaining the amounts omitted from taxation for the years 1903 to 1914, inclusive, was ‘correct, and that there is no further liability on the defendant company for taxes on said Capital for said years,” and dismissed the bill. It is of this decree that the Commonwealth is here complaining.

As is well understood, the method of taxation of merchants in Virginia is different from the method of taxation of manufacturers. The merchants’ tax for many years has been and is at present a graduated license tax, based upon the gross amount of the purchases made by the merchant and reported to the taxing officials under oath, and such license tax is “in lieu of all taxes for State purposes on the capital actually employed in the business (tax bill, sec. 46, Acts 1915, p. 234), whereas the method of taxation of manufacturers is an ad valorem, tax imposed upon the amount of capital invested in that business not otherwise taxed (tax bill, schedule C, sec. 8, clause 3, Acts 1915, p. 161). Prior to the year 1915 the manufacturer was' liable to no other tax upon goods manufactured and sold [67]*67by him, so that up to 1915 the Craddock-Terry Company paid its license taxes as a merchant based only upon purchases made- by it from others. In 1915 the statute imposing merchants’ license taxes (tax bill, secs. 45, 46, Acts 1915, p. 233) was amended, and the change, together with the interpretation thereof by the Auditor of Public Accounts, is embodied in a circular referred to in the case of Commonwealth v. Armour & Co., 118 Va. 242, 87 S. E. 610, affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, Armour & Co. v. Virginia, 246 U. S. 1, 38 Sup. Ct. 267, 62 L. Ed. 547. The Auditor in 1916 also issued his circular of instructions following that decision, which is in this record and reads thus:

“A manufacturer engaged in business in this- State, who is taxed upon the capital employed in the business may, without a merchant’s license, sell at the place of manufacture, but nowhere else, except by sample, the goods, wares and merchandise manufactured by him and a non-resident manufacturer, establishing a place of manufacture in this State, and taxed by this- State on his capital employed in that business, would have the same privilege. If either a non-resident manufacturer or a resident manufacturer desires to sell the goods, wares and merchandise manufactured by him at a definite place or store other than the place of manufacture, then such manufacturer, either resident or non-resident, must, as aforesaid, take out a merchant’s license even though this definite place or store be located in the same city or town in which his place of manufacture is established.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.E. 576, 129 Va. 62, 1921 Va. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-craddock-terry-co-va-1921.