Flowers v. Texas Mexican Ry. Co.

174 S.W.2d 70, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 28, 1943
DocketNo. 9380.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 70 (Flowers v. Texas Mexican Ry. 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
Flowers v. Texas Mexican Ry. Co., 174 S.W.2d 70, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 543 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

McClendon, chief justice.

Suit brought under Art. 7057b, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., by two railroad corporations — ■ Tex-Mex (Texas Mexican Railway Company) and Southern (San Antonio Southern Railway Company) — against certain state officials (Secretary of State, Attorney General, Treasurer and Comptroller), to recover corporation franchise taxes for the year 1939 demanded by the Secretary of State under Art. 7084, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St., as amended by 1930 Laws, 5th Called Sess., p. 220, Ch. 68, § 2, and paid under protest. The amount sued for is that arrived at by computation under Sec. (D) less that so arrived at under Sec. (B) of Art. 7084; the railroads, on the one hand, contending that they are ‘‘corporations which are now (1930) required to pay annually a tax upon intangible assets,” and therefore ’ Sec. (B) applies; and the defendant officials, on the other hand, contending that they are not such corporations, since they were not assessed and did not pay any intangible assets tax for the year 1939, and therefore Sec. (D) applies. In a trial to the court the railroads recovered the amount sued' for. The officials have appealed.

The facts are not in dispute. The proper interpretation of the pertinent sections of Art. 7084 is the sole question the appeal presents. These sections (substantially stated, except where quoted) follow:

*71 (A) prescribed a graduated tax upon all corporations, domestic and foreign (with stated exceptions) based upon the amount of their capital stock.

“(B) Corporations which are now required by law to pay annually a tax upon intangible assets, corporations owning or operating street railways in or upon the public streets of any town or city, and corporations organized to maintain or owning or operating electric interurban railways, shall be required to hereafter pay a franchise tax equal to one-fifth (1/5) of the franchise tax herein imposed against all other corporations under Section (A) herein.”

(C) exempted certain terminal companies not here involved.

“(D) Except as provided in preceding Clauses (B) and (C) all public utility corporations, which shall include every such corporation engaged solely in the business of a public utility whose rates or service is regulated, or subject to regulation in whole or in part, by law, shall pay a franchise tax as provided in this Act, except the same shall be based on that proportion of the issued and outstanding capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits, which the gross receipts of the business of said corporation done in this State bears to its total gross receipts, instead of the gross assets; and in lieu of the rate hereinbefore prescribed said tax shall be computed as follows:” (Here follow rates in some respects less than those in Sec. A.)

The respective contentions of the parties may be thus summarized:

Those of the railroads: Sec. B designates three classes of corporations falling within its purview: (1) Those (now — 1930) required by law to pay annually a tax on intangible assets; (2) certain street railway corporations; and (3) electric interurban railway corporations. The only statutory provision then requiring the assessment and payment of taxes on intangible assets, as such, was the Act of 1905, c. 146, p. 351 (as amended by Acts 1907, 1st C.S., c. 17, p.' 469), present Art. 7105, R.C.S., known as the Intangible Assets Act, which expressly included railroad corporations. The word “now” relates to 1930, the effective date of the Act (this is conceded), and therefore alludes to the classes of corporations which were then “required by law” to pay such tax “annually.” This embraces all corporations then enumerated in Art. 7105, whether or not such taxes were actually assessed and paid. This for two reasons: First, because that is the natural and obvious meaning of the language of the statute. It is to be noted, in this connection, that to apply it only to corporations against which such taxes were then assessed would exclude corporations not then assessed, but assessed in subsequent years, and would also exclude corporations of the classes named which were not then in existence but were thereafter chartered. Second, because such interpretation would render the statute unenforceable, for the reason that the franchise tax is required to be paid on or before May 1st of each year, and under the intangible tax act that assessment could not be made until some time after May 31st of each year. It could not therefore be known on May 1st, the date of required payment of the franchise tax, whether any intangible tax would be assessed for that year against the corporation required to pay the franchise tax.

Those of the officials (appellants): The intangible tax act does not levy any tax, but merely prescribes a method of assessing such tax against those named therein. So held in Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Shannon, 100 Tex. 379, 100 S.W. 138, 10 L.R.A.,N.S., 681. Therefore it does not require the payment of such tax. Intangible assets are property, and all corporations are “required by law to pay” taxes thereon, if they own such property. However, to construe Sec. B as applying to all corporations whether or not they in fact pay the tax, would nullify Sec. A, as all corporations would thereby be included in Sec. B. Therefore the section must be construed to include only such corporations as actually pay the tax. Two alternative constructions of Sec. B are urged, each of which leads to the same result, so far as concerns this case. First, it is contended that Sec. B only names two classes of corporations, (1) street railways and (2) electric interurban railways, which actually pay taxes on intangible assets; the phrase, “corporations which are now required by law to pay annually a tax upon intangible assets,” being a modifying clause to the two named classes of corporations. Second, in the alternative, conceding that Sec. B designates three classes of corporations, and that the first class includes only those named in the intangible tax act, only such corporations actually paying that tax are *72 included. This because there would be no basis for extending the exemption of 4/S of the tax prescribed in Sec. A to corporations that did not in fact pay any intangible assets tax; therefore the language “required to pay” must be construed to mean paying.

Conceding that the intangible tax act did not levy a tax upon the named corporations, but only provided a mode of assessment of their intangibles, nevertheless we think it clear that Sec. B referred (in above class 1) to those corporations alone. It is not necessary to review in detail the background of that act. It was passed for the manifest purpose of reaching assets of those named therein (principally railroads) which, it was considered, were escaping their just burden of taxation. The tax collector of Travis County assessed as un-rendered personal property for the year 1897 the intangible assets of the Austin & Northwestern R. R. Co. domiciled in that county. Recovery by the State upon that assessment was denied by the district court, this court (State v. Austin & N. W. R. Co., 60 S.W. 886), and the Supreme Court, 94 Tex. 530, 62 S.W. 1050. The ground upon which this court denied recovery (Justice Key dissenting) was that the situs of the intangibles (if in fact assessable separately from the physical property) was not entirely in the county of the railroad's domicile, but was in the several counties in which its physical properties were located.

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174 S.W.2d 70, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-texas-mexican-ry-co-texapp-1943.