Ford Motor Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission

1940 OK 433, 106 P.2d 803, 188 Okla. 78, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 22, 1940
DocketNo. 28986.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1940 OK 433 (Ford Motor Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Motor Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, 1940 OK 433, 106 P.2d 803, 188 Okla. 78, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 382 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This action originated in the district court of Oklahoma county. It was instituted by the Ford Motor Company, a Delaware corporation, to recover from the Oklahoma Tax Commission $2,400, representing a portion of the license fee paid by the plaintiff for the privilege of doing business in the state during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1936. The sum was exacted from the plaintiff by the defendant in addition to $799 paid by plaintiff and admitted to be due at the time of filing the corporation’s return. It was paid under protest, and this action to recover the same was duly instituted within the time required by law.

On submission of the cause in the trial tribunal, judgment was entered for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals, appearing herein as plaintiff in error. Our reference to the parties will be by their trial court designation.

The authority of the defendant to retain the sum in controversy depends upon chapter 155, Session Laws 1933, now superseded by subsequent legislation and repealed with a “saving” clause. (Session Laws 1939, page 412, section 11, art. 6, ch. 66.) The computation of the defendant in determining the charge to be made was based upon figures conceded by the plaintiff to be correct, with the exception of a slight error rectified by agreement of the parties, and admittedly constituted an accurate application of the formula prescribed by statute (sections 3 and 5 of chap. 155, S. L. 1933, supra). The complaint is that the statutory formula as applied to the plaintiff contravenes the “commerce” clause (art. 1, sec. 8) and the “equal protection” and “due process” clauses (14th Amendment) of the Constitution of the United States.

The formula prescribed by statute is set forth in section 5 of the act in the following language (second grammatical paragraph):

“For the purpose of computing the amount of license fees hereby imposed and payable by any such corporation, association or organization, the value of capital stock or other written evidence of interest or ownership employed in this state is hereby declared to be the value of that portion of the capital stock or other evidence of interest or ownership of the corporation, association or organization which equals *79 the proportion which the property-owned and business done in Oklahoma bears to the total property owned and business done by the corporation, association or organization.”

The above should be read in conjunction with that portion of section 3 of the act providing:

“Each such corporation, association or organization shall pay for such license, a fee of one dollar per each one thousand dollars, or portion thereof, of the value of its capital stock employed in Oklahoma, as the value of capital stock employed in Oklahoma is defined in section five (5) hereof.”

The principal complaint of the plaintiff is based upon the fact that the statute authorized the defendant to, and the defendant did, take into consideration in computing the charge the amount of business done in Oklahoma by the plaintiff, which was in a greater ratio to its entire business than the properties owned in Oklahoma were to its aggregate properties. The plaintiff, in computing the amount of tax claimed by it to be due, ignored that factor.

The plaintiff corporation is a unitary enterprise and is engaged in the manufacture of products (principally automobiles and other motor driven vehicles) which it manufactures and assembles outside the state of Oklahoma and sells in Oklahoma. A part of the automobiles were, during the tax year involved, distributed from a central plant in Oklahoma City to other parts of the state. Also, the Ford Motor Company establishment in Oklahoma City is the general distributing plant for parts going to dealers throughout the state.

The record shows that the value of plaintiff’s Oklahoma assets, during said year, amounted to the sum of $908,680.-05; that the amount of business transacted by it in Oklahoma during said period of time amounted to $6,520,823.-12, making a total of $7,429,503.17. That the value of plaintiff’s assets everywhere amounted to $716,193,121.17; that the total amount of business transacted by it everywhere during said year amounted to the sum of $744,576,792.31, making a total of $1,460,769,913.48. This sum divided into the amount of $7,429,-503.17 gives a percentage of .00508601-87486. This percentage applied to the total value of plaintiff’s capital stock in the sum of $628,928,250.73 gives the result of $3,198,740.87. This amount was fixed by defendant as the actual value of the plaintiff’s capital stock employed in this state. Upon this valuation a tax was assessed against it at the rate of $1 per thousand upon each $1,000 of valuation, or a tax in the sum of $3,199.

Since the method of computation adopted by the defendant admittedly conforms to the statute and the pivotal issue in the case is whether the Federal Constitution is traversed by the statute, a more detailed analysis of the mathematical calculation is unnecessary to a determination of this appeal.

The plaintiff complains that by the statutory method of computation this state has thus taken into consideration many properties and assets which were never within the boundaries of the state. Specifically, the plaintiff sets forth its argument under two propositions which read:

“First: That the commission applied the formula under the statute to the total value of the capital stock of Ford, whereby there resulted a levy of a corporate franchise tax beyond the actual value of the capital stock of Ford represented by assets actually employed in Oklahoma, which resulted in exacting and taking from Ford its property without due process of law, and without equal protection of the law as guaranteed to it by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. * * *
“Second: That the commission applied the formula under the statute to the capital stock of Ford, which determined a value of capital stock employed in Oklahoma in excess of the actual value of property in Oklahoma, and thereby exacted from Ford the levy of a franchise tax upon its properties which were engaged in interstate commerce and which were beyond the jurisdiction of the state.”

*80 In controverting these propositions the defendant commission relied in its brief upon Ford Motor Company v. Clark, 100 Fed. 2d 515, wherein the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals (5th Circuit) approved as valid a Texas statute comparable to our own, refusing to approve the same complaints as are herein made by the plaintiff company.

The plaintiff company did not in its brief deny the similarity of the Texas statute in its dominant aspects, nor the applicability of the decision to the problem here presented. It sought to avoid the effect of that decision by asserting the unsoundness of the same and pointed out that certiorari had been granted by the Supreme Court of the United States (306 U. S. 628). Plaintiff called attention to alleged inconsistencies between the result therein announced and previous decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. (Examine, in this connection, Wallace v. Hines, 253 U. S. 66, 64 L. Ed. 783, 40 S. Ct. 435; Bass, Ratcliff & Gretton, Ltd., v.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 433, 106 P.2d 803, 188 Okla. 78, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-oklahoma-tax-commission-okla-1940.