Fuqua v. Spry Burial Ins. Co.

47 So. 2d 817, 254 Ala. 189, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 532
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1950
Docket8 Div. 480, 481, 481-A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 So. 2d 817 (Fuqua v. Spry Burial Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuqua v. Spry Burial Ins. Co., 47 So. 2d 817, 254 Ala. 189, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 532 (Ala. 1950).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Justice.

Three appeals are, by agreement of the parties, consolidated and presented in one record.

The Spry Burial Insurance Company, a corporation, filed the bill of complaint in the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Lauder-dale County, Alabama, against Weaver Fuqua, Jr., as Tax Collector of Lauder-dale County, seeking to enjoin and restrain him from proceeding with the sale of complainant’s property for the collection of taxes assessed against the corporate shares of capital stock by the State Department of Revenue. The taxes assessed are for the tax years 1944 and 1945 and 1947. For the years 1944 and 1945 they were made as escape assessments.

Apparently recognizing that courts of equity will not restrain the collection of a tax unless in addition to the illegality of the tax, there is also present a recognized ground of equitable jurisdiction, appellee, complainant in the court below, proceeded upon the theory that there was fraud in the making of the assessments.

As we construe it, the bill alleges that the assessments were made to or against the corporation, and not to or against the persons in whose names the-shares of stock stand on the books of the corporation. Section 25, Title 51, Code, provides, in part, that: “Every share of any domestic corporation * * * shall be assessed and the taxes thereon collected in the county wherein such corporation has its home or chief office in the state, and shall -be assessed at sixty percent of its value to the person in whose name such shares stand on the books of the corporation and not to the corporation. * * * It shall be no ground for objection to such-assessment of shares that the same is entered upon the assessment book in the name of the -corporation.” Section 28, Title-51, provides: “If a corporation by endorsement on its tax assessment or otherwise in writing, shall agree to pay the-taxes, if any, assessed on the shares for the shareholders, it need not file a list of such shareholders.” The propriety of such-an assessment to or against the corporation is fully supported by the decision in-the case of Commissioners Court of Washington County v. State ex rel. Fairford. Lumber Co., 172 Ala. 242, 55 So. 623, 626, where it was held:

“The assessment complained of was made to the corporation, being of the shares of. its stock owned in severalty by Fussey, Conger, and Kelly, corelators with [192]*192the corporation. No report was ever made to the assessor on the part of the corporation, as required by subdivision 9 of section 2082 of the Code, informing him as to the number of shares of its capital stock, the names and addresses of its stockholders, and the various other matters therein specified. It is insisted for relators that the assessment thus made is void, because the statute (subdivision 9, of section 2082) declares in terms that such stock ‘shall be assessed * * * to the person in whose name such shares stan I on the books of the corporation, and no I to the corporation.’
“The answer to this contention is furnished by the statute itself, which declares that ‘it shall be no ground for objection to such assessment of shares that the same is entered upon the assessment books in the name of the corporation.’ Construing this clause in connection with the one first above quoted, it is quite evident that the first, while it expressed a preferred mode of assessment, is yet directory only, in so far as the validity of the assessment is concerned. Prior to the Act of February 18, 1897 (Acts 1897, p. 1489), the shares of the capital stock of any company or corporation required to assess its property in this state could not be assessed against the shareholders. Subdivision 8, § 451, Code of 1886. And since by that act, found substantially unchanged in subdivision 9, § 3911, of Code of 1896, and subdivision 9, § 2082, of Code of 1907, the corporation is still required as formerly to pay for its shareholders the taxes assessed against the stock, the conclusion is strengthened that assessment to the individual owners, as directed, is a matter of form merely, for the information or convenience of the assessor perhaps, but not of the substance of the assessment.”

The statute at this time does not make it mandatory on the corporation to pay the taxes assessed on the shares of stock, but makes it optional to assume such liability. Section 28, Title 51, Code. If the corporation has assumed liability, it need not file a list of the shareholders (section 28, supra), and it is not material or prejudicial to it for the assessment of the stock to be made to it. Fairford Lumber Co. case, supra.

In view of the Fairford Lumber Co. case, supra, so long a leading precedent in our law on taxation, we think it sound to hold that when the State Department of Revenue made a tentative assessment to it and gave it notice thereof, it was in effect notice that the assessment would be made final and fix a liability on it to pay the amount of the tax on the assessment, unless cause was shown at the time appointed why it should not be done. At that time the corporation could appear and show that it has not agreed to pay the tax on its shares, and that the assessment against it should not be made final,. if it desired to take that position. But by not making such a claim before the department it was in effect an admission of liability for the amount of the tax based on the assessment. And the act of the commission in making final the assessment to the corporation, and no appeal -being taken from such assessment, made a fixed liability in the nature of a judgment against the corporation for the amount of the tax on the assessment of the shares.

In State v. DeKalb County Exchange, Inc., Ala.Sup., 43 So.2d 809,1 we did hold that under said section 25, supra, the capital stock tax was due to be imposed on the shareholders and not on the corporation. This is quite true in the first instance, but in that case there was a direct appeal by the corporation from the assessment challenging its validity on the ground of non-liability, as appellee is privileged to do in the instant case, but which it failed to do. Being so, and the corporation not having contested the assessment, the other provisions of Chapter 5, supra, have application and, as illustrated above, a liability may be imposed on the corporation for its implied consent to pay the assessment as in the nature of a default judgment against it, which judgment may not now be challenged except for fraud, which is not shown to appear.

[193]*193As above indicated the bill of complaint was predicated upon the alleged fraud of the State Department of Revenue in making the assessments. The bill of complaint was presented to Hon. Newton B. Powell, Judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit of Alabama, who granted a temporary injunction under the provisions of section 1038, Title 7, Code of 1940. On the same day the bill was filed in the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Lauderdale County. Demurrer and a sworn answer were interposed to the bill. Likewise a motion to dissolve and a motion to discharge the temporary injunction were entered in the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County supported by affidavits. Both motions were denied. This appeal is from a decree overruling the demurrer to the bill, and is consolidated on appeal with the decrees denying the motions to dissolve and discharge the temporary injunction.

From the sworn pleadings and affidavits, we think the following facts are without dispute.

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47 So. 2d 817, 254 Ala. 189, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuqua-v-spry-burial-ins-co-ala-1950.