Gay v. Bessemer Properties, Inc.

32 So. 2d 587, 159 Fla. 729, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 946
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 21, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 587 (Gay v. Bessemer Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gay v. Bessemer Properties, Inc., 32 So. 2d 587, 159 Fla. 729, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 946 (Fla. 1947).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Taxes on intangible property having been assessed against Appellee, it instituted this suit. At that time the Honorable J. M- Lee was Comptroller of the State of Florida. Later Mr. Lee died and C. M. Gay, having been appointed his successor, was substituted as a party defendant. The suit to adjudicate the validity of the assessment and to enjoin the collection of tax. During the pendency of the suit the amount of the tax was by order of court required, under protest, to be deposited with the Comproller to be held by him subject to order of Court.

When issues were made up the cause was referred by the Court to a Master with directions to take and report testimony with his findings of law and fact and to return the same with his recommendations to the Court. This was done.

Exceptions to the report were filed and, after argument and consideration, the Court entered its decree.

The report of the Master, Mr. Horner C. Fisher was, inter alia, as follows:

*731 “Pursuant to the order of my appointment, I now make and submit the following as my findings of fact, conclusions of law and recommendations. (The numbers within parentheses refer to pages in the Reporter’s transcript of testimony. Exhibits are referred to in abbreviated form, as for example P. Ex. No. 8 would refer to Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 8.)

I. Finding of Fact.

“1. The Plaintiff, Bessemer Properties, Incorporated, was incorporated under the laws of Delaware in 1936 from the consolidation of four Delaware and five Florida corporations. By the consolidation agreement, which became its character, it was provided that its principal office in the State of Delaware should be located at Wilmington, New Castle County, (P. Ex. No. 16; Stipulation 109). A few days later it secured a permit to transact business in Florida in accordance with Chapter 5717, Laws of Florida, 1907, as amended, the statute relating to the qualification of foreign corporations to do business in this State (D. Ex. No. 5).
“2. All of the capital stock of Bessemer Properties, Incorporated, is owned by Bessemer Investment Company, a Delaware Corporation (76,98). The stock of the latter is held mostly in trust for junior members of the Phipps family, being the third generation, by Bessemer Trust Company, an incorporated trust company in the State of New Jersey (102-3). Approximately two out of fifteen of such beneficiaries are residents of Florida (103-4).
“3. The officers of the plaintiff, Bessemer Properties, Incorporated, are Mr. Henry C. Phipps, President, a resident of Palm Beach, Florida; Mr. David T. Layman, Jr., Secretary-Treasurer and General Manager, a resident of New York City, N. Y.; Mr. Howard Phipps, Vice-President, a resident of West-burg, Long Island, N. Y.; Mr. Roulhac Anderson, Assistant Secretary and Treasurer, a resident of New York City, N. Y., and Mr. R. C. Alley, Assistant Secretary and Treasurer, a resident of Palm Beach County, Florida, and Mr. H. W. Robbins, Cashier, a resident of New York City, N. Y. Henry C. Phipps and John S. Phipps, two of the directors, are residents of Florida; Howard Phipps and David T. Layman, Jr., the *732 other directors, reside in New York (26, 49, 76, 96, 100-102; D. Ex. No. 2).
“4. The plaintiff maintains three business offices, a head office at 465 East 57th St., New York City, N. Y., and two subsidiary offices in Florida, one at Phipps Plaza, Palm Beach, and the other at 1317 Biscayne Boulevard, Miami. J. F. Riley, Jr. is Manager of the Palm Beach Office and Roy H. Hawkins is manager of the Miami office. Each is answerable to and operates under the direction and supervision of David T. Layman, Jr., the Secretary-Treasurer and General Manager of the Corporation, in New York, where questions of corporate and business policy are determined and all decisions other than routine are made (17-20; 44-46; 49, 73, 76).
5. The largest investment of plaintiff is in the State of Florida (95; D. Ex. 1.4). This is in real estate, urban and rural, improved and unimproved, and mortgages upon and rentals and other income derived from real estate (18; 45-46). The Palm Beach office has direct charge of properties in Palm Beach County, Broward County and the eastern half of Martin County (18). The Miami office has direct charge of properties in Dade County, certain farm properties at Port Mayaca in Palm Beach County and an orange grove in Martin County (45). These two division offices of plaintiff are separate units operating each within the territory assigned to it and directly under and subject to the direction of the plaintiff’s New York office (46).
“6. Each of the two Florida offices maintains its own subsidiary set of books and records according to a bookkeeping system prescribed by the New York office or its accountants (31, 57, 74, 88; P Ex. No. 8). Detailed reports are forwarded from the two Florida offices and also from an agency in Utah to the New York office, where is compiled a complete copy of the subsidiary records, all of which are combined with other records of the New York office in its head office ledger. That office maintains, besides its general ledger, cash books, minute books, stock certificate books and other books of account required to encompass all of the business affairs of the plaintiff regardless of origin (73-74).
“7. On plaintiff’s income tax returns for the years 1940- *733 1-2-3, which were filed in the Florida District Offices of the United States, Internal Revenue Service, plaintiff’s address was given as Palm Beach, Florida, and it was stated that the books of the corporation were located at Palm Beach (D. Ex. 1-2-3-4). Nevertheless, based upon positive and unimpeached testimony in the record, I find that this statement in the income tax returns was a mistake, and that in fact these returns compiled and prepared in the New York office from the complete books and records of that office, and that a complete tax return could not have been prepared from the books and records of the Palm Beach office which covered only the limited, though substantial, business there conducted (43, 55, 90-92). The audits of the Internal Revenue Department were in plaintiff’s Jersey City and New York office (107).
“8. The contrast between the overall authority of the New York office and the limited authority of the two Florida offices of plaintiff is evidenced by the course of business followed in the handling of funds. Each Florida office maintained two bank accounts, a Main Account and a Special or so-called Paymaster Account. Funds derived from the operation of each Florida office were deposited in its main account but were subjected to withdrawals therefrom only by the checks of the New York office or officers. Routine disbursements in each Florida office were made from its Special or Paymaster Account. Vouchers supporting these disbursements were forwarded to the New York office which thereupon reimbursed the Special Account accordingly to bring it up to an average operating level determined by that office. No funds from outside of Florida were ever deposited in either Florida main account nor from the other Florida office (21-22; 24-25; 31-34; 48, 50-53 ; 58-59; 90 P.

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Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 587, 159 Fla. 729, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gay-v-bessemer-properties-inc-fla-1947.