Hise v. McColgan

148 P.2d 616, 24 Cal. 2d 147, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 222
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1944
DocketL. A. 18665
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 616 (Hise v. McColgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hise v. McColgan, 148 P.2d 616, 24 Cal. 2d 147, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 222 (Cal. 1944).

Opinions

CAETEE, J.

Plaintiff was successful in the trial court in this action to recover franchise taxes paid under protest, and defendant prosecutes this appeal.

In 1932, Marine Building and Loan Association, hereinafter referred to as Marine, was a corporation operating in this state under the Building and Loan Association Act. [149]*149(Stats. 1931, p. 483; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 986.) The following year the business, property and assets of Marine were taken over by plaintiff commissioner pursuant to the provisions of said act. Said business, property and assets remained in the possession of plaintiff in liquidation from June 2, 1933, until the liquidation was completed in 1940. (Stats. 1931, p. 483, §§ 13.11-13.16.) Marine has been insolvent since it was taken over. Pursuant to defendant’s demand, plaintiff, in 1941, paid under protest a franchise tax and interest thereon for the income year ending on December 31, 1937, said tax being for an alleged liability for the year ending December 31, 1938. Plaintiff has also paid the $25 annual tax for Marine which is imposed where a corporation is not otherwise taxed by the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act (§4(5). (Stats. 1929, p. 19; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 8488.)

Section 4(1) of the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act provides as follows:

“Every financial corporation doing business within the limits of this State, taxable under the provisions of section 16 of Article XIII of the Constitution, of this State, shall annually pay to the State for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchises within this State, a tax according to or measured by its net income, to be computed, in the manner hereinafter provided. ...” (Italics added.) Section 4(5) of said act imposes an annual tax on all corporations not otherwise taxed under section 4 and not expressly exempted from the act.

Plaintiff does not question his obligation to pay the $25 annual tax as liquidator on behalf of Marine nor is it claimed that Marine would not be subject to the tax imposed by the above quoted portion of section 4(1), but he asserts that Marine is not doing business or exercising its corporate franchise because it is in the process of liquidation, and hence does not fall within the terms of section 4(1).

Turning first to the question as to whether or not Marine was doing business, we believe that that requirement is satisfied. That conclusion follows from the facts and law here involved. The Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act defines doing business as: “. . . actively engaging in any transaction for the purpose of financial or pecuniary gain or profit.” (Sec. 5.) Under the Building and Loan Assoeia[150]*150tion Act the commissioner as liquidator is given broad powers with respect to the business of the corporation being liquidated. He takes over all the business, property and assets of the corporation. (Stats. 1931, p.. 483, § 13.11.) He may place a custodian in charge of its business; collect all moneys due the corporation and “do such other acts as are necessary to or expedient to collect, conserve or protect its business, property and assets.” He may liquidate the affairs of the corporation and in so doing may pay claims against it; disaffirm executory contracts; require the officers of the corporation to furnish a schedule of assets and other information (Id., § 13.13); release or reconvey property pledged or hypothecated to the corporation; prosecute actions; borrow money; reduce the amount of interest on loans and rewrite the same; sell and transfer property in his own name or that of the corporation; and any instrument executed to effectuate a transaction in connection with the liquidation shall be valid for all purposes the same as if it had been executed by the duly authorized officers of the corporation (Id., § 13.16).

In the instant case the stipulated facts show that no surplus remained after the completion of the liquidation; and that the assets were insufficient to pay fully all of the claims; that “After the takeover, Marine did no business in its own name and did no business through its directors or officers, or through any agents appointed by them, or by the stockholders. The plaintiff, in the exercise of his statutory powers over the assets of Marine, made sales, rentals and transfers of the assets of Marine and made collections upon notes and other obligations which were among the assets of Marine. These activities by the Commissioner (plaintiff) commenced upon the takeover and continued thereafter through the years 1937 and 1938, until the year 1940.” (Italics added.) The doing of the foregoing things by plaintiff commissioner for and on behalf of the corporation and its creditors are clearly acts of doing business within the meaning of the definition given in the Bank and Corporation Franchise Tax Act (supra). And the fact that they were done in the course of liquidation which finally resulted in a complete disposal of all of the assets of Marine and distribution of the proceeds thereof does not change their character. While no profit may have been made as that term is usually understood, such factor is not controlling in the definition of the [151]*151term “doing business”; rather the criterion is whether or not the goal or aim is financial or pecuniary gain. (See Consolidated Coal Co. v. State, 236 Ala. 489 [183 So. 650].) It should be clear that the commissioner in liquidating Marine was endeavoring to get the best price obtainable for its assets and to conduct its affairs in liquidation to the end that the most financial gain would be realized for its creditors and stockholders. The aim was pecuniary gain. It is true that no new deposits were accepted by plaintiff commissioner for Marine and that that is ordinarily the chief activity of a building and loan association, as a going concern, yet the transactions were of the nature typified as doing business. It is not necessary to constitute doing business for franchise tax purposes that there be a regular course of business or transactions. This court stated in Golden State T. & R. Corp. v. Johnson, 21 Cal.2d 493, 495 [133 P.2d 395] :

“Defendant contends that East Bay Theatres, Inc., was not ‘actively’ engaged in any transaction for pecuniary gain or profit since its purpose was not to operate a business but merely to acquire property and derive income therefrom, and since none of the transactions occurred regularly. Such an interpretation of ‘actively’ would nullify the 1933 modification of the definition of doing business by reading into it the meaning given the term under the 1931 amendment defining it as ‘any transaction or transactions in the course of its business’ by a domestic or foreign corporation. The doing of business, however, does not necessarily mean a regular course of business under the 1933 amendment, for by its plain terms a corporation is doing business if it actively engages in any transaction for pecuniary gain or profit. Defendant would identify ‘doing business’ with ‘carrying on a trade or business. ’ A series of transactions regularly engaged in may be necessary to establish the ‘carrying on of a trade or business’ but the Legislature made it clear that it had no such concept in mind when it referred to transaction in the singular as ‘any transaction.’ The word ‘actively’ must therefore be interpreted as the opposite of passively or inactively, and as used in section 5 it means active participation in any transaction for pecuniary gain or profit.” (See, also, Carson Estate Co. v. McColgan,

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Hise v. McColgan
148 P.2d 616 (California Supreme Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 616, 24 Cal. 2d 147, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hise-v-mccolgan-cal-1944.