In re Pennsylvania Co.

2 Pa. D. & C. 163
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedJune 14, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 163 (In re Pennsylvania Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Pennsylvania Co., 2 Pa. D. & C. 163 (Pa. 1922).

Opinion

Hull, Dep. Att’y-Gen.,

The Attorney-General is in receipt of your communication, requesting an opinion as to the liability of the Pennsylvania Company for bonus upon its original capital stock and subsequent increases thereof. If it were liable for bonus upon all of its capital stock, it should have paid to the Commonwealth $249,166.68, of which it has paid only $93,333.34, leaving a balance due of $155,833.34. The company, however, contends that it was not liable for the payment of bonus upon any of its capital [164]*164stock, that the amount already paid was erroneously paid, and that it should receive credit for $93,833.34.

The facts upon which the alleged liability to the Commonwealth is based are set forth in the following tabulated statement:

The Pennsylvania Company was incorporated by Special Act of April 7, 1870, P. L. 1025. The 1st section conferred upon the incorporators the right [165]*165to form and be a body corporate, with the usual incidents of corporate existence, to receive, hold and enjoy property, real, personal and mixed, and to convey, lease, mortgage or pledge the same for its corporate purposes. This act gave to the company an “omnibus” charter. The many and varied powers conferred are too numerous to be here set forth at length. They may be found in sections 2, 3 and 4 of the act. The broad scope of these powers is indicated in the opinion of the court in International Navigation Co. v. Com., 104 Pa. 38, which involved a charge for bonus against a company upon which all of the powers of the Pennsylvania Company had been conferred by Act of May 4, 1871, P. L. 565. Among them is included the power to construct and operate railroads, to buy and sell the stocks and bonds of railroad companies, to lease, manage and operate railroad properties, and to exercise the right of eminent domain for the purpose of erecting or managing any public works.

Section 5 provided, inter alia, that “The capital stock of said company shall consist of 2000 shares of the value of $50 each, being $100,000, and with the privilege of increasing the same, by a vote of the holders of a majority of the stock present at any annual or special meeting, to such an amount as they may from time to time deem needful; . . . and whenever an increase of capital stock is made, a certificate thereof, duly executed under the corporate seal of the company and signed by the president and. secretary, shall be filed with the Auditor General before the same shall be deemed to be valid.”

The company began business in the year 1871, and since then has been “exclusively engaged in the business of operating and managing, by means of leases and ownership of their stocks and bonds, a number of railroads, some wholly within and others wholly without, and most of them partly within and partly without, the State of Pennsylvania, and of extending and improving said railroads, . . . and it was not during said period of time exercising any other franchise:” Com. v. Pennsylvania Co., 145 Pa. 266, 270. “The Pennsylvania Company obtained its charter in 1870, completed its organization in 1872, and entered at once upon active business as a lessee of lines of transportation built and owned by existing corporations:” Williams, J., in same case, at page 276.

The company has not at any time been “engaged in any other business than that of operating and managing railroads under the provisions of its act of incorporation, and at no time during said period did it make any increase of its capital stock except in accordance with the provisions of its act of incorporation, relating to the making of increases in capital stock; it did not accept the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania of 1873, and in particular it did not accept the benefits of, or act under, the Statute of Feb. 9, 1901, P. L. 3, and the provisions thereof relating to the increase of capital stock.” (Affidavit of the secretary of the company.)

Under these facts, the company contends that it is not, and was not, subject to the payment of bonus upon its original capital stock or any of the increases thereof, for the reason that there was no statute passed prior to its incorporation which imposed a bonus upon it, that the act of incorporation did not do so, and that it is not subject to the provisions of any of the bonus acts passed since 1870.

It is well settled that a bonus is not a tax, but is the consideration paid to the Commonwealth for a right, privilege or franchise. Therefore, a privilege or franchise, which has been granted free of bonus and accepted and exercised by the grantee, cannot, under the State and Federal Constitutions, be subjected to such a charge by a subsequent act of assembly, for such an act [166]*166would impair the obligation, of the contract: Com. v. Erie and Western Transportation Co., 107 Pa. 112. If the Pennsylvania Company acquired its original franchises free of bonus, has acquired no others since its incorporation, and has not subjected itself to the provisions of subsequent bonus acts, then its contention is sound and must be sustained. Accordingly, the first inquiry is whether its original franchises were granted free of bonus.

The first general act imposing bonus upon the grant of corporate franchises and upon increases of capital stock was the Act of May 1, 1868, P. L. 108, which was in force when the Pennsylvania Company was incorporated, and which provided in section 15 as follows: “That hereafter every company incorporated by or under any general or special law of this Commonwealth, except railroad, canal, turnpike, bridge or cemetery companies, and companies incorporated for literary, charitable or religious purposes, shall pay to the State Treasurer, for the use of the Commonwealth, a bonus of one-quarter of 1 per centum upon the amount of capital stock which said company is authorized to have, in two equal instalments, and a like bonus upon any subsequent increase thereof. The first instalment shall be due and payable upon the incorporation of said company, or upon the increase of the capital thereof, and the second instalment one year thereafter; and no company, as aforesaid, shall have or exercise any corporate powers until the first instalment of said bonus is paid; and the Governor shall not issue letters-patent to any company until he is satisfied that the first instalment of said bonus has been paid to the State Treasurer; and no company incorporated by any special act of assembly shall go into operation or exercise any corporate powers or privileges, nor shall said act be enrolled among the laws of the State until said first instalment of bonus has been paid as aforesaid.”

The act incorporating the Pennsylvania Company (April 7, 1870, P. L. 1025) was silent upon the subject of bonus, but the act from which I have quoted above imposed a bonus upon all companies incorporated after May 1, 1868, whether under general or special act, excepting railroad, canal, turnpike, bridge, etc., companies. The first inquiry — whether this company received its original franchises free of bonus — thus depends upon whether it was a railroad, canal, turnpike or bridge company, within the meaning of those terms as used in the Act of 1868.

If this inquiry were to be determined by merely asking whether this company possessed the franchises of a railroad company, it would have to be admitted that it was a railroad company, and likewise that it was a canal company, a turnpike company and a bridge company.

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International Navigation Co. v. Commonwealth
104 Pa. 38 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1883)
Commonwealth v. Erie & Western Transportation Co.
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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pennsylvania-co-padeptjust-1922.