Kansas City v. Schifman Sales, Inc.

421 S.W.2d 535, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 622
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1967
DocketNo. 24628
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 421 S.W.2d 535 (Kansas City v. Schifman Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City v. Schifman Sales, Inc., 421 S.W.2d 535, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 622 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

SPERRY, Commissioner.

Kansas City, Missouri, a municipal corporation, charged defendant, Schifman Sales, Inc., with being in violation of' Section 30.190, Revised Ordinances of Kansas City, Mo. In Municipal court defendant was found guilty and fined $400.00 and costs. Defendant appealed to the circuit court where, on trial to the court, it was ordered that defendant be discharged. Kansas City appeals.

The ordinance above referred to reads, in part, as follows:

"Any person required by the provisions of this chapter to obtain an occupational license who shall engage in any business, occupation, pursuit, profession or trade, or in keeping or maintaining any institution, establishment, article, utility or commodity for which such a license is required, without first procuring and paying for such license; * * * shall be guilty of a misdemeanor”. (Emphasis ours). Schifman Sales, Inc., has no license.

For some years prior to March 11, 1963, Mr. David Schifman was a salesman, an employee of Schifman Printing Company. He sold its products exclusively and was under its control and direction. The printing company had two other salesmen in its employ. It is agreed that Mr. Schifman was not then required to pay an occupation[537]*537al tax, by reason of the provisions of the following ordinance, quoted in part:

“Sec. 30.2300. SALESMEN.—
“ * * *. A salesman is any person who sells, offers for sale or solicits orders for any article of merchandise, or other things of value or pretended value, within the city; provided, that this definition shall not include a regular employee of business houses or concerns when engaged in soliciting or taking orders for his employer”. (Emphasis ours).

Plaintiff’s counsel stated to the court that: “Mr. Schifman was an employee or salesman for the Schifman Printing Company for a number of years and then in 1963 he incorporated himself, you might say, because then the salary that he had been receiving, or commissions, were diverted to the Schifman Sales Company, which is the corporation which is defendant here. As a salesman or an employee of the printing company he did not have to have an occupation license. We, the City, contend that the corporation which he formed in 1963 should have an occupation license * * * »

Mr. Schifman is the sole stockholder of the corporation. He organized it upon the advice of counsel in order to take advantage of federal laws which permit him to set up a pension plan for himself. Since incorporation he continues to sell for Schifman Printing Company in the same manner that he did prior thereto.

Plaintiff contends that a corporation cannot be an “employee”; that respondent cannot, therefore, be an employee of Schifman Printing Company. Plaintiff says that respondent is a sales agent, or agency, under the following ordinance:

“Sec. 30.2290. SALES AGENT OR AGENCY. * * *
“Receiving gross annual commissions, fees, charges or compensation of $5,000.00 or less, per year . . . $25.00

Following are provisions for a gradual increase in license fees, based on dollar increase in sales volume. It contains no definition of a “Sales Agent or Agency”, nor any other printed matter except as to graduated license fees. Plaintiff’s position here is that defendant is a sales agent, under the provision of this section.

Defendant now sells the same merchandise for Schifman Printing Company that Mr. Schifman formerly sold for it as an employee-salesman, but the commissions thereon go to defendant, where they are disbursed. The evidence was to the effect that the tax rate on gross receipts, wholesale and retail, (as paid by Schifman Printing Co.) is one dollar per thousand but that it is higher for a sales agency because the rate levied is on commissions, not gross receipts. Mr. Hayes, Commissioner of Revenue and in control of the department administering occupation licenses, testified to the effect that an employee of a company is on its payroll and his income is subject to withholding taxes, while a sales agent or agency is an independent operator and its income is not subject to withholding taxes; that, while an independent agent or agency may or may not be subject to a certain degree of control by the principal, that would not make it an “employee”; that there are two classifications for occupation licensing purposes in this area, employee and independent agent; that several factors are considered in making the distinction.

Mr. Coleman, municipal revenue agent, audited the records of defendant. He stated that it had paid no license fees; that he found no contract of any kind between defendant and Schifman Printing Co.; that defendant received commissions on sales from Schifman Printing Co., and paid David Schifman compensation from said receipts; that commissions paid to defendant were based on sales made for defendant by the printing company, upon which the printing company had paid taxes to plaintiff; that, since defendant is a corporation, it is required to be licensed in order to engage in business.

[538]*538“Sec. 30.260, Business, etc. for which license required” was introduced in evidence. It provides, briefly, that every corporation (and others named) engaged in any business specified in article II, shall procure and pay for a license from the city, the fees therefor to be in amounts as specified in the ordinances.

Mr. Burke, a C. P. A., testified that he had, for many years, done accounting work for Schifman Printing Co. and for defendant; that, prior to incorporation of defendant company, Mr. David Schifman was a full time salesman for the printing company and subject to its exclusive direction and control; that it also had, and now has, two other salesmen employees; that David Schifman incorporated himself in order to qualify for a pension plan, which has not been established; that, prior to the incorporation, the printing company paid Mr. Schifman commissions and he paid his own expenses therefrom, including taxes; that, since incorporation, the printing company pays commissions to defendant corporation, which pays Mr. Schifman after deducting and paying his expenses, and Schifman’s federal and state taxes.

Plaintiff contends that since defendant is a corporation, it cannot be an employee of Schifman Printing Co. and, therefore, exempt from license tax. A corporation is a legal entity separate and apart from its individual stockholders. Webster's New International Dictionary, Sec. Ed. It’s property and business is controlled and managed by its board of directors, consisting of not less than three. Sections 351.310 and 351.-315 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. The board of •directors would have the legal right to supervise, direct and control the number of and activities of employees of the corporation, and to control the nature and course •of the business in which the corporation engages. It could determine what products the corporation would sell, in what manner and for whom.

In 56 C.J.S. Master and Servant § lb, page 24, it is said:

“Generally speaking a ‘servant’ or ‘employee’ is a person who renders service to another, usually for wages, salary, or other financial consideration, and who in the performance of such service is entirely subject to the direction and control of the other, such other being respectively the ‘master’ or ‘employer’ * * ”.

In 2 C.J.S.

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Bluebook (online)
421 S.W.2d 535, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-v-schifman-sales-inc-moctapp-1967.