People ex rel. Ridgewood Land & Improvement Co. v. Saxe

174 A.D. 344, 160 N.Y.S. 752, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10410
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 A.D. 344 (People ex rel. Ridgewood Land & Improvement Co. v. Saxe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Ridgewood Land & Improvement Co. v. Saxe, 174 A.D. 344, 160 N.Y.S. 752, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10410 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

In November, 1881, the Ridgewood Land and Improvement Company was incorporated for the purpose, as declared in its charter, of “purchasing, taking, holding and possessing real estate and buildings, and selling, leasing and improving the same.” The corporation was organized under the provisions of the act of 1848 (Chap. 40) and the amendments thereto, and is a stock corporation, the object above quoted being the only one recited in its articles of incorporation. The original capital stock was $100,000, and this was subsequently increased to $200,000. There is no question that the corporation invested its money in real estate and carried on business in buying and selling land, and at one time it constructed a grand stand upon one of the parcels owned by it and rented the same for a base ball park. In or about the year 1906 the corporation disposed of all its real estate and buildings, receiving payment therefor partly in cash and partly in purchase-money mortgages. The cash received on such sales was distributed among the stockholders of the corporation, and since the year 1906 the company has been engaged in collecting the sums due on the said mortgages and distributing the same among the stockholders of the corporation. Since the year 1912 the only property owned by the corporation has been a purchase-money mortgage covering a parcel of land on the south side of Liberty avenue, in the borough of Queens. This mortgage was for the sum of $300,000, payable June 14, 1911, with interest at six per cent, and on the 31st day of October, 1913, there was due and payable upon said mortgage the sum of $191,900. During the year ending October 31, 1913, there had been paid upon said [346]*346mortgage the sum of $39,660 of principal, and $13,874.75 interest, making a total of $53,534.75, and the question presented in this proceeding is whether' the State Comptroller, and his successor, the State Tax Commission, was authorized to levy a tax upon the relator under the provisions of section 182 of the Tax Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 60; Laws of 1909, chap. 62). A tax of $400 has heen assessed against the corporation, and' certiorari has been instituted to inquire into the legality of such assessment.

The Comptroller found that for the year ending October 31, 1913, the year upon which the tax was based for the purpose of measuring the tax for the year 1914, the relator had made or declared dividends of eight per cent on its capital stock of $200,000. Under the provisions of section 182 of the Tax Law such a dividend is taxable at a quarter of a mill on each one per cent of dividends, and if these distributions of money were in fact dividends within the meaning of the Tax Law the amount of the tax would be $400, as determined by the Comptroller. The Comptroller arrived at his conclusion by showing that the amount óf principal and interest received was $53,534.75, and that the corporation during the year ending October 31, 1913, had distributed the sum of $56,000, or $2,465.25 in excess of the receipts of the particular year, the treasurer of the corporation explaining that this excess was “made up from an excess of receipts over distributions during the previous year.” In other words, the corporation evidently distributed the moneys coming in from this mortgage in even figures, retaining the odds and ends and paying them out subsequently.

It is very evident from a practical point of view that the Ridgewood Land and Improvement Company has served its purpose; that it was organized to deal in real estate in a given locality, and when the possibilities of that locality had been exploited and the property all disposed of, it was merely a question of distributing the proceeds of the business, including the capital stock, to the original investors. While the corporation was created to continue for a period of fifty years, it is entirely evident that there was no obligation to continue in active business for that period of time, nor is' any considera[347]*347tion of public policy suggested why the corporation should not be voluntarily liquidated and the capital distributed among its stockholders. Concededly this work of liquidation has been going on since the year 1906, and it had reached a point in the year 1913 when nearly $10,000 of the capital stock had been restored to the holders in cash, and the real question here is whether the company, which had not been formally dissolved, in distributing portions of the original capital to the investors, was distributing dividends within the meaning of the Tax Law; whether it was doing business in the sense contemplated by the enactment here under consideration.

Section 182 of the Tax Law, in so far as it is necessary to be considered here, provides that “For the privilege of doing business or exercising its corporate franchises in this State every corporation, joint-stock company or association, doing business in this State, shall pay to the State Treasurer annually, in advance, an annual tax to be computed upon the basis of the amount of its capital stock, employed during the preceding year within this State, and upon each dollar of such amount. The measure of the amount of capital stock employed in this State shall be such a portion of the issued capital stock as the gross assets employed in any business within this State bear to the gross assets wherever employed in business. For purposes of taxation, the capital of a corporation invested in the stock of another corporation shall be deemed to be assets located where the physical property represented by such stock is located. If the dividends upon the capital stock amount to six, or more than six per centum upon the par value of the capital stock, during any year ending with the thirty-first day of October, the tax shall be at the rate of one-quarter of a mill for each one per centum of dividends made or declared upon the par value of the capital stock during said year.”

This is the section under which the relator has been assessed, and we are to determine what is meant by the word “ dividends ” as used in the above-quoted statute, for if there were no dividends declared, if the corporation was not doing business in the State, then the tax is. without warrant of law and should not be collected. If we examine the scheme of the Tax Law we shall discover that it recognizes two characters of [348]*348franchises which are to be taxed upon different theories: There is the franchise to be a corporation, which is called upon to pay a tax of one-twentieth of one percentum for the privilege of being organized (Tax Law, § 180, as amd., with special provisions for foreign corporations doing business in this State, § 181, as amd.), and then there is the franchise to do the business for" which the corporation is organized, and this is subject to an annual tax as above pointed out. The first of these taxes is a net sum covering the full period of the corporate life, be that period long or short, while the second is of annual occurrence. When the relator was organized, therefore, it paid a tax upon its right to be a corporation for the period of fifty years; its existence, however inert, was provided for, and the privilege was paid for.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A.D. 344, 160 N.Y.S. 752, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-ridgewood-land-improvement-co-v-saxe-nyappdiv-1916.