People v. . Horn Silver Mining Co.

11 N.E. 155, 105 N.Y. 76, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 695
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 11 N.E. 155 (People v. . Horn Silver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Horn Silver Mining Co., 11 N.E. 155, 105 N.Y. 76, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 695 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was commenced to recover certain taxes claimed to be due from the defendant under chapter 542 of the Laws of 1880, as amended by chapter 361 of the Laws -of 1881, and chapter 151 of the Laws of 1882. The plaintiff claims in its complaint that there was due January 1, 1882, from the defendant, the sum of $7,500, being the tax at the rate of one and one-half mills of each dollar of valuation of its capital stock at $5,000,000, and also $1,500 as a penalty for ■neglect or refusal to pay the tax for two years. They also claim that there was due January 1, 1883, from the defendant, the sum of $30,000, being a tax at the rate of one-quarter of a mill for each one per centum of dividends declared during the year ending ¡November 1, 1882, upon $10,000,000, the par value of defendant’s capital stock, the dividends declared being twelve per centum ; and also $3,000 as a penalty for neglect or refusal to pay the tax within fifteen days from January 1,1883.

The defendant is a foreign corporation incorporated under the laws of the territory of Utah. The plaintiff recovered the amount of taxes and penalties claimed and the defendant complains of the recovery upon several grounds which will be separately considered.

The constitutional objections to the acts under which these taxes were imposed have been sufficiently considered in prior decisions of this court, and the acts must now be regarded as free from constitutional objection and, therefore, valid. (People v. Home Ins. Co., 92 N. Y. 328; People v. Equitable Trust Co., 96 id. 387; People v. Gold and St. Tel. Co., 98 id. 67.) We have now, therefore, only to construe the acts and apply them to the facts of this case.

First. The defendant claims that it was a manufacturing corporation carrying on manufacture within this State,” and, *81 therefore, not liable to taxation under section 3 of the act of 1881, which excepts such corporations from taxation under that act. As appears from its articles of association, the defendant was organized to conduct the business of mining in Utah territory, and the buying, selling, leasing and operating mines and mining claims in that territory, and smelting, reducing and. refining works there or elsewhere; to conduct a general mining, milling and .smelting business in all its branches, including buying and selling.mineral ores and bullion, carrying on a general mercantile business by buying and selling such goods, merchandise, stores and miners’ supplies as are usually kept in and required by the wants of a mining camp or settlement, and building and operating all such roads, tramways and transportation routes as may be convenient in transporting the products of its business or procuring supplies and purchasing, hiring and holding all such real and personal property wherever situate, as may be required in carrying on any of its business, and, when no longer required for business purposes, leasing, selling or exchanging the same ; and generally to do all acts and things incidental to a general mining business, or to any of the specified pursuits, the corporation being primarily formed for the immediate purpose of working and developing the estate, property and premises known as the Horn Silver .Mine, and for the treatment and reduction of the ores and metals therein contained. The business of the defendant in Utah consisted in mining the ore and manufacturing it into base bullion. The bullion was then shipped to Chicago where it had a refinery in which the lead was smelted and the base bullion separated from the silver. The bullion thus refined was then shipped to the city of New York where it was delivered to the United States assay office where it was still further refined into standard silver bars for doing which the defendant paid two per cent of the silver. It generally sold the receipts issued for the silver by the assay office in the city of New York, and so much of the proceeds as were not used there were transmitted to Utah and Chicago for use in the business of the Company at those points. It did not *82 have or carry on within this State any refining or manufacturing establishment, and its claim to be a manufacturing corporation, carrying on manufacture within this State, is based solely upon the fact that it delivered its bullion to the assay office to-be further refined for a compensation to be paid by it. Upon these facts, the referee -found that it was not engaged in manufacture within this State, and we are of the same opinion. As. its name implies, it is a mining corporation, and was organized primarily for that purpose, and all its other business was incidental, connected with and related to that. But even if it. could in any proper sense, according to the common understanding of the phrase used in this statute, be deemed a manufacturing corporation in Utah, yet it cannot with any propriety be said that it carried on manufacture within this State. According to common comprehension and the ordinary use of language, the process of refining this bullion at the assay office was not a manufacture, and the assay office was not a manufacturing establishment. But whether it was or not, the defendant which employed the assay office for a compensation to refine the bullion was not itself engaged in the manufacture. It was no more a manufacturer than a farmer is who takes his grain to the grist-mill to be ground into flour, for a part of the grain or a money compensation, or who takes his wool to a. cloth manufacturer to be made into cloth for a compensation, and then to be returned to him. A railroad company may manufacture all its cars and engines, and yet it cannot be properly classified as a manufacturing company.

The definition of the terms “ manufacturing corporations ” and manufacture,” as derived from some decisions and statutes to which our attention has been called, is of little-service in the construction of the language of this act. These terms must be construed in view of the general purposes of the acts in which they are used, and the general phraseology found in connection with them. To give effect to the legislative intention, their ordinary meaning may be enlarged or restricted. Under this section, it is not sufficient to exempt a corporation from taxation that it is a manufacturing corpora *83 tian, but it must also carry on manufacture within this State. In exempting such corporations from taxation under the act, the legislature may be supposed to have been influenced by two things-:—a desire to encourage manufacture within the State, and the fact that a corporation carrying on any manufacturing business within the State would necessarily have visible, tangible property liable under the general laws of the State to taxation. We are, therefore, constrained to hold that the defendant cannot be allowed the exemption claimed.

Second. It is claimed that the defendant was not, during the years 1881 and 1882 “ doing business in this State,” and that, therefore, it was not liable to taxation under the act of 1881. It is quite true that by far the larger share of its business was carried on in Utah, and at Chicago.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E. 155, 105 N.Y. 76, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 495, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-horn-silver-mining-co-ny-1887.