Spouting Rock Beach Assn. v. Tax Commissioners

101 A. 215, 40 R.I. 499, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 A. 215 (Spouting Rock Beach Assn. v. Tax Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spouting Rock Beach Assn. v. Tax Commissioners, 101 A. 215, 40 R.I. 499, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 48 (R.I. 1917).

Opinions

Stearns, J.

Case on tlie petitioner’s exception to the decision of the Superior Court confirming a tax assessment made by tbe respondents, tax commissioners of tbe State of Rhode Island, against tbe petitioner, as a corporation carrying on business in this State for profit.

Is tbe petitioner a corporation carrying on business for profit within this State, within the meaning of Sec. 9, *500 Chap. 769, Pub. Laws 1912, or is it, as claimed by the petitioner, a corporation organized for social purposes and consequently exempt from taxation on its intangible property, called its corporate excess, as provided for by Sec. 47 of said chapter. In considering the nature of this corporation we will examine first the powers given to the corporation by its charter, and its organization thereunder, and then the acts of the corporation.

The Bailey Beach Association was incorporated by a special act of the General Assembly on February 5,1897, and the name was changed to the Spouting Bock Beach Association by amendment May 20, 1897. The charter is as follows:

“ Section 1. Bobert Goelet, Henry A. C. Taylor and I. Townsend Burden, and their associates and successors, are hereby created a corporation by the name of the BAILEY BEACH ASSOCIATION, for the purpose of buying, selling, leasing, holding and improving real and personal property, bathing privileges, and other rights and of undertaking such measures as may promote the welfare of the City of Newport as a resort for summer residents and owners of cottages, and for the transaction of any business connected therewith and incidental thereto, with all the powers and privileges, and subject to all the duties and liabilities set forth in Chapter 177 of the General Laws, and of all acts in amendment thereof and in addition thereto.
Section 2. The said Corporation shall have power to make and ordain such Constitution and By-Laws not repugnant to the Constitution and laws of this State and of the United States, as it may think proper, and the same to modify and repeal at pleasure, to take, hold and convey real and personal property to an amount hot exceeding two hundred thousand dollars, and which real and personal property may be divided into such number of shares and of such amount as may be determined from *501 time to time by said Corporation and which shall be deemed personal property and be transferred as such according to such rules and conditions as the said Constitution and By-Laws of said Corporation may prescribe.
“ Section 3. No stockholder shall sell or transfer his stock or any portion thereof without first giving said Corporation the right to purchase the same at the lowest price for which he is willing to sell such stock, and said Corporation may provide by By-Laws in what way such right of pre-emption shall be exercised by said Corporation.
“ Section 4. This act shall take effect from and after its passage. ” .

By the constitution of the corporation the amount of the capital stock is fixed at $200,000, divided into shares of $500 each, with stock certificates in the usual form, signed by the treasurer and secretary.

Clause 5 is as follows: “ No assignee of stock in the Corporation, shall be entitled to the privileges of membership, or to a voice in the- affairs of the Corporation, until he shall have been regularly elected a member, as herein provided.” Without passing on the question of the legality of this particular by-law, it is apparent that the capital stock of this corporation is similar to the capital stock in the ordinary business corporation. It is personal property which can be bought and sold, is transferable and assignable, and on the decease of a stockholder the stock is the property of the estate of such member unless disposed of by will. Ownership of the stock, however, does not carry with it the privilege of membership and the social enjoyment of the use of the property.

In the constitution are the following provisions: “ ‘ members ’ shall be all persons who, having been duly elected and being Stockholders, are members of the Corporation. Every member, except the Corporators and original members, shall be elected by the G-overning *502 Committee.”' No person shall be elected a member unless he is the owner of at least one share of stock. Every member has one vote for each share of stock held by him, at all meetings of the corporation. The control of the business of the corporation, except the sale or mortgage of its real estate, is vested in a governing committee of nine members with power to make rules and regulations which have the force of by-laws, and the by-laws of the corporation may be amended or repealed by the governing committee. The by-laws also provide for the use of the property by “ Subscribers ” who, upon payment of a subscription and on vote of the executive committee, are entitled to the privileges of members, for the time subscribed for.

In Article III of the Constitution is the following provision :

“ Each original member (or subscriber) being the owner of four shares of the capital stock, shall have the privilege at any time of having from one to four bath houses built and conveyed to him (or to such member as he may designate) by payment to the Treasurer of one hundred dollars for each house desired.
“ Said houses to be built by the Association and to be similar to those previously erected on the beach, and to be conveyed to the member by deed or grant, containing same covenants, etc., as in deeds of bath houses made by Bailey and Smith, the former owners of said beach.”

Coming now to the consideration of the acts of the corporation the following facts appear from the statement of the corporation for the year 1914, which was filed by the corporation under protest:

*503 “ Total amount of authorized capital stock............... $200,000.00
1. Amount issued and outstanding...... 107,500.00
Number of shares outstanding....... 215
Par value of shares.............,... '500.00
Average fair cash value........... 250.00
to . a. Rate of annual dividends paid....... none.
to . b. Rate of annual dividends earned..... none.
3. Amount of bonds, debentures or outstanding indebtedness............ none.
4. Gross receipts within and without R. I. 7,220.35
5. Assets:
Real Estate and improvements ......... $93,934.14
Cash................. 184.62
Securities............. 11,387.10
Profits and Loss........ 1,994.14
$107,500.00.
Liabilities:
Capital Stock.......... $107,500.00
6.

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Related

Spouting Rock Beach Corp. v. United States
176 F. Supp. 938 (D. Rhode Island, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 215, 40 R.I. 499, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spouting-rock-beach-assn-v-tax-commissioners-ri-1917.