Staples v. Kirby Petroleum Co.

250 S.W. 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1923
DocketNo. 6659.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 293 (Staples v. Kirby Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staples v. Kirby Petroleum Co., 250 S.W. 293 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Findings of Fact.

JENKINS, J.

Appellee is a foreign corporation, chartered under the laws of Delaware. It has been for some time operating in this state, under a permit to do business in this state. Its principal office and place of business in this state is in Houston. It employs its entire capital in this state.

Within the time prescribed by law appellee made a sworn report to the secretary of state, showing the entire value of its authorized capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits to be $9,387,064.08. This is the correct value of all of the property owned by appellee. Appellant refused to issue a permit to appellee to continue business in this state, for the reason he claimed the actual value of the property owned by appellee was not the correct basis upon which to estimate the amount of the franchise tax due by appellee, but that the same should be estimated on the basis of $75,000,000. This contention is based upon the following fact: Appellee was chartered under the laws of Delaware. It is authorized by its charter to issue 75,000 shares of non-par value. That is to say, these so-called shares were units, upon which no value was fixed by the charter, and which the corporation might dispose of at any price it saw proper. The statute of Delaware (Rev. Code 1915, § 1918a, as added by 29 Del. Laws, c. 113, § 3) authorizing the issuance of appellee’s charter is as follows:

“See. 4a. Stools Without Par Value. — Any corporation may, if so provided in its certificate of incorporation or in an amendment thereof, issue shares of stock (other than stock preferred as to dividends or preferred as to its distributive share of the assets of the corporation or subject -to redemption at a fixed price) without any nominal or par value. Every share of such stock without nominal or par value shall be equal to every other share of such stock, except that the certificate of incorporation may provide that such stock shall be divided into different classes with such designations and voting powers or restriction or qualification thereof as shall be stated therein, but all such stock shall be subordinate to the preferences given to preferred stock, if any. Such stock may be issued by the corporation from time to time for such consideration as may be fixed from time to time by the board of directors thereof, pursuant to authority conferred in the certificate of incorporation, or if such certificate shall not so. provide, then by the consent of -the holders of two-thirds of each class of stock then outstanding and entitled to vote given at a meeting called for that purpose in such manner as shall be prescribed by she by-laws, and any and all such shares so issued, the full consideration for which has been paid or delivered, shall be deemed full-paid stock and not liable to any further call or assessment thereon, and the holder of such shares shall not be liable for any further payments under the provisions of this chapter.
“In any case in which the law requires that the par value of the shares of stock of a corporation be stated in any certificate or paper, it shall be stated, in respect of such shares, that such shares are without par value, and wherever the amount of stock, authorized or issued, is required to be’ stated, the number of shares authorized or issued shall be stated, and it shall .also be stated that such shares are without par value. For the purpose of the taxes prescribed to be paid on the filing of any certificate or other paper relating to corporations and of franchise taxes prescribed to be paid by corporations to this state, but for no other purpose, such shares shall be taken to be of the par value of one hundred dollars each.”

Appellant, for the purpose of the franchise tax required by the laws of this state, estimated the 75,000 shares of appellee’s non-par stock at $100, each, or $75,000,000.

The judgment of the trial court fixed the amount upon which the franchise tax should be estimated at $9,387,064.08. The trial court further found that the franchise tax owing by appellee was $5,431.75. This is correct if, as a matter of law, the tax should be based upon the valuation of $9,387,064.08, as fixed by the act of 1919.

It is the contention of appellee that the court erred in fixing the rate under the act of 1919, but that the same should be fixed under the act of 1917 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, art. 7394), for the reason that the act of 1919, in so far as it undertook to change the rate as fixed by the act of 1917, was unconstitutional. Appellant contends that the valuation, for the purpose of the franchise tax due this state, should be fixed at $75,000,000.

Opinion.

There is no law in this state authorizing a charter to be granted to a corporation with non-par value of stock, but it is not denied by appellant that a foreign corporation of this character is entitled to obtain a permit to do business in this state, upon the payment of the proper amount of franchise tax. The act of 1919 (General Laws, p. 75 [Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922, art. 73947) is not different from the law of 1917 (page 168), except that it provides that, the tax shall be computed upon the undivided surplus, in addition to the capital stock, and changes the rate. This latter feature of the act will be dealt with, in a subsequent portion of this opinion.

Section 1 of the act of 1919 reads as follows:

“Article 7394. Except as herein provided, each and every foreign corporation authorized, or that may hereafter be authorized, to do business in this state, shall, on or before the first day of May of each year pay in advance *295

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staples-v-kirby-petroleum-co-texapp-1923.