State ex rel. Leppert v. Roach

181 S.W. 90, 266 Mo. 435, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 90 (State ex rel. Leppert v. Roach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Leppert v. Roach, 181 S.W. 90, 266 Mo. 435, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 137 (Mo. 1915).

Opinions

WALKER, J.

This is an original proceeding by mandamus instituted in this court by relators to compel the respondent, who is the Secretary of State, to issue articles authorizing the creation of a business corporation under article 7, chapter 33, Revised Statutes 1909, as amended (Laws 1911, p. 148.) The application was made for the formation of a corporation with an authorized capital stock of $50,000; and the required fee based on this capitalization was tendered. Under the statute of 1911, supra, when the capital stock of a company applying for incorporation consists of property instead of cash, it is required that the articles of agreement give an itemized description of such property, sworn to by the officers and directors of the proposed company, setting out the cash value of each item thereof; if realty, a specific description of same [441]*441is to be given, with the cash value of each tract; if personalty, the location of each class of property is to be given, with its actual value by classes. In the instant case the capital stock, except $1000' in cash, consisted of personalty, which was in the articles of agreement classified and valued as required by the statute. The aggregate valuation of same so set apart and to be employed in the business of the company was more than $91,000. In their affidavit attached to the articles of agreement relators say that the property described is to be taken in payment of the capital stock of said company and that the value placed thereon by them is the actual cash value of such property. Regardless of this showing, relators contend that they are entitled to fix the amount of the capital stock of the proposed corporation arbitrarily at $50,000, which is the maximum amount of capital stock for which the minimum fee may be paid to the State for a charter. Under this state of facts the respondent refused to issue the articles of incorporation, on the ground that the capital stock of the proposed company, as shown by its articles of agreement and as admitted by relators in their affidavit thereto, was $91,000', and the fees required to be paid to the State upon this capitalization should have been tendered to authorize the granting of the charter.

Time need not be taken or words wasted in defining the distinction between the capital and the capital stock of a corporation. The distinctive meanings of these terms, many of which have been compiled by industrious counsel, need not concern us here, because they afford no aid in determining the question under consideration. Whatever differences there may be between their' respective meanings are well enough when applied to a going corporation which has accumulated assets, properly termed its capital, but such! conditions do not exist here. A company is sought to be incorporated. It is immaterial that the business in [442]*442which it proposes to engage was theretofore conducted by relators as individuals. So far as the State is concerned the incorporation of the company is the beginning of its business. The amount required by law to be paid into its treasury by its stockholders in money or money’s worth for the prosecution of its business when organized may not improperly be termed its capital stock, but at the same time this constitutes its assets or capital, because it is the actual and only property of the corporation. In fact,- as a newly created corporation its full paid capital stock is, in the very nature of its existence, all that it can possess. That is the condition here, and one of the questions to be determined in this case is whether the proposed incorporators are asking incorporation on a capitalization based on the true value of the capital stock as shown by their sworn statement or upon an arbitrary amount less than such true value.

Confronted with this state of facts, it is necessary to determine the nature of the payment required to be made by relators to authorize the respondent in issuing the articles of incorporation, and the manner in which this payment is to be measured. In other words, directing the inquiry to the concrete case, is the payment required to be made by incorporators as a prerequisite to the issuance of the articles of incorporation a fee for clerical services rendered by the Secretary of State; or, is it a tax levied by the State on a corporation at its creation, for revenue purposes? If 'a fee, the amount for which a coi'poration may be capitalized may be fixed arbitrarily by the incorporators regardless, as in this case, of the value of the property to be taken as capital stock as set forth in ' the articles of agreement required to be filed when application is made for the charter, provided, of course, that value is equal to the total amount for which the company is to be incorporated. If, however, the payment required is in the nature of a tax, then the com[443]*443pany must be incorporated for an amount equal to the total cash value of the property to be taken as the capital stock set forth, as before stated, in the articles of agreement. This for the reason that a capitalization for a less amount than the .total cash value of the property set forth in the articles of agreement would prevent the levy and collection of the corporation tax upon the full amount of the capital which the company proposed to employ in its business; or, conversely, it would enable the company to escape the payment of a corporation tax upon the value of the property in excess of the amount for which the company was incorporated.

A section of our State Constitution (Soc. 21, art. 10), under the subdivision entitled, “Revenue and Taxation,” provides, among other things, that no business corporation shall be created or organized under the laws of this State unless the persons named as corporators shall, at or before the filing of the articles of association or incorporation, pay into the State Treasury the fees therein specified. This is followed by a general proviso that nothing contained in the section shall be construed to prohibit the General Assembly from levying a further tax on the franchises of a corporation.

This section first found lodgment in our laws in the present Constitution, and while held to be self-enforcing (State ex rel. v. Lesueur, 145 Mo. 322), the General Assembly, in 1879 (Sec. 708, R. S. 1879), deemed it proper to enact (Sec. 2976, R. S. 1909), in the words of the Constitution, that portion of the constitutional section regulating the amount to be.paid the State to authorize the issuance of articles of incorporation. This fact, if it have no other pertinence, is indicative of the importance with which the section was regarded by the General Assembly, because the action of the latter was not necessary to render the section operative.

[444]*444We have’shown that the section appears in the Constitution under the title of “Revenue and Taxation.” While a title is, in a legal sense, no part of a law and cannot be used to amplify or restrain same, it may properly be considered here in determining the purpose of the framers of the organic law in thus classifying the section, under the general rule that a title is presumed to express the intent of a law unless plainly contradicted by the body of same. [Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Albert, 39 Mo. 181; Sedg., Stat. Con., p. 39.] Applying this rule to the concrete case, the conclusion is authorized that the title indicates the nature of the payment required to be that of a tax and not a mere fee for clerical services, and there is nothing in the section which militates against the correctness of this conclusion; besides, it is supported not merely by abstract reasoning, but it has judicial sanction.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 90, 266 Mo. 435, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-leppert-v-roach-mo-1915.