State v. Pierce Petroleum Corporation

2 S.W.2d 790, 318 Mo. 1020, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 790 (State v. Pierce Petroleum Corporation) 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 v. Pierce Petroleum Corporation, 2 S.W.2d 790, 318 Mo. 1020, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 635 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*1023 RAGLAND, J.

Appellant’s statement of the case, which is acquiesced in by respondent, is as follows:

“This case arises out of an action to recover delinquent franchise taxes. Defendant, respondent in this court, is a private corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware and licensed to do business under the laws of the State of Missouri. In compliance with our franchise-tax law, defendant made its' report in writing to the State Tax Commission for the year 1926. Said report disclosed that said defendant corporation was organized in Delaware with two million five hundred thousand (2,500,000) shares of stock having no stated par value; that three and one-tenth per cent of the total number of shares were employed within the State of Missouri; that seventy-seven thousand five hundred (77,500) shares of stock represented three and one-tenth of the total number of shares; and that said seventy-seven thousand five hundred (77,500) shares of no-par value represented that part of defendant’s outstanding capital stock and surplus said to be employed in Missouri.
“Upon the basis of this report, the Tax Commission assessed a tax against the defendant corporation on the sum of seven million seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($7,750,000) ; that amount being arrived at by allotting to each no-par-value share of stock, said to be employed in this State, an arbitrary value of one hundred dollars each, as provided by law. The resulting tax was $3875. Defendant paid to the State of Missouri, $410.18, the amount it claimed it owed *1024 for franchise tax for 1926, said amount being arrived at by basing the tax on the actual value of the no-par-value shares employed in this State, instead of giving an arbitrary value of one hundred dollars to each share. The balance of the tax, $3464.82, as assessed, remaining due and unpaid on June 1st (the delinquent date named in. the statute), the State Treasurer certified the same to the Attorney-General for collection.
“The Attorney-General filed suit to collect the tax and agreed by stipulation to waive penalty and interest. Defendant filed its answer, setting up as a defense that there was no law authorizing the State to tax a corporation having share of stock with no stated par value, for the purpose of the franchise tax at one hundred dollars per share; and further, that such a method of taxation was unconstitutional.
‘ ‘ The case was submitted to the court on the pleadings, and judgment was rendered for the defendant. From this judgment, plaintiff appeals to this court.”

It is the State’s contention that Section 12 of an act relating to stock corporations, passed by the General Assembly in 1921 (Laws 1921, p. 664), requires that for the purpose of computing a corporation’s annual franchise tax each share of its stock which is without any nominal or par value shall be considered the equivalent of a share having a nominal or par value of one hundred dollars.

Respondent’s position is: First, that said Section 12 in no way relates to the computation of the franchise tax which is required to be paid by corporations under the laws of this State; and, second, that if said section be construed as requiring that an arbitrary value of one hundred dollars per share be put on no-par-value stock for the purpose of computing the franchise tax, the section in that respect violates designated provisions of the State Constitution and the Constitution of the United States. The proper construction of the statute is .therefore the first, and possibly the only, question for determination.

I. Prior to 1921 all the statute laws of this State relating to business corporations, other than insurance companies, tacitly assumed that any such corporation would have a named capital stock divided *nto a sPec^e<^ number of shares of a designated par value. And capital stock, from some angle, was made the basis for the imposition of numerous duties, restrictions and regulations. By the act heretofore referred to, stock corporations, with certain exceptions not material here, were authorized to issue both preferred and common stock, without any nominal or par value, by stating iii their articles of association or certificate of incorporation, “in lieu of statements which may be prescribed by law as to the amount of the capital stock and the number and par value of shares into which it is divided: *1025 (a) The number of shares with nominal or par value, and the number of shares without nominal or par value, that may be issued by the corporation, and the class, if any, into which such shares are divided; (b) the nominal or par value shares of stock other than shares which it is stated are to have no nominal or par value; (c) the amount of capital with which the corporation will begin business.” [Sec. 1.] Section 3 of the act provided that the stated capital of a corporation issuing shares without nominal or par value should be the capital with which the corporation begins business increased by any net additions thereto, or diminished by any net deductions therefrom. Section 4 provided that preferences, lights, limitations, privileges and restrictions mig’ht be stated in dollars and cents per share in respect to shares of stock without any nominal or par value. Section 5 provided that such shares might be issued and disposed of by the corporation issuing them for such consideration as might be prescribed or authorized in the articles of association or certificate of incorporation, or, if not so prescribed, then for such consideration as might be fixed by the stockholders or by the board of directors acting under authority of the stockholders. And Section 11 provides that except as to preferences, rights, limitations, privileges and restrictions, if any, shares of stock without nominal or par value should be deemed.to be an aliquot part of the aggregate capital of the corporation issuing the same and equal to every other share of stock of the same class. From numerous provisions found throughout the act, and particularly those of Section 12 considered as a whole, it is manifest that it was the purpose of the Legislature in permitting corporations to issue shares of stock without any nominal or par value to impose upon them, so far as was consistent with the general purpose of the act, the same burdens, restrictions and regulations, which, were then imposed by existing law upon other stock corporations, and which, as stated, were based in some respect on the amount of capital stock. Some of these provisions declare that for certain specific purposes "the stated capital” of this new kind of- corporation shall be deemed its capital stock. For example, the following is found in the body of Section 12: 1 ‘ For the purpose of any statutory provision limiting the amount of capital stock which a corporation may have, or prescribing the portion or amount or par value of stock or capital which must be subscribed or paid in cash or otherwise, whether at the time of formation, before commencing to do business, or from time to time subsequent thereto, the stated capital of a corporation having shares without nominal or par value, shall be deemed to be its capital stock or the amount thereof.” Other provisions declare that for certain other purposes a share without nominal or par value shall be considered the equivalent of a share having a nominal or par value of one hundred dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 790, 318 Mo. 1020, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierce-petroleum-corporation-mo-1928.