State v. Realty Loan Co.

96 So. 613, 209 Ala. 559, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 11, 1923
Docket6 Div. 782.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 So. 613 (State v. Realty Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Realty Loan Co., 96 So. 613, 209 Ala. 559, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 524 (Ala. 1923).

Opinions

MILLER, J.

The board of tax adjusters' of Jefferson county assessed as an escape certain personal property of the Realty Loan Company, a corporation, on January 3, 1921, for the years 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, and 1920. It reached the circuit court of the county by appeal from orders assessing and valuing the property as an escape and subjecting it to taxation for those five years.

The state filed in the circuit court one count in the. complaint. It claimed the defendant, the Realty Loán Company, owned during each of those five years personal prop-erty consisting of capital stock of the Realty Trust Company, a foreign corporation; that this stock escaped taxation for each of the five years; and avers the assessable value of this stock for each year it escaped taxation was $88,800 for 1916, $105,300 for 1917, $117,-000 for 1918, $120,000 for 1919, and $120,000-for 1920. It also avers the defendant failed to list this stock of the Realty Trust Company owned by it for taxation for each of the five years; that it has not been assessed for taxation during the five years; and the state avers the defendant for each of the five years assessed and paid taxes on its own corporate stock as a domestic corporation.

The defendant filed two special pleas to-this complaint, numbered 5 and 6. The state filed demurrers to each plea. They were overruled by the court. The state then filed two special replications to pleas 5 and 6. Demurrers of defendant to each were sustained by the court. A nonsuit was granted the state. Einal judgment was rendered by .the court. This appeal is prosecuted by the state therefrom, and the adverse rulings to it by the court on the demurrers are the-errors assigned.

Pleas 5 and 6 aver this stock owned by defendant in tbe Realty Trust Company did not escape being taxed for any one of the five yeárs mentioned in the complaint; that the entire capital stock of defendant corporation was by the tax assessor duly assessed and valued for each of the five years, and the taxes thereon were paid. Plea 5-then avers:

“That the said assessed value of the capital, stock was represented in whole, or nearly in whole, by the value of the personal property sought in this -suit to be assessed and taxed by the state, being the same personal property declared on in the complaint; that the failure-to separate in the return the stock value and the value of the personal property did not allow the-personal property of the corporation to be an escape, and-it was not an escape, but tbe said personal property was assessed and taxes paid thereon in the said assessment and the *561 paying of taxes on the capital stock of the defendant corporation.”

Plea 6 also avers the defendant in each of the five years mentioned in the complaint made out under oath to the tax assessor of this county, in which is the home office of defendant, a list showing the total number of shares of the capital stock of defendant corporation, the par value, the date and price paid for the last sale of any stock, the-book value of the shares of stock, amount of the surplus, the amount of the undivided profits; and this plea then avers:

“That thereupon the tax assessor of Jefferson county during each said year assessed the said corporate stock of the defendant for the tax years respectively described in the complaint and judicially determined the said assessment, and- thereupon the defendant paid each of said assessment so assessed by the said tax assessor. That the said assessments of the said corporate shares, included the property now set out in the complaint and sought to be reassessed in this cause, although this defendant made no separate return of the personal property owned by it. This defendant at said time owned no other personal property than the personal property declared on in the complaint, and now sought in this complaint and in this proceeding to be retaxed, and owned no real estate. That the said assessed stock value was represented by the value of the said personal property described in the complaint. Wherefore defendant says that said shares of stock of the Realty Trust Company described in the complaint were not escaped from taxation for the years alleged.”

It appears from the complaint that the state seeks to assess for taxation, for five years the stock of the Realty Trust Company, a foreign corporation, which is owned by the defendant corporation, on the ground that it has escaped taxation during those years. N

The defendant by pleas 5 and 6 states this stock has not escaped taxation; that the entire capital stock of the defendant corporation was duly assessed for the five years, the value thereof fixed; and the taxes thereon paid, and the assessed value of its entire capital stock for those years represented, included, and was based on the value of this stock of the foreign corporation owned by it. Plea 5 avers:

“That the said assessed value of the capital stock was represented in whole, or nearly in whole, by the value of the personal property sought in this suit to be assessed and taxed by the state, being same personal property declared on in the complaint.”

Plea 6 states:

“That said assessments of the said corporate shares included the property now set out in the complaint to be reassessed in this cause.”

And it avers:

“This defendant at said time owned no other personal property than the personal property declared on in this complaint, and sought to be retaxed.”

And also avers:

Defendant “owned no real estate, that the-said assessed - stock value was represented by the value of the said personal property described in the complaint.”

From these pleas, if true, and they are confessed by the demurrers, it appears the value of the entire capital stock of the defendant corporation for each of the five-years, as assessed, was represented by and based on the value of its stock in this foreign corporation, and this stock in the foreign corporation was all the property, or practically all the property, owned during the five years1 by the defendant. If this1 stock in the foreign corporation owned by defendant is valued and assessed for taxation during the five-years and taxed as escaped property, then.this would be double taxation of the same property, as its value was represented by and made the value during those five years of the capital stock of defendant corporation, which was assessed, valued, taxed, and the taxes-paid thereon during the five years. Property, the subject of taxation, which has been assessed and taxed, and the taxes paid, cannot be subject to taxation as an escape. In this case the entire capital stock of the defendant corporation was assessed, its value fixed, and the taxes on its assessed value were paid for each of the five years; but the personal property, this stock in the foreign corporation, which was all or practically all the property the defendant owned, was not listed or its value separately assessed. This stock in this foreign corporation owned by- the defendant was not, then, subject to taxation as an escape, because its value was represented in and made up the value of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, which’ was assessed and the tax on its assessed value paid for each of the five years.

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Related

E. K. Wood Lumber Co. v. Whatcom County
104 P.2d 912 (Washington Supreme Court, 1940)
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131 So. 14 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
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105 So. 172 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 613, 209 Ala. 559, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-realty-loan-co-ala-1923.