Texas Land & Cattle Co. v. City of Fort Worth

73 S.W.2d 860, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1934
DocketNo. 12976.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 860 (Texas Land & Cattle Co. v. City of Fort Worth) 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
Texas Land & Cattle Co. v. City of Fort Worth, 73 S.W.2d 860, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 732 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinions

The Texas Land Cattle Company and Tina Brooker, temporary administratrix of the estate of J. N. Brooker, deceased, have prosecuted this appeal from a judgment in favor of the city of Fort Worth for taxes assessed on certain promissory notes as hereinafter noted.

The case was tried without a jury and findings of fact and conclusions of law by the trial judge appearing in the record disclose the issues of fact and law which, stated in a narrative form, are as follows:

"1. The defendant, Texas Land Cattle Company, is a private corporation chartered under the laws of the State of Delaware in the year 1926, with its charter stating that the purposes of the company are to conduct and engage in the ranching business and to lend money on land, and naming Wilmington, Delaware, as its home office.

"2. The stock of the company consists of 2,000 shares, 1980 shares owned by J. N. Brooker, who was president and general manager of the company, 10 shares owned by Tina Brooker, a niece of J. N. Brooker, who was secretary and treasurer, and 10 shares owned by Alice Brooker, a sister of J. N. Brooker; all of these named persons were the only directors and stockholders of the company and all of them resided in one family on the outskirts of the City of Fort Worth, in the County of Tarrant, State of Texas. Continuously from the time the Texas Land Cattle Company was organized, its business was transacted in the office of its president, J. N. Brooker, in the City of Fort Worth, Texas. Neither J. N. Brooker nor Tina Brooker, the active managers of the business of the company, were ever in the City of Wilmington, Delaware, and no loans of any kind or character were ever made at the home office of the company.

"3. The Texas Land Cattle Company was engaged in the business of lending money in the City of Fort Worth. All of the details of making the loans were transacted through the office of its president and agent, J. N. Brooker, in the City of Fort Worth, Texas, and evidenced by promissory notes made payable in the City of Fort Worth. The money paid to the borrower was by check on some Fort Worth Bank either signed by Brooker individually or by the company which maintained an account in said city. Payments of interest or principal on the loans were made at the office of the local agent, J. N. Brooker, or at some local bank. The money obtained from the loans was deposited in some Fort Worth bank and reinvested as above detailed, said money never being sent at any time and in any amount to the home office of the company at Wilmington, Delaware. All of the business of the corporation consisted in the lending of money in Fort Worth by its local agent as above detailed and in dealing in securities by said local agent, and the only acts of any agent in Wilmington, Delaware, were those performed by the Corporation Service Company, and these consisted of the original incorporation of the company, the payment of the company's annual franchise tax and the receipt and temporary detention of the notes in a lock box in Wilmington, Delaware. Said notes were on occasions sent from time to time to Wilmington, Delaware, Kansas City, Missouri, or Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and there temporarily deposited in a lock box. Said temporary transfer of notes from place to place was not necessary in the conduct of the company's business and it constituted no part of the dealings of the *Page 862 company, which were exclusively handled in the City of Fort Worth. The notes and credits in question were used and employed in Fort Worth, Texas, in the furtherance of the business in which the Texas Land Cattle Company was engaged, and the business of the company, to wit, the lending of money, was not furthered in any way by the retention of the notes in any jurisdiction other than the City of Fort Worth, as the execution, delivery, recording, application of credits, transfers and release of said notes took place wholly within the corporate limits of the City of Fort Worth. The notes in question were regularly, habitually and continuously used in Fort Worth in the company's business, except when sent out of the jurisdiction for deposit and safekeeping only, but were returned to the City of Fort Worth and to the office of the company, or one of the local Danks when it became necessary to employ them in the routine business of the company.

"4. During all of the times described in plaintiff's petition, J. N. Brooker owned all of the 2000 shares of stock in the Texas Land Cattle Company with the exception of 20 qualifying shares held by a niece and sister in his household. The organization was a one-man corporation. It was organized and its affairs were operated as a corporation for the sole and only purpose of avoiding and evading the payment of taxes due and payable by the defendant in the City of Fort Worth, Texas. The corporation was a mere fiction for the purpose of establishing the domicile of the defendant in Wilmington, Delaware. None of the directors or stockholders of the company were ever in the City of Wilmington, Delaware. All of its business was conducted in the office of its president in the City of Fort Worth, Texas. The real office and domicile of the corporation was in the City of Fort Worth, Texas.

"5. Ad valorem taxes for the years 1928, 1929, 1930 and 1931 were regularly and duly assessed by the City of Fort Worth against the notes of said company described in plaintiff's first amended original petition, as shown by the certified copies of the delinquent tax rolls of said city for said years in the following amounts for the following years: (Here follows a list of the promissory notes and the years for which the taxes were assessed on each, their rate of taxation, and the aggregate of the taxes assessed being $17,613.01.)

"6. No taxes of any kind have been paid on said notes for any of the years described in plaintiff's petition.

"7. In May of 1931, all of said notes were transferred and assigned by said company to J. N. Brooker, with full knowledge on the part of the said Brooker of all of the above facts.

"8. The plaintiff City of Fort Worth is a municipal corporation with more than 100,000 inhabitants. It was duly and regularly incorporated as a `home rule' city under and by virtue of the laws and Constitution of the State of Texas on the 11th day of December, A.D. 1924, the provisions of which Charter the courts take judicial notice of.

"Conclusions of Law.
"1. The property of the defendant Texas Land Cattle Company has been legally assessed for taxation by the plaintiff City of Fort Worth.

"2. The actual situs for taxation purposes of the promissory notes belonging to the defendant Texas Land Cattle Company, and those that it has assigned to its president, J. N. Brooker, was the City of Fort Worth, Texas.

"3. The defendant, Texas Land Cattle Company, a corporation, is indebted to the plaintiff, City of Fort Worth, in the sum of $17,613.01, being the taxes and penalties due on the defendant's property, together with costs of suit and foreclosure of its lien upon the promissory notes described in plaintiff's petition."

Judgment was rendered in accordance with those conclusions.

It is a general rule that the situs of personal property, both tangible and intangible for purposes of taxation, is the domicile of the owner. That rule is based upon a fiction, to the end that the owner may not escape the expenses of the government by virtue of whose laws his rights in such property are protected.

The defendant in the trial court, appellant here, has invoked that rule, which is the sole basis of its resistance to the demand of the city of Fort Worth, plaintiff, for the taxes awarded in the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 860, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-land-cattle-co-v-city-of-fort-worth-texapp-1934.