Union Tanning Co. v. Commonwealth

96 S.E. 780, 123 Va. 610, 1918 Va. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 780 (Union Tanning Co. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Tanning Co. v. Commonwealth, 96 S.E. 780, 123 Va. 610, 1918 Va. LEXIS 55 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:

The assignments of error, upon the points saved in the proceedings in the court below, raise the following questions for our consideration, which will be disposed of in their order as statéd below.

1. Was the omitted capital of the Union Tanning Company, employed in business in Virginia, as of February 1, 1908 to 1915, inclusive, legally assessable for taxation in Giles'county in 1916?

This subject is wholly regulated by statute.

That such capital of a foreign corporation doing business in Virginia (as was true of the said company), is intangible personal property and as such has been assessable and taxable in Virginia since long prior to 1908, under the statute law of Virginia, is well settled. Commonwealth v. United Cigarette Machine Co., 119 Va. 447, 455, 89 S. E. 935. The question of the situs of such property, of a foreign corporation doing business in this State at more than one place, for the purpose of its assessment for taxation in Virginia, has not heretofore, however, been presented to this eourt for decision, and it must be decided by the application of the statute law on the subject to the facts of the case. The latter question was not involved in the case last cited, and that decision did not pass directly upon such question.

[624]*624The legal situs of intangible personal property—i- e., the; capital—of corporations, both foreign and domestic, taxable in this State, for all of the years in question, was and is fixed for current yearly assessments, by section 492 of the Code of Virginia, Which provides that the intangible personal property not otherwise taxed of all corporations “shall be listed to the corporation by the principal accounting officer and at the principal place of business of the corporation * *” (Italics supplied). Va. Code, 1904, sec. 492. This statute has not been amended or changed in its phraseology, and, hence, was in force and fixed the situs for its assessment for taxation of all the capital of said company employed in business in this State on the first day of February for the years 1908 to 1916, inclusive, and was in force when the assessment complained of in the instant case was made. •

The Acts of 1916, p. 655, at p. 660, having reference in the language presently to be quoted, not to domestic corporations, but to foreign corporations only, doing business in this State, uses the following language with regard to the situs of the intangible personal property—i. e., the capital—of such corporations employed in business in'this State, for current yearly assessments, namely, that such property or capital is “ * * hereby declared assessable within this State and at the business domicile of .said nonresident * * corporation * * or its agent or representative.” (Italics supplied). This act was also in force when the assessment complained of in this case was made.

The Acts of 1916, at pp. 827-8, containing section 508 of the Code, as amended, on the subject of the assessment of “omitted taxes, levies, etc.,” so far as material to the point under consideration, provides as follows: “ * * the examiner of records * * (is) * * hereby authorized, unless the assessment on intangible personal property * * for omitted taxes have (has) already been made, to [625]*625use the same methods * * for the assessment * * of all omitted taxes on intangible personal property * * as are authorized to be used for the assessment * * of current taxes * * ” This act was also in force when, and it was under it that, the assessment complained of in the instant case was made.

Where, then, was the principal place of business or business domicile of said company in this State when the assessment of omitted' capital complained of was made in 1916?

The company contends that the law will imply that-its principal place of business in this State was at the place where its principal office in this State was located -at the time in question; and the case of Lloyd v. Lynchburg, 113 Va. 627, 75 S. E. 233, is relied on to sustain that position.

That case involved a domestic corporation and, in construing said section 492 of the Code, held that the law will imply that the principal place of business of such corporation is at the place where its principal office is located. It is true that that holding resulted from the consideration that the domicile of a domestic corporation is, as a general rule, at the place where its principal office is located; and from the further consideration that, independently of statute, the intangible assets of a corporation—as of a natural person—having no 'situs of their own for purposes of taxation, follow and are assessable only at the domicile of the owner. Hence, that case is not-directly decisive of the point that the same holding must be made with respect to the locus in this State of the principal place of business of a foreign corporation; for, accurately speaking, a foreign corporation can have but one domicile, as is true of a natural person, and it can have but one principal office, which is identical with its domicile, if it has such an office at all, and that, if it exists, must be located within the jurisdiction of the sovereign which created it. If a corporation or [626]*626natural person has its domicile in this State, it is not a non-resident, but a resident of this State. Therefore, a foreign corporation cannot have its true domicile or its principal office, in the sense that it is its true domicile, in this State. It is because its domicile is not in this State that it is a foreign corporation. However, while all this is true, nevertheless, since it is settled, as above stated, that the capital of a foreign corporation employed in business in Virginia is taxable in this State, and since section 492 of the Code fixes the situs of such capital for the purpose of its assessment for such taxation, it is manifest that the language, “the principal place of business,” in said section 492, when applied to a foreign corporation, has reference to its principal place of business in this State, and where, for purposes of taxation, it will be considered as domesticated and to have a local habitation. That this is a correct construction of said section 492 becomes plain in view of the phraseology, “business domicile,” used in the later statute (Acts, 1916, p. 655, at p. 660, above quoted) in designation of the situs of intangible personal property of foreign corporations for assessment for taxation. Both of such statutes are still in force. There is no conflict between them. They both mean one and the same thing when applied to foreign corporations.

• That is to say, the whole subject is-statutory if there is statute law governing the subject. It is only in the absence of statute on the subject that the rule with respect to the situs of intangible personal property following the domicile of its owner applies. The legislature has plenary power to provide that such property of a non-resident corporation (and of non-resident natural persons) shall be assessable for taxation at any place or places it may designate, regardless of the true domicile of the corporation or person taxed. By such designation it makes such place or places the quasi-domicile—i. e., the domicile for purposes of taxation in this State—of such corporations or natural persons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 780, 123 Va. 610, 1918 Va. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-tanning-co-v-commonwealth-va-1918.