White v. State

197 S.W.2d 389, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 727
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1946
DocketNo. 9586.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 197 S.W.2d 389 (White v. State) 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
White v. State, 197 S.W.2d 389, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 727 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

This appeal is from a declaratory judgment construing Art. 5221b — 5(c) (7), Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St., as not authorizing appellant, White Tire & Supply Company, a co-partnership composed of G. A. White, L. C. Kirby, and Madie Wood, to pay its unemployment compensation taxes for the year 1945 at the rate of .5% instead of at the rate of 2.7% as demanded by the Texas Unemployment Compensation Commission and recovered herein by the State.

The question arose because on January 1, 1945, appellant reorganized its business, and to be entitled to the lower .5% rate it must have been on that date eligible to the three-year “experience rating” of its predecessor within the meaning of subsection 5(c) (7) of the Act, and particularly the part of (7) *vhich reads:

“For the purposes of this Section, two or more employing units which are parties to or the subject of a merger, consolidation, or other form of reorganization effecting’ a change in legal identity or form, shall be deemed to be a single employing unit if the Commission finds that (i) immediately after such change the employing enterprises of the predecessor employing unit or units are continued solely through a single employing unit as successor thereto; and (ii) immediately after such change such successor is owned or controlled by substantially the same interests as the predecessor employing unit or units; and (iii) the success sor has assumed liability for all contributions required of the predecessor employing unit or units; and (iv) the consideration of such two or more employing units as a single employing unit for the purposes of this Section would not be inequitable.”

The facts show that the White Tire & Supply Company was first organized in the year 1938, as a co-partnership composed of G. A. White, L. C. Kirby, and Madie Wood. It continued to so operate until the year 1940, when it was incorporated with a capital stock of $24,000, owned by the three named partners, except $3,500 of the stock was transferred to Dan L. Calihan and Clinton Scott, employees, as a reward for their services to the corporation. The corporation, as did its predecessor co-partnership, owned and operated a store for the sale of automobile tires and supplies at Huntsville, Texas. Later the corporation established a branch of its business at Trinity, Texas, under the name of Trinity Motor Company, which was owned and controlled by the corporation.

In 1942 the corporation was dissolved and a co-partnership was organized, composed of G. A. White, L. C. Kirby, Madie Wood, Dan L. Calihan and Clinton Scott, the five owners of the capital stock of the predecessor corporation. Under the co-partnership arrangements Calihan owned an 18% interest and Scott a 4.2% interest therein. This co-partnership continued the operation of the store at Huntsville and the Trinity Motor Company at Trinity until January 1, 1945, when a reorganization agreement was made, whereby Calihan became the owner of the motor company business at Trinity, in consideration or satisfaction of his 18% interest in the former co-partnership business, and at which time Calihan began the operation of the Trinity Motor Company as an individual. Scott sold his 4.2% interest in the co-partnership business to Madie Wood. Beginning on January 1, 1945, appellant, White Tire & Supply Company, became a co-partnership, composed of G. A. White, L. C. Kirby, and Madie Wood, which became the owner and operator of only the store at Huntsville. That is, a part of the business of the former five-member co-partnership became the individual property of one of the partners who withdrew from the co-partnership; another partner sold his interest, leaving only three members as the owners and operators of the remaining part of the business, the store at Huntsville.

*391 At no time did the Trinity Motor Company have more than five employees, and standing alone never became subject to the Unemployment Act. During the time it was a part of the business of the corporation and later of the five-member co-partnership, it was subject to the Act as a part of such White Tire & Supply Company business. The store business at Huntsville was at all times subject to and complied with the Act.

The corporation, after the expiration of the three-year period prescribed by the Act, by reason of the experience fating of itself and its predecessor, the three-member co-partnership, became entitled to and was awarded an experience rating of .5% by the Commission. Likewise, the five-member co-partnership, which succeeded to all of the interest of the corporation, was entitled to and was by the Commission awarded an experience rating of .5%. It is this experience rating of .5%, earned by the five-member co-partnership, that appellant contends it is entitled to under the foregoing facts and statutes. The Commission ruled and the trial court held that appellant was not entitled to succeed to such experience rating of .5%.

We hold that under the foregoing agreed facts appellant underwent on January 1, 1945, a reorganization within the meaning of Subsection 5 (c) (7) of the Act, because after January 1, 1945, instead of there being one five-member partnership employing unit operating an establishment in Huntsville, Texas, and an establishment in Trinity, Texas, there were appellant, a three-member partnership employing unit operating only the establishment in Huntsville, and Calihan, an individual employing unit operating the establishment in Trinity. In consequence the reorganized three-member partnership employing unit was not entitled to succeed to the experience rating of the former five-member partnership employing unit.

Appellant, contends (1) that the provisions of (7) (i), and (ii) of the Act do not apply to a partnership reorganization; but if so, that the provisions of (i) and(ii) should be read in the disjunctive so that the word “and” between (i) and (ii) should be read “or” in order to give the Act its true meaning; and (2) that when so construed there was no such change or reorganization of the White Tire & Supply Company on January 1, 1945, as would effect its experience rating within the purview of Subsection 5(c) (7) of the Act. Neither of these contentions is sustained.

As supporting the contention that the provisions of (7) (i) and (ii) have no application to a partnership reorganization, appellant cites the language providing that “two or more employing units” may merge or reorganize and “be deemed to be a single employing unit,” if the Cpmmission finds the merger or reorganization is within the purview of the Act. It is argued that a partnership could hardly effect any sort of reorganization without forming a new partnership, because under partnership law the slightest change of membership works a dissolution and formation of a new partnership. After so reasoning appellant poses the question that “if the benefits of this section of the Act (transfer of experience rating) were intended for any sort of reorganization of a partnership, what character of reorganization could it have applied to ?”

No Texas case has construed Subsection 5 (c) (7) with respect to transfer of experience rating. The decisions of other states, having identical or similar statutes, have uniformly held that one employing unit subject to a reorganization effecting a change in its legal identity or form is within the purview of such statutes, and that two employing units reorganizing into one is not a prerequisite.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W.2d 389, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-state-texapp-1946.