Winkleman v. Blue

92 S.E. 124, 79 W. Va. 518, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 113
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 92 S.E. 124 (Winkleman v. Blue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winkleman v. Blue, 92 S.E. 124, 79 W. Va. 518, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 113 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

POFEENBARGER, JUDGE:

On this writ of error to a judgment rendered by tbe Circuit Court of Wood County, in a proceeding authorized by sec. 42a of eh. 32 of the Code, sustaining the action of the State Tax Commissioner, in his assignment of the plaintiffs in error, for the purposes of license and license taxation, to the class of persons that are taxable as licensees, under clause f of see. 2 of ch. 32 of the Code, two questions arise: (1) whether the plaintiffs in error, copartners and stock brokers of the city' of New York, holding a membership in the New York Curb Association and having a branch office in the city of Parkersburg, West Virginia, are so engaged in interstate commerce as to place their business or vocation outside of and beyond the taxing power of the state of West Virginia; and, (2), whether, if the state can impose a license tax upon such [520]*520business, the plaintiffs in error, belong to the class of persons taxable under clause e of said section at the rate of $50.00 per year, or the class taxable under clause f- thereof, at the rate of $500.00 per year. For the last quarter of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1915, they paid to the clerk of the County Court of Wood County, $12.50. For the fiscal year, they paid to him, $50.00. Believing them to be taxable as persons belonging to' class f, the State Tax Commissioner demanded of them an additional $112.50, for the last quarter for the fiscal year ending June- 30, 1915, and'made a draft upon them for said amount which they declined to pay. On a'demand therefor by the sheriff of Wood County, under his power and authority to enforce payment, they paid said sum, on the 13th day of July 1915, and, on the 9th day of August 1915, instituted this proceeding in the Circuit Court to review the action of the State Tax Commissioner and obtain an order requiring said sum to be returned to them.

The character of their business, upon which the determination of both questions depends, is disclosed and explained in detail by Louis Friedman, their general manager, and Edward Neal, their local manager at Parkersburg. The State Tax Commissioner introduced no testimony, on his own behalf. In the course of the examination of these two witnesses, some references to -the firm’s books were made, and, in one instance, the prosecuting attorney demanded that they be placed in the record. Against this demand, impracticability of their production was urged, and the .record discloses no action by the court on the motion. As the bill of exceptions declares the transcript contains all the evidence introduced upon the hearing, and neither the books nor any extracts therefrom appear in it, there can be no presumption that the judgment or order complained of rests upon, or is aided by, any contradiction of the oral testimony of the witnesses, by the books or records of the firm. Evidently, the books were never seen or examined by the court.

The branch office of the firm at Parkersburg, there took orders from its- patrons, in person, and by telephone, telegraph and mail, for purchases and sales of shares of stock of corporations, to be executed by the firm, in the state of [521]*521New York, in what is known as the New York Curb Association. It seems, in some instances, to have taken such orders for execntion, indirectly, on the New York Stock Exchange. It did not effect or consúmate any purchases or sales, in the city of Parkersburg, nor elsewhere than in the city of New York. In other words, it did not act as' a broker or agent in any purchases or sales at Parkersburg, between citizens of that city, or of the state of West Virginia or of any other place. All transactions in which it participated were actually done and completed'in the state of New York. In some instances, the patrons of the Parkersburg office deposited there the entire amount of the purchase money, and then the agency bought the stock in New York, paid for it there, received the certificates of stock, caused transfers to be made and new certificates to be issued and sent to them for delivery at Parkersburg. In others, only part of the purchase money was so deposited and the brokers paid for stock’in full, advancing the remainder of the purchase money, charged the advancement to the customer, as a debt bearing interest, and held the certificates as collateral security for the loan. In both classes of transactions, purchases of stock were sometimes made without any deposit, but -always upon the understanding and agreement, express or implied, that the money would be paid and, the brokers, relying upon such understanding, always paid for the stock and had the certificates actually delivered to them in New York. It frequently happened, however, that no delivery was made to the customer. He would leave the certificates in the hands of the broker, until such time as it might be to his advantage to have the shares sold, either to gain profits or to prevent losses. It was not unusual to take .orders to buy and to sell at the same time, to buy at'the existing price and subsequently to sell at a higher or lower price; nor for the brokers to sell on their own volition, on the falling of the market prices of the stocks bought for their customers, to figures so low as to render the marginal deposits insufficient security for their advancements or loans, in order to prevent losses to themselves, as well as the customers. _ - .

In about fifty per cent of the firm’s business done through [522]*522the Parkersburg office, the portion thereof based upon marginal contracts in which deliveries were not made to the customers, there ivas no element of interstate commerce. Ware & Leland v. Mobile County, 209 U. S. 405. In respect of the nature of the business and the relations of the parties, that ease was very similar to this. In it, the brokers represented their customers in dealings and transactions in cotton and grain consumated in New York, Chicago and New Orleans, all places outside of the state in which the local brokerage office was located. Here, the brokers represent customers in contracts pertaining to shares of the capital stock of corporations. In no other respect, do these cases materially differ. The following observations of the federal Supreme Court, in the case just cited conclusively show that the marginal contract portion of the business done by the plaintiffs in error, is not interstate in its character:

“But' how stands the present case upon the facts stipulated? The plaintiffs in error are brokers who take orders and transmit them to other states for the purchase and sale of grain or cotton upon speculation. They are, in no just sense, common carriers of messages, as are the telegraph companies. For that part of the transactions, merely speculative and followed by no actual delivery, it cannot be fairly contended that such contracts are the subject of interstate commerce; and concerning such of the contracts for purchases for future delivery as result in actual delivery of the grain or cotton, the stipulated facts show that, when the orders transmitted are received in the foreign state, the property is bought in that state and there held for the purchaser. The transaction was thus closed by a contract completed and executed in the foreign state, although the orders were received from another state. When the delivery was upon a contract of sale made by the broker, the seller was at liberty to acquire the cotton in the market where the delivery was required or elsewhere. He did not contract to ship it from one state to the place of delivery in another state.

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185 U.S. 27 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Ware & Leland v. Mobile County
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Winward v. Lincoln
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81 S.E. 399 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 124, 79 W. Va. 518, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winkleman-v-blue-wva-1917.