International Paper Co. v. Broadhead
International Paper Co. v. Broadhead
Opinion
This is an appeal from a decision of the Circuit Court of Montgomery County upholding the denial of a foreign franchise tax credit by the Department of Revenue of the State of Alabama against International Paper Company (IPCO).
The facts are not in dispute and are as follows: In March 1986 Hammermill Paper Company, a Pennsylvania corporation (Hammermill Penn), qualified for an investment tax credit allowed under Ala. Code 1975, §
"6. The terms of this Agreement may not be amended or altered, nor may the rights of a TAXPAYER hereunder be assigned or otherwise transferred, without the written consent of the STATE."
The memorandum further provided that Hammermill Penn's right to the deduction shall not be revoked "unless [Hammermill Penn] fails to comply with the terms of this agreement, in which case [the deduction] shall immediately cease and terminate."
Effective August 1987, Hammermill Penn merged into H.P. Subsidiary, Inc., a Delaware corporation. The articles of merger provided that the surviving corporation would be called Hammermill Paper Company. Effective January 1989, Hammermill Paper Company merged into International Paper Company (IPCO). At the time of the merger, IPCO owned all the outstanding shares of the capital stock of Hammermill Paper Company. The merged corporation became International Paper Company (IPCO).
The §
IPCO appealed the denial to the Administrative Law Division. Following a hearing, the administrative law judge determined that the denial was proper. IPCO appealed the matter to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County. The circuit court affirmed the denial of the credit. IPCO appeals.
The dispositive issue is one of law — specifically, whether the right to the credit was "assigned or otherwise transferred" when Hammermill Penn merged with H.P. Subsidiary, Inc., in 1987 and, if so, did the transfer violate paragraph 6 of the memorandum agreement.
IPCO contends that the merger was not an assignment or a transfer of the rights provided for in §
The Department contends that at the time of the merger, Hammermill Penn ceased to *Page 279 exist. Its rights, including the right to the credit, passed to the surviving corporation by operation of law. It asserts that this passage of rights was a "transfer" and violated the nonassignment clause found in the memorandum agreement.
In authorizing corporate mergers, the Alabama legislature has provided that "[w]hen such merger has been effected . . . [s]uch surviving . . . corporation shall thereupon and thereafter possess all the rights, privileges, immunities and franchises, of a public as well as a private nature, of each of the merging . . . corporations."
In construing the merger statutes, our supreme court has stated:
First National Bank v. Adams,"[W]hile the constituent corporation may no longer survive for some purposes, the rights and privileges which it enjoyed under the statutes of Alabama survive the merger and inhere in the surviving corporation following merger."
We find the most illuminating case on this subject to be one in which IPCO was previously involved. In International PaperCo. v. Curry,
Southern Kraft, a foreign corporation which owned assets in this state and had been doing business here, merged into its foreign parent, IPCO, which theretofore owned nothing in Alabama. Southern Kraft paid its franchise tax in 1941 based on its assets in Alabama as of January 1, 1941, as required by statute. Later in 1941, IPCO qualified to do business in this state. Soon thereafter, the merger occurred. The Department sought to apply the franchise tax against the surviving corporation, IPCO, on the basis of the 1940 Alabama capital owned by Southern Kraft. This was not allowed. The supreme court said that following the merger, Southern Kraft "live[d] as a component part of the surviving corporation." The court explained:
"To deny to International Paper Company the rights, franchises and privileges to which Southern Kraft was entitled at the time of the merger is in effect a denial of such rights, franchises and privileges to Southern Kraft Corporation itself, notwithstanding that Southern Kraft has paid its franchise tax."
Although the cases above were decided before the adoption of the current Alabama Business Corporation Act in 1980, they are still good law. Section 10-2A-145 of the current act and section 11.06 of the revised act provide for the same result. These newer statutes explicitly state that the surviving corporation of a merger is vested with all the "rights, privileges, immunities, and franchises" of the constituent corporation. § 10-2A-145(b)(4), Code 1975; Rev.Ala.Bus.Corp. Act § 11.06 (1994).
Applying statutory and case law to the facts of this case, we find that the merger did not constitute a "transfer" or an "assignment." We find those terms to be inappropriate descriptions of the effect of a merger. The passage of rights from Hammermill Penn to Hammermill Paper Company and subsequently to IPCO was statutory and, therefore, by operation of law.
The possibility of merger is easily foreseeable. The state, fearing the repercussions of a merger, could have obtained the desired protection by inserting express language which would have included the merger transaction. Such nonassignment clauses have been upheld in the context of statutory mergers.See, e.g., Pacific First Bank v. New Morgan Park Corp.,
The purpose of §
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The foregoing opinion was prepared by Retired Appellate Judge L. CHARLES WRIGHT while serving on active duty status as a judge of this court under the provisions of §
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- International Paper Company v. Ernest Broadhead, as Chief of Franchise Tax Division of the Department of Revenue of the State of Alabama.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published