South Central Bell Telephone Co. v. State
South Central Bell Telephone Co. v. State
Opinion
This is a franchise-tax case.
The Century Dictionary (1891), Vol. VI, p. 6201, defines the word "tax" in its first definition as follows:
"(1) A disagreeable or burdensome duty or charge; an exaction; a requisition; an oppressive demand; strain; burden; task."
The same dictionary, Vol. II, p. 2360, defines "franchise" as:
"A privilege arising from the grant of a sovereign or government or from prescription, which presupposes a grant; a privilege of a public nature conferred on individuals by grant from government: as, a corporate franchise (the right to be and act as a corporation)."
Yet, this is far more than a franchise-tax case. It is a very important matter with great economic impact.1 We are forced by a unanimous decision of the United States Supreme Court to come to grips with a propensity to favor domestic corporations over foreign corporations, a propensity that has permeated the decisions of all branches of State government.
The Supreme Court of the United States, after granting the Taxpayers' petition for certiorari review, reversed this Court's decision and remanded the case "for further proceedings not inconsistent with [its] opinion." South Cent. Bell Tel. Co. v.Alabama,
"The Legislature shall,3 by general laws, provide for the payment to the state of *Page 136 Alabama of a franchise tax by corporations organized under the laws of this state which shall be in proportion to the amount of capital stock. . . ."
(Emphasis added.) Pursuant to the mandate of § 229, the Legislature has enacted §
"Every corporation organized under the laws of this state . . . shall pay annually to the state an annual franchise tax based on its capital stock as follows:
"For the tax year beginning Rate on each $1000.00 of capital stock
"January 1, 1984 $10.00
"And all years thereafter $10.00
"provided, that in no event shall the amount paid by any corporation for annual franchise tax be less than the sum of $50."
(Emphasis added.)
Neither the Constitution of Alabama of 1901 nor §
Section
"The legislature shall,7 by general law, provide for the payment to the state of Alabama of a franchise tax by such corporation, but such franchise tax shall be based on the actual amount of capital employed in this state."
(Emphasis added.) The foreign-corporation franchise tax differs basically from the domestic-corporation franchise tax in that it is a tax on the foreign corporation's "actual amount of capital
employed in this state," rather than one on the corporation's "capital stock." The Constitution of Alabama of 1901 does not define the term "capital." Pursuant to the mandate of § 232, the Legislature has enacted §
"(a) Amount of levy. — Every corporation organized under the laws of any other state, nation, or territory and doing business in this state . . . shall pay . . . to the state an annual franchise tax of three dollars ($3) on each one thousand dollars ($1,000) of the actual amount of its capital employed in this state. . . ."
(Emphasis added.)
The term "capital," as it is used in § 232 and in the foreign-corporation franchise-tax statute, has been construed several times by this Court. This Court has construed "capital" to mean "all assets which have an actual or a legal situs in Alabama and which are used or employed by the foreign corporation in Alabama in the exercise of any business whatsoever." AlabamaTextile Prods. Corp. v. State,
In 1961, the Legislature amended the foreign-corporation franchise-tax statute, expressly defining the term "capital" and specifying a method for determining the actual amount of capital employed by a foreign corporation in Alabama.10 See Act No.
"What is capital stock of corporations . . .?"
He then quoted Cook on Stock Stockholders, § 3:
"`Capital stock is the sum fixed by the corporate charter as the amount paid in, or to be paid in by the stockholders, for the prosecution of the business of the corporation, and for the benefit of corporate creditors. The capital stock is to be clearly distinguished from the amount of property possessed by the corporation.'"
Chief Justice Stone, after citing and quoting other sections of Cook on Stock Stockholders, and Neiler v. Kelly,
"The foregoing quotations are made with a view of presenting clearly and fully the nature and object of capital stock in a corporation. As property it has peculiar attributes. Collectively it is the property of the corporation, while the ownership of the shares is in the shareholders."
(Emphasis added.)
In Fox's Appeal,
"The capital stock is nothing — a myth — a mere name, excepting insofar as it is represented by investments made with the money paid into the treasury of the corporation on account of such capital stock. Hence it is that the courts have long since declared that a tax upon the capital stock of a corporation is a tax upon the assets and property of such corporation."
See also Commonwealth v. New York, P. O.R.R.,
In Henry Campbell Black's A Dictionary of the Law, published in 1891, "capital stock" is defined, at page 170, as: "The common stock or fund of a corporation. The sum of money raised by the subscriptions of the stockholders, and divided into shares." Black's then quotes
In another case roughly contemporaneous with the Alabama Constitutional Convention of 1901, Western Union Telegraph Co. v.Kansas,
This Court recognizes that before the adoption of the Constitution of Alabama of 1901, this Court and legal writers of the time used the term "capital stock" in the strict and narrow sense as dealing only with amounts paid in to the corporate treasury. See, e.g., 11 William Meade Fletcher et al., FletcherCyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations § 5079 (perm. ed. rev. vol. 1991), defining "capital stock" as "the amount fixed, usually by the corporate charter, to be subscribed and paid in or secured to be paid in by the shareholders of a corporation, either in money, or in property, labor or services, at the organization of the corporation." See Phoenix Carpet Co. v. State,
This Court cannot be catalogued as a jurisdiction that recognized the term "capital stock" as referring only to the amounts paid in by shareholders while other courts of the time, such as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Fox's Appeal, supra, took a broader view. In Phoenix Carpet Co. v. State, supra, this Court construed an 1897 statute that imposed a "privilege tax" against foreign or domestic corporations "graduated by the paid-up capital stock of the corporation."
"Owing to the difficulty of distinguishing between the capital and the property in which it is invested, tests for determining whether a tax is on the property or the franchises, may be regarded, generally, uncertain and unsatisfactory; yet, its determination is often necessary, for if a franchise tax, the property in which the capital is invested becomes immaterial. The usual and most certain test is, whether the tax is upon the capital stock, eo nomine, without regard to its value, or at its assessed valuation in whatever it may be invested; if the former, it is a franchise tax; if the latter, a tax upon the property."
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote for the United States Supreme Court in Towne v. Eisner,
"A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged, it is the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to the circumstances and the time in which it is used."
Because some Justices dissented in Archer Daniels Midland and in Abbott Laboratories, for the Court to render a unanimous opinion it must examine the term "capital stock" as it is defined today to see if it is ambiguous. Black's Law Dictionary (7th ed. 1999), defines "capital stock" as: "1. The total number of shares of stock that a corporation may issue under its charter or articles of incorporation, including both common stock and preferred stock. . . . 2. The total par value or stated value ofthis stock." (Emphasis added.) Black's Law Dictionary (6th ed. 1991), defined "capital stock" as: "The shares of stock representing ownership of a business. . . . Corporate assets or property contributed by shareholders. . . . Liability of the corporation to its shareholders, after creditors' claims have been liquidated. Valuation of the corporation as a businessenterprise." (Emphasis added.)
Black's Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979) defined "capital stock" substantially as it is defined in the 6th edition and includes the definition: "Valuation of the corporation as a business enterprise."
Black's Law Dictionary (4th ed. 1951 and rev. 4th ed. 1968), defined "capital stock" as follows:
"Capital Stock
"The term has various meanings.
"It may mean: . . . valuation of the corporation as a business enterprise, Commonwealth v. Columbia Gas Electric Corporation,336 Pa. 209 ,8 A.2d 404 ,410 ."
The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, at a time when that court was Kentucky's highest state court, held that, for purposes of a Kentucky statute imposing a franchise tax on foreign corporations based on the "capital stock" of the corporation, the term *Page 142
"capital stock" meant "the property of the corporation." Luckettv. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co.,
"At the outset we wish to point out that the expression, `capital stock' when used in franchise tax statutes has a particular meaning. Usually, and we suppose strictly speaking, the capital stock of a corporation is the money contributed by the corporators to the capital and represented by shares issued to subscribers. It is evidence of rights in property. The terms `capital' and `capital stock' are practically the equivalent of each other, but when considered as the basis for the imposition of a franchise tax, `capital stock' means, not the stock share, but the property of the corporation."Id. at 880 (emphasis added) (citations omitted). The Kentucky court further explained that the corporate property "includ[es] the intangible value gained by the use of [all property of the corporation] as a going concern" and "necessarily includes tangible property." Id. at 880-81.
Because the term "capital stock" was ambiguous in 1901 and because it is now ambiguous, we can consult the Official Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1901 to determine what the framers meant in using the term "capital stock" in § 229 of the Constitution. However, before doing so, we consider relevant events that preceded the adoption of the 1901 Constitution.
In analyzing the meaning of the phrase "capital stock" as it was being used at the time of the Alabama Constitutional Convention of 1901, we must take into account any constitutional provisions that were supplanted by the provisions of the 1901 Constitution and pay heed to the meaning of words and phrases usually accorded to them at the time they were used. State v.Alabama Power Co.,
In 1898, the United States Supreme Court, in New York v.Roberts,
"The amount of capital stock which shall be the basis for tax under the provisions of section three, in the case of every corporation, joint stock company and association liable to taxation thereunder, shall be the amount of capital stock employed within this state."Id. at 663 (emphasis added). The Court referred to the tax as being based on annual dividends in relation to the capital employed in the state. New York, by adopting the phrase "capital stock employed," as its basis for calculating the tax, moved beyond Alabama's reference in its 1897 franchise-tax statute to "paid-up capital of the corporation." By adopting that phrase, New York computed the amount due under its franchise tax in a manner analogous to methods appropriate for computing amounts due under property taxes. That this method makes it easier to segregate in-state and out-of-state assets is but to state the obvious.
Phoenix Carpet and Stonewall Insurance Co. recognized, on the one hand, that a tax on "capital stock" may be a tax assessed in reference strictly to the stock, without regard to its value, and, on the other hand, may be a tax assessed in reference to the value of the stock considered in light of the assets in which the capital has been invested. However, Phoenix Carpet *Page 143 taught that the latter approach would have serious state constitutional implications if it were applied only to corporations. Roberts upheld a New York franchise tax on both domestic and foreign corporations graded according to annual dividends considered in light of the capital stock employed within the state.
Considering the context of these decisions, one can see a method in the framers' drafting, in 1901, two specific constitutional provisions authorizing, for the first time, franchise taxes on domestic and foreign corporations expressed in broader terms of "capital stock" and "capital employed." Before 1901, the general taxing power of the State had served as the sole basis for a franchise tax, and the 1897 statute provided for a tax "graduated by the paid-up capital stock of the corporation." In order to move to a taxing method that taxed capital stock employed — the method historically deemed by this Court to provide a tax in the nature of a property tax and not a franchise tax, seeStonewall Insurance Co.,
The intent of the Constitutional Convention in drafting § 229 and § 232 was to provide for the enactment of a franchise tax that would be applied equally to both domestic and foreign corporations insofar as the United States Constitution would permit.Louisville N.R.R. v. State,
"The legislature shall, by general law, provide for the payment to the State of Alabama of a franchise tax by [a foreign] corporation, which shall be the same as that required of domestic corporations and in proportion to the amount of its capital stock. . . ."Official Proceedings, Vol. 4, p. 4483 (emphasis added). In the proceedings to adopt this section, Mr. Kyle moved to
"Amend [the above section] of the report by striking out all of the seventh line after the word corporation and all of the eighth except the word `but' and insert the following: `Based on the actual amount of capital employed in this State.'"Id. at 4484 (emphasis added). As amended, the section then provided:
"The Legislature shall by general law provide for payment to the State of Alabama for franchise tax upon such corporations based upon the actual amount of capital employed in this State. . . ."
He explained the reasons for his proposed changes:
"Now the object of that is to cut out corporations, State organizations, that have pledged in different States and that have headquarters or do their business in this State. For instance take the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company. They have a capitalization of thirty million dollars. They have large property in Tennessee as well as in Alabama. Therefore it should not be required of them or any other corporation of like character, to pay its franchise tax upon property they own in other States. Take the Southern Iron and Foundry Company. They have a plant in this State. The main plant is in Tennessee. *Page 144 This amendment would reach all the capital they have in use in Alabama. But they would not have to pay upon the entire capital stock. The Western Union Telegraph Company with eighty million dollars capital would have to pay on the capital of eighty million dollars instead of what she has in this State. So this reaches the matter and makes it the property in possession of the State."Id. at 4485 (emphasis added). Mr. Kyle's statements unequivocally demonstrate that the purpose of his amendment, and the eventual difference in the language, had nothing to do with what kind of possessions the foreign corporations would be taxed on, but had to do only with where those items that were to be taxed were being used. Alabama would tax only the capital of foreign corporations used within the State, instead of "the entire capital stock," the assets of the corporation. The Convention adopted Mr. Kyle's proposed amendment. The change in the language only prevented Alabama from overreaching into foreign corporations' out-of-state assets. The minutes indicate that the Convention was concerned with protecting foreign corporations from paying too much in Alabama franchise taxes.
The report of the Constitutional Convention to the people stated, in referring to § 232, that "[t]he Legislature is required to provide for the payment of a franchise tax upon corporations, and when levied on foreign corporations, it must be in proportion to the amount of the capital stock employed here." Note that this language is almost identical to the language employed by New York in its franchise-tax statute. See New York v. Roberts, supra. Because § 229 used the term "capital stock" and § 232 used the term "capital," it is evident that the delegates used those terms interchangeably to mean the assets of corporations.
The framers of the Constitution, therefore, required the Legislature to impose a franchise tax based on the value of domestic corporations and based on the value of the capital of foreign corporations used in Alabama. Because a franchise tax is a tax on the privilege of being and acting as a corporation in Alabama, the drafters of the Source Document, the document that controlled the Legislature's subsequent enactment of the franchise-tax statutes, had the power, subject only to any restraints imposed by the United States Constitution, to define the base for the franchise taxes. This is so notwithstanding the fact that at the time of the adoption of the Constitution of 1901 other bases may have been used to calculate a franchise tax.
The provisions now appearing as §§
Ten years ago, after the Court of Civil Appeals declared the Alabama franchise-tax scheme unconstitutional as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution (Whitev. Reynolds Metals Co.,
House Bill 16, drawn to deal with the consequences of the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals in White, was the subject of an advisory opinion in Opinion of the Justices No. 330,
Therefore, for the past 10 years, as a result of this Court's unprecedented action, domestic corporations have not been taxed on the value of their assets. The United States Supreme Court has held that it is not constitutional to have this disparate method of assessing the franchise tax.
Sections
In summary, we are persuaded that the term "capital stock," as used in § 229, authorizes a franchise tax on the assets, or property, of the corporation, and that it is not limited to par value of capital stock or the shares of paid-in capital stock.14 Therefore, the unconstitutional discrimination that the Supreme Court of the United States has declared in regard to Alabama's franchise-tax scheme stems not from the Alabama Constitution of 1901, but instead from the domestic-corporation franchise-tax statute as interpreted by this Court and as applied by the Executive Department. Whereas §
This Court retains jurisdiction over all issues, including remedial issues involving *Page 147 the propriety or necessity of retrospective legislation.
INTERIM ORDER ISSUED.
Hooper, C.J., and Maddox, Houston, Cook, See, Lyons, Brown, Johnstone, and England, JJ., concur.
What the delegates meant by the word "shall" is graphically illustrated as it related to § 104 of the Constitution, which provides in pertinent part: "The legislature shall not pass a special, private, or local law in any of the following cases. . . ." Here are set out 31 different "cases," including such things as "[f]ixing the punishment of crime," § 104(14), and "[r]emitting fines, penalties, or forfeitures," § 104(28). Following this list of the 31 "cases," the following appears as part of the first sentence in the last paragraph of § 104: "The legislature shall pass general laws for the cases enumerated in this section. . . ." The meaning of the words "[t]he legislature shall pass general laws" was discussed in the Official Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1901 ["Official Proceedings"] by Emmett O'Neal (a delegate from Lauderdale County and chairman of the Committee on Local Legislation and later Governor of Alabama, 1911-1915) and by delegate W. T. Sanders:
"MR. SANDERS: I desire to ask the gentleman a question. If the Legislature should refuse to pass a general law for the subjects enumerated in this Section, would not the members thereof thereby violate their oath to support the Constitution?
"MR. O'NEAL: Yes sir.
"MR. SANDERS: It is not optional with them, but is it not a command for them to pass a general law?"MR. O'NEAL: In answer to the gentleman from Limestone, by reading the whole section it will be seen that it is made the absolute duty of the General Assembly to pass general laws on every subject as to which they are prohibited from passing local laws. You take up this whole list and while the Legislature is forbidden to pass local laws on these subjects, they are required if this section is adopted to pass a general law covering the subjects. They would violate their oaths if they did not do so."
Official Proceedings, Vol. 2, pp. 1799-1800.
Section 282 of the Constitution also provides: "It is made the duty of the legislature to enact all laws necessary to give effect to the provisions of this Constitution." Therefore, the Legislature has had, and continues to have, the duty to impose a franchise tax on domestic corporations "which shall be in proportion to the amount of capital stock." (See § 229.)
In 1935, the Legislature enacted what is now §
"Section 317. AMOUNT OF LEVY — DOMESTIC CORPORATIONS. Every corporation organized under the laws of this State, except strictly benevolent, educational or religious corporations, shall pay annually to the State an annual franchise tax of two dollars on each one thousand dollars of its capital stock."Section 318. AMOUNT OF LEVY [ — ] FOREIGN CORPORATIONS. Every corporation organized under the laws of any other state, nation or territory and doing business in this State, except strictly benevolent, educational or religious corporations, shall pay annually to the State an annual franchise tax of two dollars on each one thousand of the actual amount of capital employed in this state."
(Emphasis added.) In a series of acts, the Legislature amended the rate of taxation to maintain equality of rate between domestic and foreign corporations. In 1955, the rate for the franchise tax on both domestic and foreign corporations was increased from $2 to $2.50 on each $1,000. Act No.
"`. . . The foreign corporation franchise tax, both as initially enacted in 1915 and as reenacted in the 1935 Act, imposed a franchise tax on foreign corporations based on the "actual amount of capital employed in this state." However, the statute neither defined capital nor provided how the capital employed in Alabama was to be determined. This cryptic statutory provision resulted in many court cases attempting to interpret and apply the tax base to many varied situations. In an effort to eliminate this confusion and litigation, the foreign corporation franchise tax law was amended by the 1961 Act . . . to define the term "capital" and to provide for the allocation of the appropriate amount of capital to Alabama. . . .'"
Reference
- Full Case Name
- South Central Bell Telephone Company v. State of Alabama and State Department of Revenue.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published