City of Allegheny v. Federal Street & Pleasant Valley Passenger Railway Co.
City of Allegheny v. Federal Street & Pleasant Valley Passenger Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The principle upon which this case must turn is the same as that in City of Allegheny v. Pitts., All. and Man. Pass. R. R. Co., opinion filed herewith, ante, p. 414. Both were actions of assumpsit for a tax on dividends. In the present case the appellee was a passenger railway company chartered by special act of Feb. 20, 1868, P. L. 187, with capital stock of two thousand shares at par of twenty-five dollars, but witli power of indefinite increase, and in 1889 it had been increased to four thousand shares. In 1889 consolidation with two other roads having been determined on, the capital was further increased to one million dollars, or forty thousand shares at the same par value. The object of this was twofold. As the law was then understood the capital stock of consolidated companies was not permitted to exceed the authorized aggregate capital of the individual companies in the consolidation. The proposed consolidation in this case included the appellee with a capital of one hundred thousand dollars, the Peoples’ Park Company, also with a hundred thousand dollars, and the Observatory Hill Company with two hundred thousand. But the appellee’s stock was worth per share five times as much as the Observatory Hill, and ten times as much as the Peoples’ Park, and a consolidation in the ratio of their nominal capital would not have represented their actual relative values. To obtain a convenient divisor of the consolidated stock therefore, the appellee increased its shares to forty thousand, representing a capital of one million, and the new stock was issued in the proportion of ten shares for each one of appellee’s, two for each of the Observatory Hill’s, and one for each of the Peoples’ Park’s, thus
It is of course conceded that if the increase of shares was a cover for distribution of accumulated profits it would not be available to- escape taxation. But there is no presumption that an increase is a dividend, that is a question of fact for the jury with the burden of proof on the party alleging it: Com. v. Erie & Pitts. R. R. Co., 74 Pa. 94. In the present case the learned judge below said there was “ no evidence that the increased number of shares was in consequence of any earnings or profits made by the defendant company,” and no ah tempt has been made to sIioav that he was in error as to that fact.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.