The statute of New York of May 26, 1881, Laws of 1881, c. 361,
imposing a tax upon the corporate franchise or business of every
corporation, joint-stock company, or association incorporated or
organized under any
Page 143 U. S. 306
law of the state or of any other state or country, to be
computed by a percentage upon its whole capital stock, and to be
ascertained in the manner provided by the act, when applied to a
manufacturing corporation organized under the laws of Utah, and
doing the greater part of its business out of the New York, and
paying taxes in Illinois and Utah, but doing a small part of its
business in the New York, does not tax persons or property not
within the state, nor regulate interstate commerce, nor take
private property without just compensation, nor deny to the
corporation the equal protection of the laws, nor impose a tax
beyond the constitutional power of the state, and the remedy of the
corporation against hardship and injustice, if any has been
suffered, must be sought in the legislature of the state.
The cases respecting state taxation of foreign corporations
reviewed.
The Court stated the case as follows:
The defendant below, the plaintiff in error here, the Horn
Silver Mining Company, is a corporation created under the laws of
the Territory of Utah. The present action is brought by the people
of the State of New York, upon the allegation that it was doing
business within the state in 1881 and 1882, to recover certain
taxes alleged to be chargeable on its "corporate franchise or
business" for those years, and the penalty prescribed for their
nonpayment in each year.
By the Act of the Legislature of New York approved May 26, 1881,
amending a previous act providing for levying taxes for the use of
the state upon certain corporations, joint-stock companies, and
associations, it was declared that every corporation, joint-stock
company, or association then or thereafter incorporated or
organized under any law of the state or of any other state or
country and doing business in the state, with certain specified
exceptions not important in this case, should be subject to a tax
"upon its corporate franchise or business," to be computed in a
mode specified, which was by a certain percentage upon its capital
stock measured by the dividend on the par value of that stock, or,
where there were no dividends, or its dividends were less than a
certain percentage upon the par value of the capital stock, then
according to a certain percentage upon the actual value of the
capital stock during the year.
Page 143 U. S. 307
The complaint in the action alleges the facts necessary to
charge the corporation under this act for both years; that the
amount of tax due pursuant to its provisions for the year ending on
the first day of November, 1881, was $7,500, and the additional sum
of $1,500 as a penalty for the delay of the company in paying the
tax for two years after it became due, and that the amount of taxes
due for the year ending on the first day of November, 1882, was
$30,000, with the further sum of $3,000 as a penalty of ten
percentum for the delay of the defendant in paying the same.
The defendant answered the various allegations of the complaint,
denying them so far as they charge liability the people of New York
and setting up that it had been at all times a manufacturing
corporation organized and existing under the laws of Utah; that it
had never exercised any franchises or powers under the laws of New
York; that its capital stock of $10,000,000 was issued in payment
for real estate in Utah and Illinois, which consists entirely of
mining property and improvements thereon, and a refinery; that
during the years ending November 1, 1881 and 1882, it carried on in
the State of New York the business of manufacturing bars of silver
from Utah and Illinois into standard bars; that said business
constituted but a small portion of its entire business, and was the
only business carried on in the State of New York except its
financial business and correspondence; that its capital stock was
only partially employed in New York, and that it paid taxes both in
Utah and in Illinois. It insisted that the statute upon which the
action was brought was invalid and inoperative as to it because of
the facts set forth and because it established an unjust and
unequal system of taxation, and fixed the amount of tax wholly
without regard to the extent of the corporate franchises exercised
by it in the state, and without regard to the amount of business
done within the state or the amount of capital employed or the
amount of its capital stock held in the state and the extent of the
protection and benefits derived from its laws and agencies, and
because it sought to tax property and persons not within the
jurisdiction of the state or in
Page 143 U. S. 308
any way subject to its authority, and violated the principles of
equality and uniformity. It also insisted that the taxation
attempted was, in effect, the taking of private property without
just compensation, the denial to defendant of the equal protection
of the laws, and a regulation of commerce among the several states
and taxing property and business without the jurisdiction of the
State of New York. By consent of parties, the case was referred to
a referee to hear and determine all the issues of law and fact
therein. The referee found that the defendant was a corporation
created and organized under the laws of the Territory of Utah, and
was at all times mentioned in the complaint doing business in the
State of New York, and liable to be taxed on its corporate business
under the provisions of section 3 of the act of New York above
cited. He also found, in substance, that the stock and capital of
the defendant were properly appraised, and the amount of the tax
was assessed in conformity with the provisions of that act, and
that accordingly the sums above mentioned, amounting to $41,250,
were due, and he directed a judgment to be entered therefor in
favor of the plaintiff.
The referee also found that the defendant paid taxes, both in
the Territory of Utah and in the State of Illinois, in the years
1881 and 1882, and that the greater part of its business was out of
the State of New York, as well as the greater part of the capital
used in its business.
Upon the findings of the referee judgment was entered in the
supreme court of the state for the amount reported, and the case,
being taken to the court of appeals, was there affirmed. Being then
remitted to the supreme court and entered there, the case was
brought on a writ of error to this Court.
Page 143 U. S. 312
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the court.
A corporation being the mere creature of the legislature, its
rights, privileges, and powers are dependent solely upon the terms
of its charter. Its creation (except where the corporation is sole)
is the investing of two or more persons with the
Page 143 U. S. 313
capacity to act as a single individual, with a common name and
the privilege of succession in its members without dissolution, and
with a limited individual liability. The right and privilege, or
the franchise, as it may be termed, of being a corporation is of
great value to its members, and is considered as property separate
and distinct from the property which the corporation itself may
acquire. According to the law of most states, this franchise, or
privilege of being a corporation is deemed personal property, and
is subject to separate taxation. The right of the states to thus
tax it has been recognized by this Court and the state courts in
instances without number. It was said in
Delaware
Railroad Tax, 18 Wall. 206,
85 U. S. 231,
that
"the state may impose taxes upon the corporation as an entity
existing under its laws, as well as upon the capital stock of the
corporation or its separate corporate property. And the manner in
which its value shall be assessed, and the rate of taxation,
however arbitrary or capricious, are mere matters of legislative
discretion,"
except, we may add, as that discretion is controlled by the
organic law of the state. And, as we there said also,
it is not for us to suggest in any case that a more equitable
mode of assessment or rate of taxation might be adopted than the
one prescribed by the legislature of the state. Our only concern is
with the validity of the tax. All else lies beyond the domain of
our jurisdiction.
The granting of the rights and privileges which constitute the
franchises of a corporation being a matter resting entirely within
the control of the legislature, to be exercised in its good
pleasure, it may be accompanied with any such conditions as the
legislature may deem most suitable to the public interests and
policy. It may impose as a condition of the grant, as well as also
of its continued exercise, the payment of a specific sum to the
state each year, or a portion of the profits or gross receipts of
the corporation, and may prescribe such mode in which the sum shall
be ascertained as may be deemed convenient and just. There is no
constitutional inhibition against the legislature's adopting any
mode to arrive at the sum which it will exact as a condition of the
creation of the corporation or of its continued existence. There
can be therefore no possible
Page 143 U. S. 314
objection to the validity of the tax prescribed by the statute
of New York so far as it relates to its own corporations. Nor can
there be any greater objection to a similar tax upon a foreign
corporation doing business by its permission within the state. As
to a foreign corporation -- and all corporations in states other
than the state of its creation are deemed to be foreign
corporations -- it can claim a right to do business in another
state, to any extent, only subject to the conditions imposed by its
laws.
As said in
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S.
181,
"the recognition of its existence even by other states, and the
enforcement of its contracts made therein, depend purely upon the
comity of those states -- a comity which is never extended where
the existence of the corporation or the exercise of its powers is
prejudicial to their interests or repugnant to their policy. Having
no absolute right of recognition in other states, but depending for
such recognition and the enforcement of its contracts upon their
assent, it follows as a matter of course that such assent may be
granted upon such terms and conditions as those states may think
proper to impose. They may exclude the foreign corporation
entirely, they may restrict its business to particular localities,
or they may exact such security for the performance of its contacts
with their citizens as in their judgment will best promote the
public interest. The whole matter rests in their discretion."
This doctrine has been so frequently declared by this Court that
it must be deemed no longer a matter of discussion, if any question
can ever be considered at rest.
Only two exceptions or qualifications have been attached to it
in all the numerous adjudications in which the subject has been
considered, since the judgment of this Court was announced more
than a half century ago in
Bank v. Earle,
13 Pet. 519. One of these qualifications is that the state cannot
exclude from its limits a corporation engaged in interstate or
foreign commerce, established by the decision in
Pensacola
Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 96 U. S.
1,
96 U. S. 12. The
other limitation on the power of the state is where the corporation
is in the employ of the general government
Page 143 U. S. 315
-- an obvious exception, first stated, we think, by the late Mr.
Justice Bradley in
Stockton v. Baltimore & New York
Railroad, 32 F. 9, 14. As that learned Justice said,
"if Congress should employ a corporation of ship-builders to
construct a man-of-war, they would have the right to purchase the
necessary timber and iron in any state of the union."
And this Court, in citing this passage, added, "without the
permission and against the prohibition of the state."
Pembina
Mining Co. v. Pennsylvania, 125 U. S. 181,
125 U. S.
186.
Having the absolute power of excluding the foreign corporation,
the state may, of course, impose such conditions upon permitting
the corporation to do business within its limits as it may judge
expedient, and it may make the grant or privilege dependent upon
the payment of a specific license tax, or a sum proportioned to the
amount of its capital. No individual member of the corporation, or
the corporation itself, can call in question the validity of any
exaction which the state may require for the grant of its
privileges. It does not lie in any foreign corporation to complain
that it is subjected to the same law with the domestic corporation.
The counsel for the appellant objects that the statute of New York
is to be treated as a tax law, and not as a license to the
corporation for permission to do business in the state. Conceding
such to be the case, we do not perceive how it in any respect
affects the validity of the tax. However it may be regarded, it is
the condition upon which a foreign corporation can do business in
the state, and in doing such business, it puts itself under the law
of the state, however that may be characterized.
The only question therefore open to serious consideration in
this case is one of fact: did the Horn Silver Mining Company do
business as a corporation within the state? The referee found such
to be the fact as a conclusion from many probative circumstances in
the case. That finding was never set aside, but stands approved by
the courts of New York. If the correctness of the conclusion could
be questioned and held not justified by the facts in evidence, and
they should be considered as showing only transactions of
interstate commerce, and not business in the state independently of
such commerce, it
Page 143 U. S. 316
would be impossible to overcome the force of the answer of the
defendant, in which it alleges that, in the years 1881 and 1882, it
was a manufacturing company carrying on manufactures within the
State of New York. The admission is conclusive that the corporation
was engaged in business in the state in those years, though, we are
clear, not in such a business as rendered it a manufacturing
corporation exempt from the tax prescribed by the statute.
To dispose of the position that the plaintiff in error was a
manufacturing corporation, and therefore excepted from taxation
under the statutes cited, it is only necessary to refer to the
articles of association of the company. By them it appears that it
was organized to conduct the business of buying, selling, leasing,
and operating mines and mining claims in the Territory of Utah and
smelting, reducing, and refining works there and elsewhere; of
conducting a general mining, milling, and smelting business in all
its branches, including buying and selling mineral ores and
bullion; of carrying on a general mercantile business by buying and
selling such goods, merchandise stores, and miners' supplies as are
usually kept in and required by the wants of a mining camp or
settlement; of building and operating all such roads, tramways, and
transportation routes as may be convenient in transporting the
products of its business or procuring supplies; of purchasing,
hiring, and holding all such real and personal property, wherever
situate, as may be required in carrying on any of its business,
and, when no longer required for business purposes, of leasing,
selling, or exchanging the same, and generally to do all acts and
things incidental to a general mining business, or to any of the
aforesaid pursuits. They also declare that it was primarily formed
for the immediate purpose of working and developing the estate,
property, and premises known as the "Horn Silver Mine" and the
treatment and reduction of the ores and metals therein contained.
There is in the business thus detailed nothing that would
characterize the corporation as a manufacturing company, and in no
proper sense was it engaged in a manufacturing business within the
state. The bullion taken by the company from its mines was shipped
to
Page 143 U. S. 317
Chicago, and, after being refined and the silver separated from
the lead, it was forwarded to the United States assay office in the
City of New York, where it had an office not for occasional
business transactions, but where its transfer books were kept, its
dividends declared and paid, and other business done by it such as
is usually performed by corporations where their principal office
of business is situated. It is true, the greater part of the
business of the company was done out of the state, and the greater
part of its capital was also without it, but the statute of New
York does not require that the whole business of a foreign
corporation shall be done within the state in order to subject it
to the taxing power of the state. It makes, in that respect, no
difference between home corporations and foreign corporations, as
to the franchise or business of the corporation upon which the tax
is levied, provided it does business within the state, as such
corporation.
There seems to be a hardship in estimating the amount of the tax
upon the corporation for doing business within the state according
to the amount of its business or capital without the state. That is
a matter, however, resting entirely in the control of the state,
and not a matter of federal law, and with which, of course, this
Court can in no way interfere.
Since this tax was levied, the law of the state has been
altered, and now the tax upon foreign corporations doing business
in the state is estimated by the consideration only of the capital
employed within the state. It is said that against nearly all other
foreign corporations except this one, the taxes upon their
franchises have been computed upon the basis of the capital
employed within the state, but as to that we can only repeat what
was said in the court of appeals of the state -- that if this be
true, the defendant may have reason to complain of unjust
discrimination, and may properly appeal for relief to the
legislature of the state, but that it is not within the power of
the Court to grant any relief, however great the hardship upon
it.
The extent of the tax is a matter purely of state regulation,
and any interference with it is beyond the jurisdiction of this
Court. The objection that it operates as a direct interference
Page 143 U. S. 318
with interstate commerce we do not think tenable. The tax is not
levied upon articles imported, nor is there any impediment to their
importation. The products of the mine can be brought into the
state, and sold there without taxation, and they can be exhibited
there for sale in any office or building obtained for that purpose;
the tax is levied only upon the franchise or business of the
company.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissented.