1. The tax "with respect to carrying on or doing business"
imposed on domestic corporations by Revenue Acts of 1916 and 1918
held applicable to a corporation organized for the purpose
of holding the stock of a mining corporation, and of issuing and
selling bonds secured by pledge of the stock and furnishing the
proceeds from time to time to the other to enable it to carry on
its work, other activities of the holding company consisting of
maintaining an office, voting the shares, electing directors,
lending the proceeds of bonds through a trust company on call loans
when not needed for advances to the mining company, collecting
interest, etc. P.
270 U. S.
455.
2. Where a single business cannot be carried on without two
corporations taking part in it, each, under the above acts, must
pay a tax. P.
270 U. S. 456.
5 F.2d 1014 reversed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals which
affirmed a decree in the district court (294 F.
Page 270 U. S. 453
581) for the copper company in an action to recover from the
collector the amount of taxes alleged to have been erroneously
collected.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to recover the amount of taxes alleged to have
been erroneously collected for the years 1917 to 1920. The taxes
were levied under the Acts of September 8, 1916, c. 463, §
407, 39 Stat. 756, 789 and of February 24, 1919, c. 18, §
1000, (a)(1) and (c), 40 Stat. 1057, 1126. Both statutes impose
upon domestic corporations organized for profit a tax "with respect
to the carrying on or doing business," at certain rates for the
fair value of the capital stock, and both exempt such corporations
"not engaged in business" during the preceding taxable year. The
question is whether the plaintiff, the Chile Copper Company, brings
itself within this exemption. The facts are set forth in the
complaint, and the case was heard upon a motion to dismiss. In the
district court, judgment was given for the plaintiff, 294 F. 581.
The judgment was affirmed on the opinion below by the circuit court
of appeals. 5 F.2d 1014. A writ of certiorari was granted by this
Court. 268 U.S. 685.
The facts are somewhat peculiar. The Chile Exploration Company,
a New Jersey corporation, owned mines in Chile and needed to borrow
large sums of money in order to develop them. By the laws of Chile,
it could not mortgage its mines effectively, and therefore could
not
Page 270 U. S. 454
give security directly for bonds. To meet the difficulty, the
Chile Copper Company was organized in Delaware for the purpose of
holding the capital stock of the Chile Exploration Company, issuing
bonds secured by a pledge of the stock, and furnishing the proceeds
from time to time to the Exploration Company to enable the latter
to go on with its work. The purpose was carried out. On April 1,
1917, the plaintiff authorized the issue of collateral trust bonds
for $100,000,000 to be secured by a pledge of all the
above-mentioned stock. During the six months ending on June 30,
1917, it executed an agreement with underwriters and issued
$35,000,000 of the bonds, received payments from subscribers, which
were deposited in a special account with the Guaranty Trust Company
of New York, paid the expenses of the issue from the special
account, and made provision for the accrued interest payable upon
the bonds. It also paid the interest on $15,000,000 of bonds
outstanding under an earlier pledge. During the same time,
stockholders' and directors' meetings were held, directors and
officers were chosen, corporate books and accounting records were
kept, and such other acts were done and expenses paid as were
necessary to keep up the corporate existence. An office was
maintained for the activities described. The plaintiff owned and
voted on the stock of the Exploration Company, and elected its
directors, and made advances to it from the proceeds of the bonds
issued in 1917, the Guaranty Trust Company being directed after
payment of certain matters not to pay checks drawn upon the special
account unless accompanied by a letter from the plaintiff stating
that the proceeds would be used for specified purposes connected
with the development of the mines. The plaintiff agreed to furnish
and did furnish the Guaranty Company statements showing that the
proceeds had been so applied. During the six months mentioned, the
sum of $1,250,000 was advanced to the Exploration Company, and
Page 270 U. S. 455
interest upon loans and a part of the bond discount paid by it
to the plaintiff and payments on account of a dividend also were
made.
The activities for succeeding years were similar, advances to
the Exploration Company being made each year. The plaintiff had
funds received from the issue of bonds in 1917 in excess of the
amounts that it thought proper to advance during the given period
to the Exploration Company. A part of these it invested in Liberty
Bonds, but the greater part, which it had deposited with the
Guaranty Trust Company and the Central Union Trust Company, it
authorized those companies to lend on call in the plaintiff's name
and at its risk, taking security. If the security was not
satisfactory, the plaintiff directed the Trust Company to call the
loan. During the year ending June 30, 1920, 224 loans amounting to
$37,200,000 were made, and 180 loans amounting to $29,100,000 were
called. In the same year, the plaintiff received $332,366.90 as
interest upon these loans. During the previous year, it received
$194,579.20 upon similar loans.
If the corporation was one that Congress had power to tax in
this way, it is hard to say that it is not within the taxing acts.
It was organized for profit, and was doing what it principally was
organized to do in order to realize profit. The cases must be
exceptional when such activities of such corporations do not amount
to doing business in the sense of the statutes. The exemption "when
not engaged in business" ordinarily would seem pretty nearly
equivalent to when not pursuing the ends for which the corporation
was organized, in the cases where the end is profit. In our
opinion, the plaintiff was liable to the tax. We do not rest our
conclusion upon the issue of bonds in the first year or the call
loans made in the last, and for the same reasons we cannot let the
fagot be destroyed by taking up each item of conduct separately and
breaking the stick. The activities and situation must
Page 270 U. S. 456
be judged as a whole. Looking at them as a whole, we see that
the plaintiff was a good deal more than a mere conduit for the
Chile Exploration Company. It was its brain, or at least the
efferent nerve without which that company could not move. The
plaintiff owned and by indirection governed it, and was its
continuing support by advances from time to time in the plaintiff's
discretion. There was some suggestion that there was only one
business, and therefore ought to be only one tax. But if the one
business could not be carried on without two corporations taking
part in it, each must pay, by the plain words of the Act. The case
is not governed by
McCoach v. Minehill & Schuylkill Haven
R. Co., 228 U. S. 295,,
and
United States v. Emery, Bird, Thayer Realty Co.,
237 U. S. 28. It is
nearer to
Von Baumbach v. Sargent Land Co., 242 U.
S. 503.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND took no part in the decision of this
case.