A law of Massachusetts (G.L., 1921, c. 63) imposes an excise on
foreign corporations for the privilege of carrying on or doing
business in the state at a fixed rate per thousand dollars upon
such proportion of the fair cash value of all the shares
constituting the capital stock of the corporation taxed, as the
value of the assets, real and personal, employed in business within
the state bears to the value of its total assets. Petitioner, a
Maine corporation, had its offices and transacted its business
wholly in Massachusetts, the business comprising the buying of
hides and skins, having them tanned by others, and selling the
leather through the tanners. It operated no tanneries itself. It
owned all the stock of two subsidiary Maine corporations, both
having tanneries and engaged in tanning in Massachusetts, one of
which did tanning for petitioner alone, and the other chiefly so,
though it also had selling branches in other states. In assessing
petitioner's excise, the value of the stocks of the subsidiaries
was included as part of its assets employed by it in business
within Massachusetts.
Held:
1. That the finding that the subsidiary stocks were so employed
was justifiable, and that their inclusion in computing the excise
was not to tax property beyond the state's jurisdiction in
violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
even assuming that they had no situs in Massachusetts for the
purpose of imposing a direct property tax. Pp.
277 U. S.
422-423.
2. The question whether the value of the stock of one of the
subsidiaries attributable to its business in other states should
have been deducted is not presented, inasmuch as its decision was
left open by the court below as dependent on a different statutory
remedy from the one invoked in this case. P.
277 U. S. 424.
3. Whether the subsidiaries would be subject to similar excises,
and the constitutional propriety of so taxing them, either
independently or in connection with the excise against petitioner,
is not considered.
Id.
256 Mass. 419, affirmed.
Page 277 U. S. 414
Error to a decree of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
dismissing petitions for the recovery of excise taxes levied upon a
foreign corporation for the privilege of doing business in
Massachusetts. The judgment was entered in the Supreme Judicial
Court in Suffolk County on a rescript from the full court.
Page 277 U. S. 419
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The National Leather Co., a Maine corporation, applied by two
petitions to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts for
Suffolk County
* for the
abatement of portions of the taxes that had been exacted of it by
the Commissioner of Corporations and Taxation under Chapter 63 of
the General Laws for the privilege of carrying on business in
Massachusetts in the years 1922 and 1923. The petitions alleged
that the statute as applied was an attempt to tax property not
within the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, and repugnant to the
Fourteenth Amendment. The cases were consolidated, and, at the
hearing, by order of the presiding justice, were reserved for
determination by the full court upon the pleadings and an agreed
statement of facts. The court in banc sustained the excise, 256
Mass. 419, and, in accordance with its rescript, the court for
Suffolk County dismissed the petitions. The writ for error was
properly directed to the latter court.
See Davis v. Cohen
Co., 268 U. S. 638,
268 U. S.
639.
The statute provides that every foreign corporation shall pay
annually "with respect to the carrying on or
Page 277 U. S. 420
doing of business by it within the Commonwealth," an excise
consisting in part of an amount "equal to five dollars per thousand
upon the value of the corporate excess employed by it within the
Commonwealth," which is defined as
"such proportion of the fair cash value of all the shares
constituting the capital stock . . . as the value of the assets,
both real and personal, employed in any business within the
Commonwealth . . . bears to the value of the total assets of the
corporation,"
with certain exceptions not here material. Section 30, cl. 4;
§ 39(1).
The business of the National Leather Co., hereinafter called the
petitioner, was the purchasing of hides and skins, having them
tanned by other companies, and selling the leather through the
tanners. It operated no tanneries itself. Its business was
conducted wholly in Massachusetts; its business offices were
located there, and it carried on no active business outside the
state. Among other properties, it owned the entire capital stock,
except a few qualifying shares, of the A. C.Lawrence Co. and the
National Calfskin Co., two other Maine corporations. Its upper
leather was tanned chiefly by these two subsidiary corporations,
and its sole leather by other corporations in which it had no
interest.
The business of the Lawrence Company was the tanning of hides,
principally for upper leather, which it sold on a commission basis.
Most of its tanning was done for the petitioner. Its tanneries were
in Massachusetts, where it was engaged in business, but it was
qualified to do business and had selling branches in four or five
other states. The business of the Calfskin Company was tanning
hides of the petitioner. Its tannery was in Massachusetts, where it
was engaged in business. It had no property or selling branches
outside Massachusetts, and was not qualified to do business in any
other state except Maine.
Page 277 U. S. 421
In determining the portions of the excises based upon "corporate
excess," the commissioner included all the capital stock of the
Lawrence Company and the Calfskin Company owned by the petitioner
as part of the assets employed by it in business within
Massachusetts, but did not include any stocks owned by it in other
corporations which were not engaged in business within
Massachusetts.
The petitions for abatement were directed solely to the portions
of the excises assessed by reason of this inclusion of the capital
stocks of the Lawrence and Calfskin Companies.
The petitioner contends that the inclusion of these stocks as
part of the assets employed by it in business in Massachusetts for
the purpose of measuring its taxable corporate excess is in effect
the imposition of a tax upon the stocks themselves; that these
stocks, as distinguished from the assets of the subsidiary
corporations, had no situs in Massachusetts and were not within its
jurisdiction, and that the statute, so applied, is therefore beyond
the power of the state and violates the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
The Massachusetts court, in holding that the statute had been
properly construed and applied by the commissioner and in
sustaining the validity of the taxes, said:
"The commissioner . . . , in determining under G.L. c. 63,
§ 44, the 'corporate excess employed within the commonwealth
by, every foreign corporation' doing domestic business here, is
required to give those words the definition and to follow the
legislative mandate in G.L. c. 63, § 30, cl. 4. . . . The
petitioner held the stock in its two subsidiary corporations for
the lawful prosecution of its business. All the facts recited lead
to the conclusion that there was no error of law in including the
shares of stock for computation of the excise of the petitioner.
The entire business of the petitioner was conducted
Page 277 U. S. 422
in this Commonwealth, the certificates of stock of the
subsidiary corporations actually were kept here, all the business
of one and a large part of the business of the other was carried on
here, and the petitioner made use of the activities of these
subsidiary corporations as essential parts of its business. Without
discussing whether any one or more of these factors standing alone
would justify the method employed in ascertaining the excise, their
collective force is sufficient to that end. The interpretation of
the words of the statute requires this result. . . . The language
of the statute . . . is explicit, and its meaning is not clouded or
obscure. It cannot render subject to direct taxation property not
within the jurisdiction, but, where other essential elements are
present, the excise is justified. . . . Apart from the domicile of
the several corporations and looking for the moment only at
tangible property and its physical location, there is jurisdiction
to sustain taxation in this Commonwealth. All the business of the
petitioner and of one of its subsidiaries and a principal part of
the business of the other subsidiary is conducted in Massachusetts.
. . . [There] is no direct tax on property, but an excise on a
foreign corporation levied solely for the privilege of doing
domestic business within this Commonwealth measured in part on the
value of stock employed in business in this Commonwealth. . . . The
question whether the value of the stock of the Lawrence Company
attributable to that part of its business and property in other
states ought to have been deducted is not presented on this record.
That relates to overvaluation, as to which a different remedy is
provided. . . . G.L. c. 63, § 71."
For present purpose, it may be assumed that the capital stocks
of the two subsidiary companies had no situs in Massachusetts which
brought them within the jurisdiction of that state for the purpose
of imposing a direct property tax.
See
Rhode Island Trust Co.
v. Doughton,
Page 277 U. S. 423
270 U. S. 69,
270 U. S. 80.
But here, the statute does not impose any direct tax upon these
stocks, and, as construed by the Massachusetts court, merely treats
them as assets employed by the petitioner in its business within
the state, and therefore requires that they be included when the
total assets so employed by it are computed for the purpose of
arriving at the proportionate part of the value of its own capital
shares, determined by comparing the assets employed in business
within the state with the total assets, wheresoever employed or
located, on which the excise for the privilege of carrying on its
business within the state is imposed.
It is settled law that a state may lawfully impose upon a
foreign corporation a tax for the privilege of doing business
within its borders which is measured by the proportionate part of
its total gross receipts that are received within the state,
Maine v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 142 U.
S. 217,
142 U. S. 228;
or by the proportionate part of its total capital stock which is
represented by the property located and business transacted within
the state,
Hump Hairpin Co. v. Emmerson, 258 U.
S. 290,
258 U. S. 293;
American Mfg. Co. v. St. Louis, 8 F.2d 447, 450; or by the
proportionate part of its total net income which is attributable to
the business carried on within the state,
Underwood Typewriter
Co. v. Chamberlain, 254 U. S. 113,
254 U. S. 120;
Bass, etc., Ltd. v. Tax Comm'n, 266 U.
S. 271,
266 U. S.
282.
Here, both the commissioner, the administrative officer charged
with the enforcement of the statute, and the Massachusetts court
have found that the capital stocks of the two subsidiary companies
were employed by the petitioner in carrying on its business within
Massachusetts. We find no adequate reason for disturbing this
conclusion. On the contrary, looking to the substance of the
transactions, and not merely to form, we think that the petitioner,
through its ownership of the capital stock of the two subsidiary
corporations and the control which it
Page 277 U. S. 424
thereby exercised over them, did in a very real and practical
sense employ these stocks as an instrumentality in carrying on its
business within Massachusetts -- to the extent, at least, that the
controlled activities and property of the subsidiary corporations
were within the state.
Cf. Edwards v. Chile Copper Co.,
270 U. S. 452,
270 U. S. 456. And
since the Massachusetts court did not determine whether the value
of the stock in the Lawrence Company attributable to that part of
its business and property in other states should have been
deducted, for the reason that, as to such overvaluation, if any, a
different statutory remedy was provided, we have no occasion to
consider that question.
It is said that, under the Massachusetts statute, the subsidiary
corporations were subject to similar excises on their own account,
and therefore there will be what is akin to double taxation. But we
are not here concerned with an excise tax on the subsidiary
corporations, and need not consider its constitutional propriety,
either independently or in connection with the excise against the
petitioner.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS is of opinion that the effect of the
challenged judgment is to tax property beyond the jurisdiction of
Massachusetts, and that therefore it should be reversed.
* These proceedings were instituted under G.L. c. 63, §
77.