1. The annual tax laid by § 4 of Act No. 233, Pub. Acts of
Mich. 1923, upon every local corporation "for the privilege of
exercising its franchise and of transacting its business within
this State" has been held by the state supreme court to be a tax on
the privilege to do business, not merely on the doing of it, and to
be applicable where the business is being conducted by a receiver,
appointed for the purpose of continuing it.
Held:
(1) The decision must be followed in a federal court
receivership as a binding construction of the local law. P.
286 U. S.
342.
(2) A decision upholding.the tax as applied to a receiver is
necessarily a construction of the statute, although the statute
does not mention receivers and its application to them was guided
by general principles as to the effect of a receivership. P.
286 U. S.
343.
(3) The tax should be paid by the receiver as it accrues, as
part of the expense of administration, and where this was deferred
until the receivership developed from a merely protective into a
winding up process, the accumulated taxes must be paid in
preference to the claims of creditors. P.
286 U.S. 344.
2. Receiverships for conservation should be watched with a
jealous eye to avoid inequitable results. P.
286 U. S.
345.
3.
United States v. Whitridge, 231 U.
S. 144, distinguished. P.
286 U. S. 346.
52 F.2d 842 reversed.
District Court, affirmed.
Page 286 U. S. 335
Certiorari, 284 U.S. 616, to review the reversal of an order
requiring the receiver of a corporation to pay accrued corporate
franchise taxes before the claims of creditors. The order was made
on petition of the state.
Page 286 U. S. 339
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
A petition by the people of the State of Michigan that a
receiver appointed by a federal court be directed to pay out of the
moneys in his hands corporate franchise taxes due or claimed to be
due to the people of the state was granted by the District Court,
and denied by the Court of Appeals. 52 F.2d 842. The case is here
on certiorari.
At the suit of a simple contract creditor, a receiver of the
property of the Worden Grocer Company, a Michigan corporation,
engaged in business at its domicile, was appointed by a Federal
District Court in Michigan on February 9, 1926. The bill of
complaint alleged that the defendant was solvent, and that, if its
business was handled by a receiver free from interference by its
creditors, it would be able to pay its debts in full and would have
a surplus available for preferred and common stockholders. On the
same day, the directors of the defendant adopted a resolution
consenting to the receivership, and an answer admitting the
allegations of the bill of complaint
Page 286 U. S. 340
and consenting to the relief prayed for was filed forthwith.
Thereupon, and still on the same day, the court made an order
appointing the Michigan Trust Company receiver of the defendant and
of all its assets, with authority
"to carry on the business now carried on by the Worden Grocer
Company and to operate and manage its property and business in such
manner as will, in the judgment of said Receiver, produce the most
satisfactory results."
To that end, authority was granted
"to pay the current and unpaid payrolls of said defendant, to
incur such obligations and indebtedness, . . . the same to be prior
to the present unsecured obligation"
of the defendant, "as to the Receiver may seem necessary for
continuance of the business," and, in particular, "to pay all taxes
and assessments levied upon the property and assets of said
company," as well as all rentals accrued or to accrue
thereafter.
The receiver so appointed carried on the business thus committed
to its charge. It continued to do this till December 30, 1929, when
the court made an order confirming a sale of all the mercantile
assets, as a result of which sale there was paid to the common
creditors a dividend of 25 percent. Cash and unsold real estate are
still in the receiver's custody.
In February, 1930, the people of the state filed in the district
court a petition that the receiver be directed to pay the corporate
taxes or privilege fees for the years 1925 to 1929 inclusive,
amounting in the aggregate to $10,988.36. The liability of the
receiver in respect of such fees or taxes is the subject of this
controversy. The District Court held that they were charges upon
the assets prior to the claims of creditors in that they were
expenses necessarily incurred by the receiver in fulfilling the
duty to operate the business. The Court of Appeals held that they
were liabilities due to the people of the state, but liabilities
not to be discharged until the claims
Page 286 U. S. 341
of all other creditors, as well as the expenses of the
receivership, had been satisfied in full.
By a statute of Michigan enacted in 1923 (Act No. 233, Public
Acts 1923, p. 374, § 4),
"every corporation organized or doing business under the laws of
this state, excepting those hereinafter expressly exempted
therefrom, shall at the time of filing its annual report with the
secretary of state of this state, as required by section seven
hereof, for the privilege of exercising its franchise and of
transacting its business within this state, pay to the secretary of
state an annual fee of two and one-half mills upon each dollar of
its paid-up capital and surplus, but such privilege fee shall in no
case be less than ten dollars nor more than fifty thousand
dollars."
There were amendments of the statute in 1927 and 1929 (Act No.
140, Public Acts 1927; Act No. 175, Public Acts 1929), but their
significance in relation to this controversy is not important
enough to make it necessary to quote them.
The tax is laid upon the corporation "for the privilege of
exercising its franchise and of transacting its business within
this state." Whether a corporation does exercise its franchise or
transact its business within the meaning of a statute so framed
when it does business through a receiver is a subject on which much
subtle argument has been expended by state and federal courts.
Distinctions have been drawn between receivers appointed to carry
on the business of a corporation with a view to the continuance of
its corporate life and receivers appointed in aid of the
dissolution of the corporation or the liquidation of its business.
See, e.g., Collector of Taxes v. Railway, 234 Mass. 336,
125 N.E. 614;
Ohio v. Harris, 229 F. 892, 901. Other
distinctions have been drawn between taxes on a franchise to exist
as a corporation and a franchise for transacting business, or, as
many of the cases put it, between a franchise to "be" and a
franchise to "do."
Page 286 U. S. 342
See, e.g., Cobbs & Mitchell v. Tax Appeal Board,
252 Mich. 478, 481, 233 N.W. 386. Even where the tax is on a
franchise to "do," there is wide diversity of judgment. The wording
of some statutes has been read by some courts as importing the
doing of business in the usual course by agents and officers
appointed in the usual way.
United States v. Whitridge,
231 U. S. 144,
231 U. S. 149.
Wording only slightly different has been thought by other courts to
include the operations of a business conducted by receivers.
Central Trust Co. v. N.Y.C. & N. R. Co., 110 N.Y. 250,
18 N.E. 92;
New York Terminal Co. v. Gaus, 204 N.Y. 512,
98 N.E. 11;
In re U.S. Car Co., 60 N.J.Eq. 514, 43 A. 673;
Armstrong v. Emmerson, 300 Ill. 54, 132 N.E. 768;
People v. Hopkins, 18 F.2d 731. Other wording not unlike
has been held to import the imposition of a burden on the mere
privilege to "do," though no business was in fact transacted by the
directors or by anyone (
In re G. H. Hammond Co., 246 Mich.
179, 244 N.W. 655;
New York v. Jersawit, 263 U.
S. 493,
263 U. S.
495), a construction whereby the tax on the privilege to
do becomes closely assimilated, in respect of domestic
corporations, to one on the privilege to be.
In re G. H.
Hammond Co., supra.
We are not required to choose from these diversities the
construction that would appeal to us as the most consonant with
reason if choice were wholly free. Choice, as it happens, is not
free, for our task is to ascertain the meaning of a Michigan
statute, and, as to that the courts of the state, if they have
spoken, pronounce the final word. The decision of the Supreme Court
of Michigan in
Re Detroit Properties Corporation, 254
Mich. 523, 236 N.W. 850, 852, is a controlling adjudication as to
the meaning and application of the privilege fee exacted of
Michigan corporations. The court held that the tax was imposed upon
the privilege to "do;" that this privilege existed though nothing
was ever done; that the order appointing
Page 286 U. S. 343
a receiver to continue the business did not divest the
privilege; that the only effect of such an order was to nominate
the person who was to exercise the "powers belonging to the
corporation by legislative grant;" and hence that, within the
meaning of the statute, the corporation retained a "privilege of
exercising its franchise and of transacting its business," for
which a tax was due.
Cf. Central Trust Co. v. N.Y.C. & N.
R. Co., supra; Ohio v. Harris, supra; Collector of Taxes v. Bay
State St. Railway, supra; People v. Hopkins, supra; In re G. H.
Hammond Co., supra. The significance of this decision is not
avoided by the suggestion that the court, in determining the
application of the tax, was guided by general principles as to the
effect of a receivership, and not by any provision expressly
covering receiverships in the body of the statute. This does not
detract from the quality of the judgment as an expression of the
local law. Problems of statutory construction do not arise unless
the meaning of a statute is obscure or uncertain in its relation to
a set of facts, and obscurities or uncertainties thus arising are
not susceptible of settlement unless the words of the statute are
read in a setting of common law implications, a background of
common law doctrine, giving meaning and perspective to a vague and
imperfect outline.
Ward v. Erie R. Co., 230 N.Y. 230, 234,
129 N.E. 886;
Murray v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co., 62 F.
24, 31;
United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.
S. 649,
169 U. S. 654;
Rice v. Minn. & N.W. R.
Co., 1 Black 358,
66 U. S.
374-375. The Supreme Court of Michigan, in deciding the
Detroit Properties case had to make answer to the question
whether the legislature of the state, in imposing a tax upon the
privilege of exercising a franchise, intended to reach a situation
where the business of the corporation was conducted through the arm
of a receiver. The tax, if there was any, could have no origin
independent of the provisions of the statute, and any decision
upholding or annulling it is one involving inescapably a
construction of the statute.
Cf. 263 U.
S.
Page 286 U. S. 344
Jersawit, 263 U. S. 493,
263 U. S. 495;
Mason v. United States, 260 U. S. 545,
260 U. S.
555-556;
Quong Ham Wah Co. v. Industrial
Comm'n, 255 U. S. 445,
255 U. S. 448;
Poe v. Seaborn, 282 U. S. 101,
282 U. S.
110.
We hold, therefore, in submission to the local law, that the
corporation, the Worden Grocer Company, was still subject to the
tax though it was in the hands of a receiver. The decision of the
court below apparently concedes as much, but maintains that the tax
must be paid by the corporation, and not by the receiver, with the
result that the state is subordinated to all the other creditors.
We find no warrant for the discrimination either in the provisions
of any statute or in any principle of equity governing the
distribution of a fund in the hands of a receiver. On the contrary,
statute and doctrine point the other way.
Viewing the receivership in its true light, as one not to wind
up the corporation, but to foster the assets, we think the annual
taxes accruing while the receiver was in charge must be deemed
expenses of administration, and therefore charges to be satisfied
in preference to the claims of general creditors. They are so
treated in the order by which the receiver was appointed. By the
order, the receiver is directed, in continuing the business, to pay
taxes and rentals and any other expenses necessary to enable the
business to go on, and to give such payments priority over other
debts and obligations. These privilege fees were charges of the
nature there described. Taxes owing to the government, whether due
at the beginning of a receivership or subsequently accruing, are
the price that business has to pay for protection and security.
Coy v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co., 220 F. 90, 92. The
privilege fees, being taxes, were expenses of administration within
the very terms of the order, but, in addition, they were taxes of
such an order that the corporation, by failing to pay them, became
subject, if the state so elected, to a forfeiture of its franchise.
Act No. 172, Public Acts
Page 286 U. S. 345
1923, p. 272, § 7;
cf. Turner v. Western Hydro-Electric
Co., 241 Mich. 6, 216 N.W. 476. The receiver was under a duty
to pay them when they accrued, and having failed to fulfill that
duty then, it should be compelled to pay them now. The decisions as
to this are persuasive and uniform.
Coy v. Title Guarantee
& Trust Co., supra; Bright v. Arkansas, 249 F. 950;
McFarland v. Hurley, 286 F. 365;
People v.
Hopkins, 18 F.2d 731, 733;
cf. In re Tyler,
149 U. S. 164,
149 U. S.
182.
If the receivership were to be viewed as equivalent to one for
the liquidation of the business, the result would not be different,
and this for the reason, without considering any other, that it was
not such a receivership when the suit was instituted. It was then,
as we have pointed out, a receivership for the conservation of the
assets of a corporation believed to be completely solvent. If it
ever lost its original quality and became a winding-up
receivership, the change was not earlier than the sale of the
mercantile assets in the latter part of 1929. Claims of the state
for taxes then accrued, instead of being postponed to those of
other creditors, are entitled to a preference by the provisions of
the local law. Sections 15315 and 15362, Compiled Laws of
Michigan.
This Court has had occasion to point out the abuses that can
arise from friendly receiverships' forestalling the normal process
of administration in bankruptcy and enabling a tottering business
to continue while creditors are held at bay.
Harkin v.
Brundage, 276 U. S. 36,
276 U. S. 52-54;
cf. Kingsport Press v. Brief English Systems, 54 F.2d 497,
499-500. Receiverships for conservation have at times a legitimate
function, but they are to be watched with jealous eyes lest their
function be perverted. For four years, the business of this
corporation was carried on in Michigan by a chancery receiver in
the hope that winding up and dissolution would thereby be averted.
There should be no shift of the theory of the suit in these,
its
Page 286 U. S. 346
expiring moments. To protect through a receiver the enjoyment of
the corporate privilege and then to use the appointment as a
barrier to the collection of the tax that should accompany
enjoyment would be an injustice to the state and a reproach to
equity.
A word in conclusion should be said as to
United States v.
Whitridge, supra. The Court held in that case that a
corporation operating through a receiver is not subject to a
federal tax imposed as an excise on the actual doing of business
and to be measured by its fruits. The tax in controversy is a state
tax, and is laid not on the doing of business, but on the mere
privilege to do it. The state decision as to its meaning would
control in case of conflict, but conflict there is none.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals should be reversed,
and that of the District Court affirmed.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS is of opinion that the decree of the
Circuit Court of Appeals should be affirmed.