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[242 U.S. 111, 112] Messrs. Forney Johnston and W. F. Evans for plaintiff in error.
Mr. William L. Martin, Attorney General of Alabama, and Mr. Lawrence E. Brown for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice Day delivered the opinion of the court:
The Kansas City, Memphis, & Birmingham Railroad Company, plaintiff in error herein (hereinafter called the railroad company), filed its complaint in the city court of Birmingham, Alabama, against James P. Stiles, probate judge of Jefferson county, Alabama, whereby it sought to recover sundry sums of money, aggregating $2,434.40, paid to Stiles by virtue of the provisions of 12 of an act of the Alabama legislature, ontitled, 'An Act to Further Provide for the Revenues of the State of Alabama.' By this act it is provided that corporations organized under [242 U.S. 111, 113] the laws of Alabama shall pay an annual franchise tax as follows: where the paid-up capital stock does not exceed $50,000, $1 per thousand of such paid-up capital stock; where paid-up capital stock is more than $50,000, and up to $1,000,000, $1 per thousand on the first $50,000, and 50 cents for each thousand of the remainder; where paid-up capital stock is more than $1,000,000, and up to $5,000,000, $1 dollar per thousand on the first $ 50,000, and 50 cents per thousand for the next $950,000, and 25 cents per thousand for the remainder; where he paid-up capital stock exceeds $5,000, 000, $1 per thousand on the first $50,000, 50 cents per thousand on the next $950,000, 25 cents per thousand on the next $4,000,000, and 10 cents per thousand on the remainder; and that corporations organized under the laws of any other state, and doing business within the state of Alabama, shall pay annually franchise tax as above, based, however, on the actual amount of capital employed in the state of Alabama. The act also contains provisions not relevant to this action and not necessary to be set forth here.
The railroad company is a consolidated corporation, existing by virtue of the consolidation, under concurrent acts of the states of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama, of three independent and distinct railroad corporations created by and formerly operating solely within the respective states named. As regards this consolidation, plaintiff avers--
The railroad company averred, if it was required to pay the franchise tax in question upon its entire capital, that it would be paying another and different rate of taxation, or another and different amount of franchise tax, from that which is required of like corporations doing business in Alabama, contrary to the provision of the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution that no state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of its laws; that the enforcement of the act by subjecting to its operation the railroad company's property in other states constituted a taking of its property without due process of law; and that said act imposed a direct burden upon interstate commerce in requiring it to pay, in addition to all other fees and taxes provided by law, a tax upon its capital stock for the right and privilege of transacting and carrying on its interstate business as a common carrier, in violation of clause 3 of 8, article I. of the Federal Constitution.
A demurrer was filed to this complaint, which demurrer was sustained. Upon appeal to the supreme court of Alabama, this judgment was affirmed ( 192 Ala. 687, 68 So. 1018), and a writ of error brings the action to this court.
The consolidated company was formed, so far as the state of Alabama is concerned, under 1583 of the Alabama Code of 1886, which provides in substance, as follows: That whenever the lines of any two or more railroads chartered under the laws of that or any other state, which, when completed, may admit the passage of burden or [242 U.S. 111, 116] passenger cars over any two or more of such roads continuously without break or interruption, such companies are authorized before or after completion to consolidate themselves into a single corporation, in the manner following: The directors of such corporations may enter into an agreement, prescribing the terms and conditions thereof, mode of carrying into effect, name, number of directors, etc., and such new corporation shall possess all the powers, rights, and franchises conferred upon the two or more corporations, and shall be subject to all the restrictions, and perform all the duties, imposed by such statute. Provision is also made for ratification of such consolidation by the stockholders, after which ratification the agreement is deemed completed, as to each corporation. It is also provided that 'every such new corporation so formed shall keep an office in the state of Alabama, and be in all respects subject to the laws of the state of Alabama as a domestic corporation.' The corporation is to be deemed consolidated when a copy of the agreement is filed with the secretary of state, and after the election of the first board of directors the property and franchises of each corporation shall be vested in the new corporation, and it shall be subject to the liabilities of its integral parts, as if such debts had been incurred by it.
It will be noted that this statute, which is a grant of corporate rights from the state of Alabama to the consolidated company, contains the express provision that such company shall in all respects be subject to the laws of the state of Alabama as a domestic corporation. Applying 12 of the statute, the Alabama supreme court has held that the railroad company is a corporation organized under the laws of that state, and, as such, subject to the franchise tax imposed by that section of the statute.
The Federal questions (which are alone within the jurisdiction of this court) are to be determined upon this construction of the state statute by its highest court.
[242 U.S. 111, 117]
When the companies comprised in this consolidation sought to avail themselves of the laws of Alabama, they were asking a privilege and right which, subject to the limitations of the Federal Constitution, was within the authority of the state. This principle was succinctly stated in Ashley v. Ryan,
This doctrine has been affirmed since. Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Kentucky,
The railroads comprising this consolidation entered upon it with the Alabama statute before them and under its conditions, and, subject to constitutional objections as to its enforcement, they cannot be heard to complain of the terms under which they voluntarily invoked and received the grant of corporate existence from the state of Alabama.
The specific objections based upon the Federal Constitution remain to be noticed. It is said that the company is deprived of the equal protection of the laws, this contention being based upon the fact that domestic corporations, operating only within the state, are required to pay the tax upon property within the state, and foreign cor-
[242 U.S. 111, 118]
porations are taxed only upon the basis of property within the state. To support this contention as to denial of equal protection of the laws, the company relies principally upon the decision of this court in Southern R. Co. v. Greene,
That case is readily distinguishable from the one now under consideration. Here the state imposes the franchise tax equally upon all of its corporations, consolidated and otherwise. The fact that a wholly intrastate corporation may own no property outside of the state, while the consolidated company does, presents no case of arbitrary classification. In both cases, the franchise tax is based upon a percentage of the capital stock. There is no denial of equal protection of the laws because a state may impose a different rate of taxation upon a foreign corporation for the privilege of doing business within the state than it applies to its own corporations upon the franchise which the state grants in creating them.
It is urged that this tax is void because it undertakes to tax property beyond the jurisdiction of the state, and imposes a direct burden upon interstate commerce. Objections of this character were so recently discussed, and the previous cases in this court considered, in Kansas City, Ft. S. & M. R. Co. v. Botkin,
The tax is not of the character condemned in Western U. Teleg. Co. v. Kansas,
So of the objection that the tax imposes a burden upon interstate commerce, the test of validity recognized in previous cases and repeated in Kansas City, Ft. S. & M. R. Co. v. Botkin, supra, is the nature and character of the tax imposed. The state may not regulate interstate commerce or impose burdens upon it; but it is authorized to levy a tax within its authority, measured by capital in part used in the conduct of such commerce, where the circumstances are such as to indicate no purpose or necessary effect in the tax imposed to burden commerce of that character. In the present case, the franchise tax is imposed upon the capital stock of a corporation consoli- [242 U.S. 111, 120] dated under the state law, and engaged in both interstate and intrastate commerce.
We find nothing in the amount or character of the tax which makes it a burden upon interstate commerce, and so beyond the authority of the state to impose. It results that the judgment of the Supreme Court of Alabama must be affirmed.
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Citation: 242 U.S. 111
No. 212
Decided: December 04, 1916
Court: United States Supreme Court
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