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Stone v. Gen. Contract Pur. Corp.

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Jun 8, 1942
193 Miss. 301 (Miss. 1942)

Summary

In Stone v. General Contract Purchase Corp., 193 Miss. 301, 7 So.2d 806, where a Missouri corporation, with an office in Memphis, Tennessee, acquired, from automobile dealers, notes which were secured by liens on automobiles, and the corporation's agents came into the state to collect the notes and enforce liens, it was held that the corporation was "doing business" in the state so as to require it to pay the state privilege tax imposed by Chapter 110, Laws of 1940.

Summary of this case from Stone, Chmn. v. Stapling Mach. Co.

Opinion

No. 34958.

April 27, 1942. Suggestion of Error Overruled June 8, 1942.

1. LICENSES. Taxation.

The distinction between a "property tax" and a "license" or "privilege tax" imposed for revenue is that function of a property tax is to raise revenue by virtue of fact that property is within jurisdiction of taxing power, and no condition is imposed thereby upon use of property taxed, while a license or privilege tax, even though also passed to raise revenue, is imposed upon the right to exercise a privilege.

2. LICENSES.

If in its nature a tax is a license or privilege tax, it does not become a "property tax" simply because it is proportioned in amount to value of property used with the privilege which is enacted.

3. LICENSES.

The tax imposed by statute levying a tax upon every person doing a business of purchasing notes or other forms of indebtedness secured by liens upon automobiles and other tangible personalty is a "privilege tax" and not a "property tax" (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

4. STATUTES.

The unconstitutionality of certain provisions in statute levying a privilege tax upon every person doing a business of purchasing notes or other forms of indebtedness secured by liens upon automobiles and other tangible personalty would not render entire statute void, but statute would be enforced as if such provisions had not appeared therein (Laws 1940, chap. 110, secs. 1, 12).

5. LICENSES.

All of the things necessary for the prosecution of a business need not take place within the state imposing a privilege tax thereon before the tax can be exacted, and all that is necessary is that something be done or take place within the taxing state that is incident to or substantially connected with prosecution of the business (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

6. LICENSES.

Neither the common-law definition of what constitutes doing business nor the definition of former decisions of the Supreme Court was controlling in determining whether a foreign corporation was doing business in Mississippi so as to be subject to tax under statute levying a privilege tax upon every person doing a business of purchasing or otherwise acquiring notes secured by liens upon automobiles and other tangible personalty where the legislature had defined the terms as used in the statute (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

7. STATUTES.

The legislature could define words used in a statute.

8. LICENSES.

A Missouri corporation engaged in financing retail automobile dealers in Mississippi was "doing business" in that state within privilege tax statute and was subject to a privilege tax with respect to notes acquired by corporation through its office in Memphis, Tenn., where notes were secured by liens on automobiles in Mississippi, and corporation's agent came into that state to collect notes and enforce liens, which were recognized by Mississippi (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

9. LICENSES.

Where a Missouri corporation engaged in financing retail automobile dealers in Mississippi acquired notes through its office in Memphis, Tenn., and notes were secured by liens on automobiles in Mississippi, and corporation's agents came into that state to collect notes and enforce liens, the fact that necessity for protection of corporation's business in Mississippi with respect to collection of notes arose when, but not until, corporation acquired notes was immaterial in determining liability of corporation for a privilege tax with respect to such notes (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

10. TAXATION.

That a tax is contingent upon events brought to pass without a state does not destroy the nexus between such a tax and transactions within a state for which the tax is an exaction.

11. COMMERCE.

If agreement between a Missouri corporation engaged in financing retail automobile dealers in Mississippi and such dealers contemplated transportation of notes secured by liens on automobiles in Mississippi from that state to corporation's office in Memphis, Tenn., in interstate commerce, such fact was immaterial in determining liability of corporation for privilege taxes with respect to notes, since "interstate commerce," if any, with regard to transportation of notes ended when they were delivered to corporation (Laws 1940, chap. 110, sec. 1).

12. COMMERCE.

It was not the purpose of the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution to relieve those engaged in interstate commerce of their just share of state tax burdens, merely because an incidental or consequential effect of the tax is an increase in cost of doing business (U.S.C.A. Const., art. 1, sec. 8, cl. 3).

13. COMMERCE.

A tax or other burden does not discriminate against interstate commerce where equality is the theme.

APPEAL from chancery court of Hinds county, HON. V.J. STRICKER, Chancellor.

Greek L. Rice, Attorney General, by Geo. H. Ethridge, Assistant Attorney General, J.H. Sumrall, of Jackson, and R.W. Heidelberg, of Hattiesburg, for A.H. Stone, Chairman State Tax Commission.

The first contention of the complainant in its original bill and supplemental bills was that the act did not apply to the business of the complainant which was handled through its offices located at Memphis or at other points outside of the State of Mississippi. This contention involves the construction of Chapter 110, Laws of 1940, and our construction of this act is that by its terms it imposed the tax upon all persons, or corporations, who acquired liens, or reserved title contracts, or other evidence of debt, with liens secured on personal tangible property located in the State of Mississippi and that the tax was measured (as distinguished from being imposed on) by the total business of the complainant within the terms of the act on the property, or secured by property located in the state of a tangible nature.

Chapter 110, Laws of 1940.

It is clear that the act intended to exact the tax levied for the rights given by the state under its law in the way of protection and enjoyment to the owner of the property. It is not the debt that is taxed, it is the right given by the laws of the state to the complainant and others buying and acquiring such securities in protecting and caring for its property and in no sense is it a tax upon anything other than the rights conferred by the state to the owner of such property. In other words, the state is exacting a tax as a compensation for the protection which the state law and the state government gives to the person acquiring such property. The tax is not a tax upon acquiring notes secured in any other manner than on tangible personal property, which is located in the State of Mississippi. It is not a tax upon an instrument so acquired that is secured by tangible property located in another state at the time the security was given. It does not apply to securities by personal endorsement, or contractual guaranty, which is not backed by liens on tangible personal property located in the state. See Wisconsin v. J.C. Penney Co., 85 L.Ed. 222.

I invite the court's most careful scrutiny of the language of the act and I think it will satisfactorily appear from the act that the state is exacting the tax as an equivalent, or compensation, due the government for protecting the property while located in the state.

The state may tax any person for any protection or right derived from the state or its laws.

The complainant in this case in the bill does not attack the act on many grounds that other complainants, in companion suits, have set up as trying, or tending, if established, to invalidate the act. This complainant in his said bills asserted that the act did not apply to it in the first place, and in the second place that the transaction, so far as the Memphis and the other out-of-state offices were concerned, constituted interstate commerce and that the tax would therefore be a tax upon interstate commerce.

I submit that buying and selling of such notes and securities upon which the tax is levied by Chapter 110, Laws of 1940, is not interstate commerce, whether the notes were acquired by the complainant through the mails or by dealers bringing the securities to them at their outside offices or in whatever manner it acquired such notes, contracts, or other securities. The law upon this question seems to be so well settled by the highest authority of the land and practically by universal authority, that I am at a loss to understand how the chancellor arrived at his conclusion upon this subject.

Hemphill v. Orloff, 277 U.S. 537, 72 L.Ed. 978; Blumenstock Brothers Agency v. Curtiss Publishing Co., 252 U.S. 435, 64 L.Ed. 649.

It is within the power of the legislature to say what shall be taxed and who shall pay the tax. The taxing power is necessary power to the existence of the government, but it may be used for other purposes than merely raising revenue. It may be used to regulate industry and business and even to discourage certain types of business. It extends to all the needs of the government.

Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U.S. 104, 55 L.Ed. 112.

The complainant further contends that by construing the act as applying to the complainant on such business as may be done by it in the manner above indicated would be to take its property without due process and to deny to it the equal protection of the law. As I construe the act, it clearly would not deny the complainant any right. The power of classification for the purpose of taxation and other lawmaking purposes is very broad and any reasonable classification for purposes of taxation will be upheld. Upon this proposition, I will refer to and rely upon the printed brief in the case of A.H. Stone v. Yellow Manufacturing Corporation, 193 Miss. 338, 7 So.2d 820, and A.H. Stone, Chairman, State Tax Commission, v. C.I.T. Corporation, 193 Miss. 344, 7 So.2d 811, said cases being companion cases in this series of lawsuits and involving common legal principles.

William Harold Cox, of Jackson, for General Contract Purchase Corporation.

The appellee instituted this suit in the chancery court to recover privilege taxes paid the appellant under protest under Chapter 110, Laws of 1940. The appellee is a Missouri corporation. It has an independent office in Memphis, Tennessee, and another independent office in Jackson, Mississippi. Separate suits were filed against the commissioner by appellee, and these actions were consolidated in the lower court. The Memphis office of the appellee contended that its purchase of automobile finance paper was consummated in Memphis, and that it was not liable for such privilege tax. The Jackson office contended that it was not liable for such tax because Chapter 110, Laws of 1940, is unconstitutional.

It was not the intention or purpose of Chapter 110, Mississippi Laws of 1940, to impose a tax on transactions conducted and concluded in Tennessee.

Ch. 110, Laws of 1940, Secs. 2, 5; Laws of 1935, Ch. 20; Adams v. Colonial Mort. Co., 82 Miss. 263, 34 So. 482; Cooney, Governor, v. Mt. States Telephone Co., 294 U.S. 384; City Sales Agency v. Smith, 126 Miss. 202, 88 So. 625; Delta Ins. Agency v. Fourth Nat. Bank, 146 Miss. 11, 111 So. 435; East Ohio Gas Co. v. Tax Comm., 283 U.S. 465; George v. Oscar Smith Sons, 250 F. (5 C.C.A., Miss.) 41; Green v. Chicago, B. Q.R. Co., 205 U.S. 530; Gulley v. C.I.T. Corp., 168 Miss. 268, 150 So. 367; Gwin, White Prince, Inc., v. Heneford, 305 U.S. 434; Independent Linen Service v. State, 169 Miss. 62, 152 So. 647; International Paper Co. v. Mass., 246 U.S. 135; Item Co. v. Shipp, 140 Miss. 699, 106 So. 437; James, Tax Commissioner, v. Dravo Contracting Co., 302 U.S. 134; Miller v. Ill. Cent., 146 Miss. 422, 111 So. 558; Morrison v. Guaranty Mortg. Co., 191 Miss. 207, 199 So. 110; Pan-American Petroleum Corporation v. Miller, 154 Miss. 565, 122 So. 393; Phelps v. Jessee French Piano, 65 S.W.2d 374; Refrigeration Discount Corp. v. Turley, 189 Miss. 880, 198 So. 731; Saxony Mills v. Wagner, 94 Miss. 233, 47 So. 899; Singer Mfg. Co. v. Adams, 165 F. 877 (5 C.C.A.); State v. Smith, 68 Miss. 79, 8 So. 294; State Tax Commission v. Interstate Natural Gas Co., Inc., 284 U.S. 41; Stone, Commissioner, v. Interstate Gas Co., 103 F.2d 544 (5 C.C.A.); Stone v. Rogers, 186 Miss. 53, 189 So. 810; Union Cotton Oil Co. v. Patterson, 116 Miss. 802, 77 So. 795; Watson v. J.R. Watkins Co., 188 Miss. 435, 193 So. 913; Wiley v. Electric Storage, 167 Miss. 842, 147 So. 773; Yellow Mfg. Acceptance Corp. v. American Oil., 191 Miss. 757, 2 So.2d 834; 61 C.J. 164, Sec. 12.

Chapter 110, Mississippi Laws of 1940, is an ad valorem or property tax and is not uniform and equal as required by the constitution of this state.

Ch. 110, Mississippi Laws of 1940; Section 2128, Mississippi Code of 1930; Sec. 112, Mississippi Constitution of 1890; Adams v. Miss. Lbr. Co., 84 Miss. 23, 36 So. 68; Bankston v. Hill, 134 Miss. 288, 98 So. 689; Barnes v. Jones, 139 Miss. 675, 103 So. 773; Brewer v. Universal Credit Co., 191 Miss. 183, 192 So. 902; Chicago R.R. Co. v. Robinson, 122 Miss. 417, 84 So. 449; Hunter v. Crook, 93 Miss. 812, 47 So. 430; Thompson v. McLeod, 112 Miss. 383, 73 So. 193; Thompson v. Kreutzer, 112 Miss. 165, 72 So. 891.

Chapter 110, Mississippi Laws of 1940, is unconstitutional as a piece of class legislation which discriminates against finance companies.

Chapter 110, Laws of 1940; Colgate v. Harvey, Tax Commissioner, 296 U.S. 404; Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U.S. 540; Hyland, Sheriff, v. Sharp, 88 Miss. 567, 41 So. 264; Louisville Gas Co. v. Coleman, Auditor, 277 U.S. 32; Lowry v. City of Clarksdale, 154 Miss. 155, 122 So. 195; Quaker City Cab Co. v. Penn., 277 U.S. 389; Rodge v. Kelly, 88 Miss. 209, 40 So. 552.

Argued orally by R.W. Heidelberg, J.H. Sumrall and Geo. H. Ethridge, for appellant, and by Harold Cox, for appellee.


The General Contract Purchase Corporation, a Missouri corporation, is engaged in financing retail dealers of automobiles. This, it does under agreements so to do with the retail dealers, by paying manufactures or distributors of automobiles purchased by the retail dealer and taking his notes therefor together with a contract that the title to the automobiles shall vest and remain in the appellee until the dealer repays the money advanced him by the appellee for their purchase; and when the dealer sells an automobile taking the purchaser's note or notes therefor under a contract reserving the title thereto in the dealer until the note or notes are paid, the appellee purchases these notes from the dealer and thereafter collects the payments due thereon. It maintains an office or place of business at Jackson, Mississippi, and another at Memphis, Tennessee; its officers and employees at the one place having no supervision or control over its officers and employees at the other. Both offices acquire these promissory notes given to and by retail dealers in automobiles in Mississippi, where the automobiles are and remain. The appellee's agreement with these dealers does not obligate it to purchase all of the notes taken by them for automobiles sold but only such as it approves. The notes, with their accompanying retain-title contracts acquired by the appellee's Memphis office, are delivered to it by the dealer in person, by agent, or through the U.S. Mail. Those purchased by its Jackson office, are so delivered to it there. The Memphis office, when necessary, sends its agents into Mississippi to collect from the makers of these notes the payments due thereon; to ascertain the continued existence and condition of the automobiles securing these payments, and to enforce the liens thereon when necessary.

Chapter 110, Laws of 1940, levies "an annual state-wide privilege tax upon every person, firm, corporation, or association . . . doing a business of purchasing, discounting, or otherwise acquiring notes, trust receipts, or other forms of indebtedness secured by liens, in the form of mortgages, retain-title or purchase contracts, or other liens, upon motor vehicles, furniture, refrigerators, . . . the amount of said tax to bear a direct relationship to the value of the securities held, owned, or acquired by such person, firm, corporation or association, and exacted in return for the protection afforded by the government and laws of this state in the enjoyment of such ownership and rights acquired thereby; the tax to be computed by application of the rate hereinafter set out to the total value of such securities." Sec. 1.

When the appellant, who is charged with the duty of collecting the tax, called on the appellee for the payment of the tax due by it, he included in the measure thereof the value of the securities acquired by the appellee at its Memphis office. The appellee paid the tax, and filed two suits in the court below enjoining the appellant from paying the tax into the state treasury and seeking to recover it from him. One of these suits deals only with the securities acquired at the appellee's Memphis office and the other with those acquried at its Jackson office. These suits were consolidated and tried together in the court below, resulting in a decree dismissing the appellee's bill dealing with its Jackson, Mississippi, securities and awarding it the relief prayed for in the bill dealing with its Memphis, Tennessee, securities. Both sides appeal.

We are to decide:

1. Whether this tax is a privilege tax or one on property, it being admitted that if it is on property it runs counter to Section 112 of the State's Constitution.

2. If it is a privilege tax does the statute violate the due process and equality provisions of the Fourteenth Amendent to the Federal Constitution, because of its provisions exempting banks, persons engaged in a general mercantile business, and dealers engaged in selling the kind of property described in the statute; from the payment of the tax; forbidding the taxpayer to "pass the tax imposed by this act on to the consumer or dealer," and forbidding persons liable for the tax and failing to pay it from access to the state's courts for the collection of the notes or the enforcement of the liens securing them.

3. Whether the statute applies to persons and corporations who, at a place of business in another state, acquire securities of the character described in the statute, but whose agents come into this state, collect the payments due on these notes, ascertain the existence and condition of the property securing the payments and when necessary take possession of the property in order to enforce the lien thereon.

(a) "The distinction between a property tax and a license or privilege tax imposed for revenue is that the function of the property tax is to raise revenue by virtue of the fact that the property is within the jurisdiction of the taxing power, and no condition or restriction is imposed thereby upon the use of the property taxed, while the license or privilege tax, even though also passed to raise revenue, is imposed upon the right to exercise a privilege, and its payment is made a condition to the exercise, or continuance in the exercise of the privilege, business, or vocation involved. . . . If in its nature a tax is a license or privilege tax, it does not become a property tax simply because it is proportioned in amount to the value of the property used in connection with the privilege which is enacted." 33 Am. Jur., "Licenses," section 3; State v. Lawrence, 108 Miss. 291, 66 So. 745, Ann. Cas. 1917E, 322; Southern Package Corp. v. State Tax Commission, 174 Miss. 212, 164 So. 45. Tested by this rule, it will be readily seen that this tax is a privilege and not a property tax. In Thompson v. Kreutzer, 112 Miss. 165, 72 So. 891, and Barnes v. Jones, 139 Miss. 675, 103 So. 773, 43 A.L.R. 673, invoked by the appellee, the tax on the ownership of the property, without reference to any activity in connection with it. In Thompson v. McLeod, 112 Miss. 383, 73 So. 193, L.R.A. 1918C, 893, Ann. Cas. 1918A, 674, a border-line case, the activity taxed (extracting turpentine from trees grown on land) was one of the rights inherent in the ownership of the land, and therefore the tax was held to be, in effect, a tax on the land itself. If it be said that that case departed from the rule above announced, we must decline to build on it, and will confine it to its own facts.

(b) It will not be necessary for us to here determine the constitutional validity of any of the provisions of this statute set forth under paragraph numbered 2 hereof, for if they should be held to be invalid, that fact would not render the statute void, but it would be enforced as if these provisions had not appeared therein, both under the general rule therefor, and Section 12 of this statute, which expressly so declares.

(c) This brings us to the third of these questions. The appellee's contention in this connection is that promissory notes acquired by its Memphis office cannot be taken into consideration in computing the tax due by it for the reason that as to those notes it did no business in Mississippi. Acquiring these notes was one of the things necessary to be done in the prosecution of the appellee's business, but it was not the only one, for they must either be sold or collected, and when necessary the liens securing their payment must be enforced. All of the things necessary for the prosecution of a business need not take place within the state imposing a privilege tax thereon before the tax can be exacted. All that is necessary is that something be done or take place within the taxing state that is incident to or substantially connected with the prosecution of the business. State of Wisconsin v. J.C. Penney Co., 311 U.S. 435, 61 S.Ct. 246, 85 L.Ed. 267, 130 A.L.R. 1229. Neither the common law definition of what constitutes doing business nor that of former decisions of this court control here, for the legislature, as it had the right to do (Mathison v. Brister, 166 Miss. 67, 145 So. 358; 59 C.J. 1036), has set forth in the statute what is meant by the words "doing business" and "doing a business" and has said that they "shall mean and include any and every act, power or privilege exercised or enjoyed in this state as an incident to, or in connection with, the lending of money, acquiring or owning notes or other forms of indebtedness secured as aforesaid by liens on tangible personal property located in the state of Mississippi, which liens may be enforced or indebtedness collected under the laws and government of this state; and the enjoyment of any and every right or privilege as owner of such securities on account of which said act, right, power or privilege so exercised or enjoyed, the state of Mississippi can lawfully levy and collect a privilege tax." One of the things that justifies the appellee in purchasing these promisory notes is that they are secured by liens on property in this state, which liens are valid for the reason that they are recognized, protected by, and can be enforced under the laws of this state. Without this protection the appellee's business insofar as it embraces Mississippi securities would be of little value and it is in return for this protection, as Section 1 of the statute declares, that the tax is exacted. It is, therefore, exacted in return for something substantial given by the state and "bears fiscal relation to protection, opportunities and benefits given by the state." State of Wisconsin v. J.C. Penney Co., supra [ 311 U.S. 435, 61 S.Ct. 250, 85 L.Ed. 267, 130 A.L.R. 1229]. In addition to this, and sufficient of itself to sustain the exaction of the tax, as to securities acquired by the appellee at Memphis, is the fact that its agents come into this state, collect the payments due on the notes, ascertain the existence and condition if the property securing the payments, and when necessary take possession of the property in order to enforce the appellee's lien thereon. These activities of its agents, which the state protects, are necessary incidents to the successful prosecution of the appellee's business.

That the necessity for the protection of the appellee's business in both of the above aspects arises when, but not until, it acquires the securities, is of no consequence although they are acquired in another state. "The fact that a tax is contingent upon events brought to pass without a state does not destroy the nexus between such a tax and transactions within a state for which the tax is an exaction." State of Wisconsin v. J.C. Penney Co., supra.

If it be said that the appellee's agreement with automobile dealers in this state contemplates the transportation of promissory notes from Mississippi into Tennessee and therefore the transactions are within interstate commerce, as to which we express no opinion, that fact is of no consequence here. When the transportation of these notes ended and they were delivered to the appellee, this interstate commerce, if such there here is, ended and all of the matters above set out that warrant the exaction of the tax either continued or took place thereafter. Moreover, "it was not the purpose of the commerce clause to relieve those engaged in interstate commerce of their just share of state tax burdens, merely because an incidental or consequential effect of the tax is an increase in the cost of doing the business." McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Coal Min. Co., 309 U.S. 33, 60 S.Ct. 388, 392, 84 L.Ed. 565, 128 A.L.R. 876. In addition, the exaction of this tax imposes the same burden on the business taxed whether prosecuted by means of intra or interstate commerce, or both, and "a tax or other burden obviously does not discriminate against interstate commerce where `equality is the theme.'" Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck Co., 312 U.S. 359, 61 S.Ct. 586, 589, 85 L.Ed. 888, 132 A.L.R. 475; McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Coal Min. Co., supra; Stone v. Interstate Natural Gas Co., 5 Cir., 103 F.2d 544, affirmed by the Supreme court of the United States, 308 U.S. 522, 60 S.Ct. 292, 84 L.Ed. 442, on the authority of Southern Natural Gas Corp. v. State of Alabama, 301 U.S. 148, 57 S.Ct. 696, 700, 81 L.Ed. 970. "There is no showing [here] of any direct burden on interstate commerce, the effect upon that commerce [if any] being incidental and remote, not differing in this respect from the effect of ordinary ad valorem taxation of property within the State." Southern Natural Gas Corp. v. State of Alabama, supra.

The decree dismissing the appellee's bill of complaint as to the tax exacted from it on the value of the securities acquired by it at Jackson, Mississippi, will be affirmed, but the decree awarding it the relief prayed for as to the securities acquired by it at Memphis, Tennessee, will be reversed, and that bill will be dismissed. So ordered.


I concur in the result reached in the majority opinion. In view of the controlling fact that appellee is duly authorized to do business in this state and is so engaged, I do not find relevant the reasons asserted to justify imposition of the privilege tax therefor.

There is no question whether appellee is engaged in this state in the "business of purchasing, discounting, or otherwise acquiring notes, trust receipts, or other forms of indebtedness secured by liens, in the form of mortgages, retained-title or purchase contracts . . .," under section 1 of Chapter 110, Laws 1940. Its liability thus fixed needs no further justification, and it is immaterial, insofar as fixing liability for privilege tax is concerned, that some of the liens on property located in the state were acquired outside the state. Liability for tax is referable to section 1 of the act which rests upon a conventional doing of business in this state. There is no need to invoke the artificial definition set forth in section 5.

In computing the amount of the tax (liability for which having arisen because doing business in this state) the aliquot share of the corporation's total business is estimated and based upon "the total amount of indebtedness secured by tangible property located in the state of Mississippi." Sec. 2. So long as this basis of computation exacts an amount that is reasonable, by well established tests, the reason for adoption of such basis is immaterial. Beyond question the state would imperil its own dignity by justifying its exaction as in consideration for the "privilege" available to appellee to employ legal processes in enforcing its rights or enjoy access to its courts. It may not exact tribute for that which it may not withhold. These are privileges not granted but protected by our Constitution, secs. 24, 25, Const. 1890; sec. 14, Amendments to Const. U.S. It may deny access to its courts to any corporation which fails to qualify but once it subjects itself to legal citizenship, it accedes to all the rights and privileges of other citizens.

It is true that section 1 of the Act of 1940 provides that "the amount of said tax to bear a direct relationship to the value of the securities held, owned, or acquired," so that in computing a liability otherwise incurred such basis is reasonable. It is immaterial that the legislature sought further to justify what it otherwise had the undoubted right to do, by explaining (sec. 1) that the tax is "exacted in return for the protection afforded by the government and laws of this state in the enjoyment of such ownership and rights acquired thereby." More properly the tax is exacted by the state for the privilege of doing business in this state. On the other hand, the taxpayer exacts protection in the enjoyment of his rights in return for the tax so paid.

Appellee is doing business in this state and is liable to taxation for such privilege. It is immaterial that the amount of such tax is computed upon a basis which may take into account tangible property located inside the state, the liens upon which were negotiated outside the state. Between taxing a nonresident because of interstate business done in this state and taxing a resident upon the basis of business done outside the state, there is a great gulf comparable only to the distance between unconstitutionality and constitutionality. Most of the confusion apparent in the able arguments arises from a failure to separate the basis of initial liability for a privilege tax from the bases employed in computing its amount.

Griffith, J., concurs in the foregoing opinion.


Summaries of

Stone v. Gen. Contract Pur. Corp.

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Jun 8, 1942
193 Miss. 301 (Miss. 1942)

In Stone v. General Contract Purchase Corp., 193 Miss. 301, 7 So.2d 806, where a Missouri corporation, with an office in Memphis, Tennessee, acquired, from automobile dealers, notes which were secured by liens on automobiles, and the corporation's agents came into the state to collect the notes and enforce liens, it was held that the corporation was "doing business" in the state so as to require it to pay the state privilege tax imposed by Chapter 110, Laws of 1940.

Summary of this case from Stone, Chmn. v. Stapling Mach. Co.
Case details for

Stone v. Gen. Contract Pur. Corp.

Case Details

Full title:STONE, CHAIRMAN OF STATE TAX COMMISSION, v. GENERAL CONTRACT PURCHASE…

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc

Date published: Jun 8, 1942

Citations

193 Miss. 301 (Miss. 1942)
7 So. 2d 806

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