People v. Ford Motor Co.

The state of California instituted the present action against the Ford Motor Company for the recovery of a franchise tax for the fiscal year 1915-16, in the sum of twenty-four thousand dollars, and accrued delinquency penalties amounting to three thousand dollars. Judgment was rendered in favor of the state and defendant appeals.

Upon this appeal the first question for consideration is whether the constitution and laws of this state authorize the imposition of a franchise tax upon the defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Michigan and transacting both interstate and intrastate business in the state of California. Article XIII, section 1, of the constitution of California provides: "All property in the state except as otherwise in this constitution provided, not exempt under the laws of the United States shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as provided by law, or as hereinafter provided. The word 'property' as used in this article and section is hereby declared to include . . . franchises . . ." Section 14 of the same article reads in part: "(d) All franchises, other than those expressly provided for in this section, shall be assessed at their actual cash value, in the manner to be provided by law . . ." These sections of the constitution in effect authorize a tax upon all franchises in this state not exempt under the laws of the United States, unless otherwise expressly provided in the constitution. *Page 10

[1] This court has held that, by the use of the tern "franchises" in these sections of the constitution, it is in tended to provide for the taxation of the intangible property of the corporation. (Miller Lux v. Richardson, 182 Cal. 115 [187 P. 411].) The right to be a corporation, or to dobusiness as a corporation, is a franchise which ordinarily has its situs at the place where the home office of the corporation is situated but, when a corporation engages in business in a state other than the state wherein it was chartered the actual exercise of the power to engage in business creates valuable intangible property in the foreign state where the business is transacted. In other words, theactual exercise of the power to do business is also a franchise and such a franchise has a substantial existence in every state where the business is transacted. (People v. Alaska Pac.Steamship Co., 182 Cal. 202 [187 P. 742].) In so far as this franchise, or intangible property, consists of the exercise of the power to transact intrastate business within the foreign state, it may be taxed by that state. (Adams Express Co. v.Ohio, 166 U.S. 185 [41 L.Ed. 965, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 604 see, also, Rose's U.S. Notes]; People v. Alaska Pac. Steamship Co.,supra.) It follows that, if a foreign corporation is actually exercising its right to do business in this state and is doing an intrastate business, it thereby has in this state taxable intangible property. Since the exercise by a foreign corporation of the power of engaging in intrastate business in this state is a franchise in this state not exempt under the laws of the United States and not excepted in the state constitution, it is property taxable under section 14, article XIII, of the constitution.

[2] Appellant contends that the revenue commission which proposed the general system of taxation ultimately embodied in section 14, article XIII, of the constitution did not contemplate that foreign corporations should pay a tax on franchises in the sense of "corporate excess," that is, a property tax, but that subdivision d of that section, above quoted refers only to domestic corporations. However, the language of the constitutional section is definite and unambiguous in this respect, and it is not permissible to go outside of the constitution itself and consult the reports of the commission and other sources for the purpose of construing words or phrases the of which, as used in the constitution, *Page 11 admits of no doubt. As stated in Pacific G. E. Co. v.Roberts, 176 Cal. 183, 192 [167 P. 845, 848]: "While the report is very valuable and enlightening upon the subject treated, we cannot read it into the constitution for the purpose of defining words of plain meaning. If we were to be governed by contemporaneous construction, we would have to consider also that given by the legislature to the fourteenth section of article XIII shortly after its adoption." This interpretation is to be found in the Statutes of 1911, page 530, chapter 335, section 5, where the legislature provided: "All franchises . . . shall be assessed at their actual cash value These franchises shall include the actual exercise of the right to be a corporation and to do business as a corporation under the laws of this state and the actual exercise of the right to do business as a corporation in this state when such right is exercised by a corporation incorporated under the laws of any other state or country."

[3] The next contention is that the court committed reversible error in overruling defendant's demurrer to the complaint. The complaint is claimed to be defective in that it alleges that the tax was levied on the "right to do business in the state of California," rather than the "actual exercise of the right to do business in the state of California." It is true that there is language in the complaint susceptible of the construction contended for by appellant, arising from the fact that the complaint refers to both the "right to do business" and the "exercise of the right to do business" as a franchise. This creates some confusion and ambiguity. However, it is apparent from the complaint as a whole that it was not the mere right to do business, but the actual exercise of that right within this state, which constituted the property taxes, and the complaint was, therefore, sufficient as against an attack by general demurrer. [4] Likewise, no error was committed by the court in striking from appellant's answer the denials that it had or possessed a franchise in the state of California. Appellant admitted in its answer and at the trial that it was doing an intrastate business in this state and, in view of what we have previously said, this was tantamount to an admission that the defendant had a franchise taxable in this state. Under the circumstances, the denials in question were merely *Page 12 incorrect conclusions of law which served but to confuse the issues and were properly eliminated.

[5] The third alleged error in law to which appellant directs attention is the action of the court in sustaining objections to a number of questions put to certain witnesses by appellant. In this connection appellant relies upon but one proposition of law, namely, that the corporation was entitled to examine the members of the board of equalization concerning the method pursued by them in arriving at the value of the property to be taxed. Conceding, for the purpose of discussion, this proposition to be correct, it is of no avail to appellant for it does not appear that appellant was prevented from ascertaining the method by which the value of appellant's franchise was determined. By some of the questions appellant sought to ascertain the methods of valuation followed by the board in other years and the rate at which property in general was taxed for purposes other than state purposes. These matters were clearly irrelevant and immaterial, for the validity of the 1915 state tax on appellant's franchise was the sole question before the court, and in this connection the methods of valuation followed in previous years or the rates employed in imposing taxes of a different nature were of no moment. It appears that the tax in suit had been originally computed at the sum of twenty-nine thousand seven hundred dollars, and that the board had thereafter, upon the hearing of an application by the appellant for a reduction, reduced the tax to twenty-four thousand dollars, which amount was finally fixed by the board. Appellant sought to question the witnesses as to the method by which the board fixed the sum of twenty-nine thousand seven hundred dollars as the amount of the tax in the first instance, and now complains that the court erroneously sustained an objection to such questions. Conceding that the method adopted by the board in fixing the tax at the higher sum was material and relevant to an inquiry as to the method by which they arrived at the tax which was finally fixed, still the record shows that the trial court did not, as counsel contends, sustain the objection to the questions referred to. On the contrary, the record shows that the objection was ultimately overruled, and that the court permitted every question propounded by counsel for appellant upon that phase of the case to be answered. No prejudice *Page 13 was suffered by appellant in the sustaining of objections to any of the hypothetical questions concerning method of valuation, for elsewhere in the record it appears that the witnesses were permitted to testify as to the general method followed in determining the value of appellant's franchise in 1915. Nor was any prejudicial error committed in sustaining objections to questions regarding the uniform application of the method, for these questions were but a repetition of previous questions in answer to which the witness testified that all similar corporations similarly situated were treated in the same way as the appellant corporation.

[6] Appellant's final attack is directed against the method of assessment. That method was as follows: The board first determined the value of the total assets of the corporation, that is, the capital stock and securities, from which it deducted the value of the tangible property of the corporation. The value of the corporate excess in California was then determined by taking that percentage of this difference (which was the total corporate excess) represented by the ratio between the intrastate business in California and the total business of the corporation. It is claimed that this method of allocation is violative of the interstate commerce clause and of the fourteenth amendment of the United States constitution.

This contention is answered by the United States supreme court in the case of Horn Silver Min. Co. v. New York,143 U.S. 305 [36 L.Ed. 164, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 403, see, also, Rose's U.S. Notes]. In this case the corporation was organized in the state of Utah and was doing some intrastate business, it appearing, however, that the great bulk of its business and capital was outside of the state of New York. In discussing the validity of a tax imposed by New York upon "corporate franchise or business," the United States supreme court said: "The counsel for the appellant objects that the statute of New York is to be treated as a tax law, and not as a license to the corporation for permission to do business in the state. Conceding such to be the case we do not perceive how it in any respect affects the validity of the tax. However it may be regarded, it is the condition upon which a foreign corporation can do business in the state, and in doing such business it puts itself under the law of the state, however that may be characterized. . . . It *Page 14 is true, the greater part of the business of the company was done, out of the state, and the greater part of its capital was also without it, but the statute of New York does not require that the whole business of a foreign corporation shall be done within the state in order to subject it to the taxing power of the state. It makes, in that respect, no difference between home corporations and foreign corporations, as to the franchise or business of the corporation upon which the tax is levied, provided it does business within the state, as such corporation. There seems to be a hardship in estimating the amount of the tax upon the corporation, for doing business within the state, according to the amount of its business or capital without the state. That is a matter, however, resting entirely in the control of the state, and not a matter of federal law, and with which, of course, this court can in no way interfere."

Upon the authority of that case, the validity of the tax here attacked seems clear, for the method employed in fixing the amount of the corporate excess or intangible property situated in this state called for a division of the entire excess in the proportion that the California business bore to the entire business, a method which would doubtless be characterized as fairer than that pursued and upheld in the Horn case.

The argument with respect to the application of thefourteenth amendment of the United States constitution is further answered by the United States supreme court in the case of Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Chamberlain, 254 17. S. 113 [65 L.Ed. 50, 41 Sup. Ct. Rep. 45]. In this case the state of Connecticut had taxed a Delaware corporation operating within its borders and the court said: "The legislature, in attempting to put upon the business its fair share of the burden of taxation, was faced with the impossibility of allocating specifically the profits earned by the processes conducted within its borders. It, therefore, adopted a method of apportionment which, for all that appears in this record, reached, and was meant to reach, only the profits earned within the state. 'The plaintiff's argument on this branch of the case,' as stated by the supreme court of errors, 'carries the burden of showing that forty-seven per cent of its net income is not reasonably attributable, for purposes of taxation, to the manufacture of products from *Page 15 the sale of which eighty per cent of its gross earnings was derived after paying manufacturing costs.' The corporation has not even attempted to show this." Similarly, in the instant case, there is no showing that the percentage of the corporation's total intangible property apportioned to the state of California was an arbitrary or unreasonable allocation.

The judgment is affirmed.

Waste, J., Lawlor, J., Sloane, J., Shurtleff, J., Wilbur, J., and Shaw, C. J., concurred.

Rehearing denied.

All the Justices concurred.