Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Honorable Robert S. Calvert Opinion No. w-819 Comptroller of Public Accounts Capitol Station Re: Applicability of the Austin 11, Texas Texas stock transfer ;z ;C;. 16, H.B. 11, 56th Leg codified’as Title ii2A, Taxation-General, R.C. S.) to joint tenancy arrangements under em- ployees a stock purchase Dear Mr. Calvert: plan. Your request for our opinion upon the referenced subject reads as follows: “Article 16.01.; Title 122A, Taxation-General, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, reads In part a6 follows~ “OThere is hereby imposed and levied’s tax as hereinafter provfded on all sales; agreements to sell; or memoranda of sales; and all deliveries or transfers of shares; or certlfieates of stock; or certificates for rights to stock; or certificates of deposit representing an interest in or representing certificates made taxable un- der this section in any domestic or for- eign assoolatfon, companyP or corporation; or certificates of interest in any busi- ness conducted by trustee or trustees made after the effective date hereof, whether made upon or shown by the books of the as- sociation, company, corporation or trustee, or by any assignment in blank or by any delivery of any papers or agreement or memorandum or other evidence of sale or transfer or order for or agreement to buy, whether Intermediate or final, and whether investing the holder with the beneficial interest In or legal title to such stock or other certificate taxable hereuuder, or with the possession or use thereof for any Hon. Robert S. Calvert Page 2 Opinion No. w-819 purpose, or to secure the future payment of money or the future transfer of any such stock, or certificate on each hundred dollars of face value or fraction thereof, 3.3 cents except in cases where the shares or certificates are Issued without desig- nated monetary value, in which case the tax shall be at the rate of 3.3 cents for each and every share,O--- "A question has arisen In connection with an Employee Stock Option Purchase Plan in cases where the employee directs that the shares of stock be issued in the name of himself and an- other as joint tenants. "In connection with this request I am enclosing copy of letter to me from Kemp, Smith, Brown, Goggln & White, Attorneys at Law, El Paso, Texas, Also, I am enclosing a Prospectus which sets out the terms of the Employee Stock Pur- chase Plan in question. "I will appreciate your opinion as to whether or not the stock transfer tax accrues on the following transactions: "(1) If the employeeus nauthorisations specifies that the shares of stock be issued in the name of the employee and another person as joint tenants, does this constitute a transfer re- quiring the affixing of stock trans- fer tax stamps to the authorization? “(2) If the purchase price of the stock is paid for with community funds and the stock, by virtue of the employee authorization, is issued to the em- ployee and his or her spouse as joint tenants, should the stamps be affixed to this authorization; if so, on the whole amount of shares of corg on one-half the amount of shares? “(3) If the shares under the authorization are to be issued In the name of the employee and a person not his spouse, should the stamps be affixed to this authorization; if so, on the whole Hon. Robert S. Calvert Page 3 Opinion No. w-819 amount of shares or on one-half the shares?" The following information is discernible from the prospectus: 1. The Company has reserved 50,000 shares of un- issued Common Stock for sale to employees through this plan. 2. Participation in the plan is through authori- zation by the employee of a stated payroll deduction, to accumulate throughout the option period. 3. The option price is determinable as a percent- age of the over-sne-counter market average; however, should such option price on the exer- cisable date exceed the closing bid price, the Company will purchase for the employee, in lieu of the option exercise, the number of shares which his accumulated deductions will buy. 4. An employeeas rights are non-assignable; how- ever, he may direct that the stock be issued in the names of himself and another as joint tenants. Our opinion is that, where the original stock set aslde Is issued pursuant to the employee's authorization and exercise of option, to the employee and another as joint tenants, there has been no "transfer" within the meaning of the Act and no tax thereon is due. Attorney GeneralIs Opinion No. O-3594 (1941) held that no tax accrues hereunder upon the Issuance by a corpo- ration of original (previously unissued) stock. Opinion No. O-4026 (1941) held that the sale or transfer of certificates for rights to stock by an original subscriber to receive original issue stock, is a taxable incident. Opinion No. O-4029 (1941) extended this holding of taxability to a trans- fer of a right to subscribe to stock even where such right is not evidenced bra "certificate for rights to stock," basing this conclusion primarily upon the wording and construction of the Federal stock transfer tax act, However, this latter opinion was overruled by Opinion No, O-5833 (1944), holding that such rights to subscribe are not taxable under the Texas law, supporting its conclusion with a careful comparison of the wording of the Texas, Federal, and New York Acts, and ju- dicial and administrative constructions of the latter. Hon. Robert 5. Calvert Page 4 Opinion No. m-819 In the present situation, the employee, by author- izing an issue of stock in the name of himself and another as joint tenants, has implicitly transferred to the joint tenant a portion of his exclusive right under the option plan to subscribe to stock. However, an application of the reasoning of Opinion No. o-5833 would declare such a trans- fer non-taxable under the Texas law. Sinee, as pointed out above, it is contemplated that sueh subscriptions will be filled with reserved original Issue stock, no transfer tax will accrue under the State act upon such issue. It should be apparent, however, that, in the event a situation arises as in point 3 above, where the employee receives over-the- counter stock, purchased by the Company, In lieu of the ex- ercise of his option, a transfer tax will accrue. In view of our answer to your first question, it becomes unnecessary to consider herein your questions two and three. SUMMARY Where an employee elects, under a stock purchase plan, of the type submitted, to have original stock issued in the name of himself and another as joint tenants, no tax accrues under the Texas stock transfer tax law (Ch. 16, H.B, 11, 3rd C.S., 56th Leg., Title 122A, R,C.S.) Very truly yours, WILL WILSON Attorney General JRIzbct APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE: W. V, Ceppert, Chairman James M. Farris J. Arthur Sandlin John C. Steinberger Zellner J. Turlington REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY CENERAL: By; Leonard Passmore