The opinion of the court was delivered by
Scudder, J.The plaintiff corporation was assessed' m 1887, 1888 and 1889, respectively, under the general clause-of section 4 of the act of April 18th, 1884 (Rev. Sup., p. 1016), a yearly license fee or tax of one-tenth of one per centum on the amount of the capital stock.
The tax was fixed for the first year, 1887, from the amount-of the authorized capital stock of the company, shown by the certificate of organization to be $250,000, at $250. No-return was made, and the tax was rated -by the state board of assessors.
*565Returns were made in 1888 and 1889, and from these ■returns of capital stock issued the taxes were assessed at 4634.10 and $646.67, o-n an increased amount of capital stock authorized by law.
An exemption from this taxation is claimed under the proviso of section 4 of the net of 1884, which excepts from its operation “ manufacturing companies or mining companies ■carrying on business .in this state.” To determine whether the company is within .the exception, reference must be had to its actual business, for the business in which the capital of a ■corporation is invested, .and not the objects for which the company was formed, as expressed in its certificate of incorporation, must be regarded. Evening Journal Association v. State Board of Assessors, 18 Vroom 36; Press Printing Co. v. State Board of Assessors, 22 Id. 75. According to the testimony, the business of the company, for which it was incorporated and in which it is actually engaged, is boat, yacht and ship building, of a peculiar construction, with a double bottom to prevent sinking by collision, and made under letters patent. It is, therefore, clearly a manufacturing company.
But it is further required that it shall be carrying on business in this state. The company was chartered in the summer of 1886. It commenced immediately by organizing and ■securing a sufficient number of shareholders, and by looking for a place for its location and buildings. In the spring of 1888 the company employed one Desmond, who rented a lot ■of land and building of the Hoboken Land Improvement Company, at Castle Point, to build vessels for them, and in the same spring, 1888, hired a property at Tottenville, on Staten Island, where they altered vessels. Certain work was also •done in Perth Amboy. Francis L. Norton, the president and general manager of the company, in answer to the question ■whether, when they went to Hoboken or Tottenville, it was •to locate 'there permanently or otherwise, said “ the sole idea was to have a place to do certain work until we found a place tin New Jersey,” and further said “ that they were looking *566along the Jersey City, the Hoboken and the Perth Amboy front.”
By lease, dated July 25th, 1889, the company rented a building and lot of land in Perth Amboy, for the term of five years from the 1st day of August then next, with the-privilege of purchase, and have actually occupied and used it as a place for manufacturing boats since that time.
Under this evidence the corporation was not a manufactur-' ing company carrying on business in this state, until it had actually located its business and begun its work Avithin the state, at Perth Amboy, and this time is fixed by the date of the lease, when the occupation of the premises and the'business under the charter Avas begun in NeAV Jersey. All that had preceded Avas temporary, preparatory, and, in part, out of the state. There Avas no plant oAvned or controlled by the company for the purpose of manufacturing Avithin the state.
The tax for the year 1889 should be remitted, but the taxes for 1887 and 1888 Avill be affirmed.