State v. Comptroller of New Jersey

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, J.

The object of the act drawn in question in this case was to impose on each corporation affected thereby an annual tax “by way of a license for its corporate franchise.” Upon gas companies such annual tax is to be imposed by a percentage calculated upon two factors, viz., (1) gross receipts within a specified period, and (2) “ dividends earned or declared” during the same period.

I'he case presents two questions—

I. How are these factors to be ascertained for calculation of the percentage ?

By. section 2 of the act, statements thereof are required to be made by officers of the company, and it is expressly prescribed that any officer making a false statement shall be deemed guilty of perjury.

By section 3 it is further provided that if any company neglects or refuses to make such statement, the state board of assessors shall ascertain and fix the amount of “ such receipts ” in such manner as may be deemed by them most practicáble. No power, in terms, is given to ascertain and fix the amount of dividends. Applying ordinary rules for the construction of statutes, the power so granted applies to those receipts before mentioned — that is, gross receipts — and the express grant of that power excludes the implication of any other power.

In my judgment, the state board of assessors had no authority to ascertain and fix the amount of dividends on which prosecutor should be taxed. If the legislature, as is argued, intended to grant such power, they have not expressed *137-their intent, and a casus omissus of such kind can only be ■cured by further legislative action.

But it is further argued that, if the tax was, in fact, rightly •assessed, it should not be set aside merely because the factor ■on which it was calculated was irregularly ascertained.

II. If that be so, another question is raised as to the true ■meaning of the phrase, “dividends earned or declared.”

On the part of the state it is contended that the phrase is intended to include all the receipts of the company in excess of its expenses — that is, all that could have been, although they have not been, divided.

But such a construction gives no force to the word “dividend,” which, as applied to incorporated companies, means that amount which is set aside and designated by the managers >of the company from its property, to be divided among its members.

Had the intent been to tax the excess of receipts over expenses, the word “ dividend ” would not have been used, for it is only in exceptional cases that all of such excess can be or is ■divided.

The phrase “dividends earned or declared” contains no ■single word of doubtful meaning, and a construction, according to the plain meaning of the words, would confine the phrase to dividends declared, although not earned, during the prescribed period.

But the collocation of words in this phrase may perhaps justify an inference that the legislature intended a broader meaning.

As before stated, it is only in exceptional cases that all the profits which have accrued to an incorporated company may prudently be divided. At the discretion of the managers, sinking funds to meet debts falling due in the future, and funds to meet possible accidents or contingencies, may be established and portions of profits may be applied thereto. So moneys from such profits may well be expended in improving the plant and so providing for the extension of the business of the company or its being done in better and more profit*138able modes. How much should be thus used must be determined by the managers. The remainder, if any, may be-divided.

But if the legislature intended by this act to reach such-dividends as ought to have been made, the tax objected to in this case cannot stand ; for, by the agreed on case, the amount, ascertained and fixed as a dividend earned, though not declared, was all expended in the betterment of the plant of prosecutor. We must assume, in the absence of proof to the-contrary, this was done in the exercise of the discretion of its managers and not for the purpose of evading the tax.

That the application of this amount to betterments may increase the value of the stock of the company does not, in my judgment, alter this result. To such an increase the word “dividend” cannot be applied without violence to its settled meaning. The legislative intent clearly was not to tax by any increase of value of stock, but by those profits which either have been divided or, to give the widest possible significance-to the language, those which ought to have been divided.

It is, therefore, unnecessary to determine more particularly the extent of meaning of the phrase “dividends earned or declared;” for, upon the widest meaning possible, the amount of earnings of prosecutor devoted to betterments ought not to-have been included in the factor on which the calculation of' its tax was made.

To that extent the tax must be set aside.