Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1963 )


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  • Honorable Ii.J. Blanchard            OpiniOn     NO.   C-   46
    Chairman, Sub-committeeon
    Senate Bill 212                    Re:       Constitutionalityof
    The Senate of The State of Texas               Senate Bill No. 212
    Austin, Texas
    Dear Sir:
    This is In answer to your request for an opinion as
    to whether or not Senate Bill No. 212 of the 58th Legislature
    is contrary to the constitutionalprovisions of Article VIII,
    Section 2, of the Texas Constitution.
    The pertinent part of S.B. 212 reads as follows:
    "Article 12.03. Corporationsexempt.
    The franchise tax Imposed by this Chapter
    shall not apply to any insurance company,
    surety, guaranty or fidelity company,
    transportationcompany or sleeping,
    palace car and dining car company now
    required to pay an annual tax measured
    by their gross receipts, or to any corpora-
    tion organized as a railway terminal corpo-
    ration and having no annual net income from
    the business done by It, or to corporations
    having no capital stock and organized for
    the exclusive purpose of promoting the
    public interest of any county, city, or
    town, or other area wlthln the State or
    to corporationsorganized for the purpose
    of religious worship or for providing
    places of burial not for private profit,
    or to corporationsorganized for the pur-
    pose of holding agriculturalfairs and
    encouragingagriculturalpursuits, or
    for strictly educationalpurposes, or
    for purely public charity, or to State-
    chartered building and loan associations;
    or to any mutual Investment company
    registeredunder the Federal Investment
    Company Act of 1940, as from time to
    time amended, which holds stocks, bonds
    -204-
    Honorable H. J. Blanchard, Page 2 (No. C-46)
    or other securitiesof other companies
    solely for mutual Investmentpurposes
    for nonprofit corporationshaving no
    capital stock organized for the purpose
    of the education of the public in the
    protection and conservationof fish,
    game and other wildlife, grass lands
    and forests, or for nonprofit corpora-
    tions having no capital stock organized
    for the purpose of providing or operating
    recreationalfacilities."
    This bill with a few amendments reads the same as Acts
    1907, 30th leg., 1st C.S., p. 503. The bill Is Identical with
    Article 12.03, Title 122A, Taxation-@eneral,Vernon's Civil
    Statutes,with the exception that the last clause of Article
    12.03 as amended by Acts 1961, 57th Leg., p. 41, ch. 27, Sec. 1,
    which reads as follows:
    11
    . . . or to nonprofit water supply
    or sewer service corporationsorganized
    on behalf of cities or towns pursuant to
    Acts of 1933, 43rd Legislature,1st Called
    Session, Chapter 76, as amended.",
    was deleted and the following clause was added:
    11
    . . . or for nonprofit corporations
    having no capital stock organized for
    the purpose of providing or operating
    recreationalfacilities."
    Section 1 of Article VIII of the Texas Constitution
    authorizes the Legislatureto impose occupation taxes, both
    upon natural persons and upon corporationsother than municipal.
    Section 2 of Article VIII of the Constitutionprovides:
    "All occupation taxes shall be equal
    and uniform upon the same class of sub-
    jects within the limits of the authority
    levying the tax; . . .'
    36 Tex.Jur.2d 627, Licenses, Sec. 34 makes this state-
    ment:
    I,
    . . . Moreover, any tax levied on a
    corporationfor exercising the privilege
    of carrying on Its business must be classed
    as an occupation tax. . . .'
    40 Tex.Jur. 82, Taxation, Sec. 53 provides:
    I,
    . . . The occupationtax laws Include
    -205-
    Honorable H. J. Blanchard, Page 3 (No. C-46)
    a tax of one per cent. of the products of
    . . . a corporate franchise tax, . ~ el'
    Both of these Texas Jurisprudeneequotations cite as
    authority the case of State v. Galveston, H, &,S. A. Ry. Co.,
    
    100 Tex. 153
    , 
    97 S.W. 71
    (1906) The Supreme Court in this
    case had before It the constructionof an act of the 29th
    Legislature,&an. maws 1905, pe 336, c. 141, the caption of
    which reads as follows:
    "An act imposing a tax upon railroad
    corporations,the receivers thereof,
    and other persons, firms, and associa-
    tions of persons, owning, operatfng,
    managing or controllingany line of
    railroad fn this state, for the trans-
    portation of passengers, freight, and
    baggage or either, equal to one per
    cent. of their gross receipts, and
    providing for the collectionand pay-
    ment thereof, and repealing the existing
    tax on the gross passenger earnings of
    railroads."
    The Court in its opinion had the following to say:
    t,
    . * D Since a corporationcan carry
    on no business except that for which it
    holds a franchise from the state> it
    follows that any tax levied upon a
    corporationin this state for exer-
    cising the privilege of carrying on
    its business must be classed as an
    occupation tax under OUP Constftutfon,
    0 . DII
    The United States Supreme Court, 
    210 U.S. 217
    , reversed
    the decision of the Texas Supreme Court, but only on the grounds
    that it was a burden on interstate commerce and did not change
    the ruling as to the constructionof franchise tax being an
    occupation tax. Texas Jurisprudence,Taxation, Section 
    40, supra
    , also cites the case of State v. Texas 8eP. Py Co.,
    
    100 Tex. 279
    , 
    98 S.W. 834
    (3.907). In this case the Supreme
    Court cited the Galveston 
    case, supra
    , as authority in con-
    struing the same tax statute.
    The Court in the case of Millers" Mut. Fire Ins. Co.
    v. City of Austin, 
    210 S.W. 825
    (Tex.@iv.App.1919, no writ
    history), cltefihe Galveston 
    case, supra
    , as authority for
    their holding, In which they had the following to say:
    "The tax provided for in the law of
    1903 is undoubtedly a tax allowing mutual
    insurance companfes to pursue their business
    -206-
    Honorable Ii.J. Blanchard, Page 4 (No. C-46)
    in Texas, an occupationtax, and it is
    not an ad valorem tax on property."
    The statute under constructionin the Millers' Mutual
    
    case, supra
    , reads as follows:
    "Each and every mutual Insurance com-
    pany operating under this act shall pay
    to the Insurance commissionerannually
    on the 31st day of December, one-half
    of one per cent. of all the gross pre-
    miums received during the year, and no
    other tax shall be required of such
    mutual insurance companies, their
    officers and agents, except such fees
    shall be paid to the commissionerof
    insurance as Is required by law."
    All of the tax statutes referred to in these three
    cases cited above are gross receipts taxes or a tax based on
    the amount of business done by the different corporationsand
    are not franchise taxes within the meaning of the franchise
    tax as used in Senate Bill 
    212, supra
    , here under considera-
    tion. A corporate franchise tax Is a tax on the privilege of
    doing business and Is due whether or not the corporationdoes
    any business and is not a tax based on the amount of business
    done by the corporation.
    Although the Courts made the statement In the decisions
    above cited that the franchise tax is an occupationtax, In
    reality, there was no franchise tax Involved In such cases and
    the statementsof the Courts amounted to dictum and should not
    be regarded as controllingthe question before us at this time.
    The franchise tax Is not an occupationtax within the
    meaning of Article VIII, Sections 1 and 2 of the Texas Consti-
    tution, as construed by Attorney Qeneral's Opinion No. V-1027
    dated April 3, 1950, a copy of which Is enclosed herewith, and
    as interpretedfor many years by the LegislatureIn allocating
    the funds derived from franchise taxes. The Legislaturehas
    consistentlyallocated the franchise tax to the General Revenue
    Fund. If It is an occupationtax, one-fourth of such revenue
    under the Constitutionwould have to be placed In the Available
    School Fund. Section 3, Article VII, Constitutionof Texas.
    Moreover, the Secretary of State, the Comptrollerof Public
    Accounts, the State Treasurer and the Attorney General for a
    long period of years have uniformly and consistentlycon-
    strued the franchise tax as not being an occupationtax.
    The Supreme Court of Texas in speaking of departmental
    constructionhas stated:
    -207-
    Honorable H. J.,Blanchard,Page 5 (No. C-46)
    "This long-continuedadministrative
    constructionis entitled to great weight,
    especially In view of the fact that the
    statute was amended as late as 1943 and
    the Legislature,whfch is presumed to
    have been aware of the interpretation,
    made no changes fn the language that
    would indicate a contrary intent."
    Burroughs v. Lyles, 181 s.w.2a 570
    ‘(1944).
    The franchise tax is not a property tax within the
    terms of Section 2 of Article VIII of the Texas Constitution,
    but is an excise tax levfed on the privilege for the corpora-
    tlon to do business in Texas.
    . of the opinion that since franchise
    We are                            .    .   taxes
    . .are
    not occupation taxes nor property taxes, tnen the provlslons
    of Section 2 of Article VIII do not apply to this law.
    Since this bill classifiesdifferent types of corpora-
    tions, the question arises as to whether or not it 1s contrary
    to other provisions of the Constitutionsuch as due process or
    equal protection of the laws.
    There are many Texas cases fn which the courts have
    held that the Legislaturehas authority to classify different
    types of business for purpose of taxation so long as the legls-
    lation is not discrfminatorynor arbitrary as between the same
    or like classes of business.
    In the case of Hurt v. Cooper, 
    130 Tex. 433
    , 
    110 S.W.2d 896
    , 901 (1937), the Court In speaking of a greater tax per
    store on chain stores than on individual stores pointed out:
    quantity buying, ability to pay cash and receive discounts,
    skill In buying, warehousing,and distributionfrom single
    warehouses, capital, unified advertfsing9 superior management,
    standard form of display, concentrationof management in spe-
    cial lines, and standardization. These distinctive features
    were held to beginterrelatedand interdependentin the chain
    store business.
    In the opinion in Hurt v, 
    Cooper, supra
    , the Court
    said at page 900:
    "That is a definite holding that mer-
    chants may be divfded into classes and
    the classes taxed in different amounts
    and according to different standards;
    that the aonsfderatfonsupon which such
    Honorable H. 3. Blanchard, Page 6 (NO. C-46)
    classlflcationsare based are primarily
    within the discretion of the Legislature;
    and that courts can interfere only when
    it Is made clearly to appear that there
    is no reasonable basis for the attempted
    classlflcatlon. If there is a reasonable
    basis or, to express It differently,If
    it cannot be said that the Legislature
    acted arbitrarily,the courts will not
    Interfere. Mere differences In methods
    of conducting businesses have long been
    recognized in this state as sufficient
    to support the classificationof mer-
    chants for the purpose of levying occu-
    pation taxes. For instance, our sta-
    tutes (see article 7047, as amended
    Vernon's Ann. Clv. St. art. 70471)
    fevy occupationtaxes on Itinerant mer-
    chants and peddlers. The difference
    between their occupationsand that of
    an ordinary merchant Is not great, but
    It would hardly be contended at this
    time that It is not sufficientto sup-
    port a separate classification."
    Mfference in profits derived, In extent of consump-
    tion of articles, and other conditions that might be.supposed,
    can properly be taken into considerationby the Legislaturein
    making classificationsand In determiningamount of occupation
    taxes to be laid on each.
    The mere fact that discriminationIs made in classi-
    fications for occupation taxes proves nothing against classl-
    fication which is not on Its face an arbitrary, unreasonable
    or unreal one.
    The Court in rendering Its opinion in Texas Co. v.
    loo wx. 628, 103 s.w. 481, 484 (lgO7), In which
    an o jection was made that a statute discriminatesbetween
    =%-
    persons pursuing occupationswhich belong to the same claea,
    said:
    . . The very language of the Consti-
    t&ion of the state Implies power In
    the Legislatureto classify the sub-
    jects of occupation taxes and only
    requires that the tax shall be equal
    and uniform upon the same class. Per-
    sons who, in the most general senae,
    may be regarded as pursuing the same
    -209-
    Honorable H. J.~‘Blanchard,
    Page 7 (No. c-46)
    occupation,8.9,'for Instance, merchants,
    may thus be divided Into classes, and
    the classes may be taxed in different
    amounts and according to different
    standards. Merchants may be divided
    Into .wholesalersand retailers, and,
    If there be reasonable grounds, these
    may be further divided according to
    the particular classes of business in
    which they may engage. The considera-
    tions upon which such classifications
    shall be based are primarily within the
    discretion of the Legislature. The
    courts, under the provisions relied on,
    can only interfere when it Is made clearly
    to appear that an attempted classification
    has no reasonable basis in the nature of
    the businesses classified,and that the
    law operates unequally upon subjects
    between whlch'there is no real difference
    to justify the separate treatment of them
    undertaken by the Legislature. . 0 .'
    In Rx Parte IZay,76 S.W.2d 1.060,Tex.Crlm. (1934),
    ADDellant was convicted on comolalnt of not having license
    for coin-operatedhandkerchle'f-vending machines. -He claimed
    that Article 7047A-1 was violative of Article VIII, Section 2,
    In that it was not equal and uniform because pay toilets and
    drinking cup vending machines were exempted. He also com-
    plained because the tax on marble machines was greater than,
    and measured bx different standard than "other similar amuse-
    ment machines. Relief was denied.
    We quote from page 1064:
    . . . businesses of the same general
    class may be properly subdividedor
    reclassifiedwhere reason exists
    therefor. Particularattention Is
    called to this because there are
    commoditiesand commodities,amuse-
    ments and amusements, services and
    services;and, if reason exists there-
    for, the Legislaturemay subdivide or
    reclassify commodity vending machines,
    service vending machines, and amusement
    vending machines. In Quong Wing v.
    Klrkendall,223 U.S. 59, It Is laid
    down that a state enactment may make
    dlscrlminatlons,if founded on dlstlnc-
    tions not unreasonableor purely arbl-
    trary."
    -210..
    Honorable H. J. Blanchard, Page 8 (No. C-46)
    That the Courts have nothing to do with the policy,
    wisdom, expediency or propriety of legislativeenactments Is
    almost a maxim. Ollre v. State, 
    123 S.W. 1116
    (Tex.Crlm.
    19091.
    We are of the opinion that In compliancewith the rule
    laid down In the above cases, the Legislaturehas authority to
    classify the various types of corporationsfor franchise tax
    exemptions as provided In S.B. 212 and that It Is not In con-
    flict with Section 2 of Article VIII of the Texas Constitution.
    We are further of the opinion that since the classificationis
    a reasonable one and cannot be said to be discriminatorynor
    arbitrary, It is not In conflict with any other provisions of
    the State Constitution.
    SUMMARY
    Senate Bill No. 212, 9th Legislature,
    does not violate the provisions of Article VIII,
    Section 2, or other provisions of the Texas Con-
    stitutlon.
    Yours very truly,
    WAGGONER CARR
    Attorney General of Texas
    H. Broadhurst
    JHB:pw
    Enclosure
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    W. V. Qeppert, Chairman
    W. 0. Shultz
    Bill Allen
    Arthur Sandlln
    APPROVED FORTHEATTORNEY QENERAL
    By: Stanton Stone
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