Title: Sinclair Pipe Line v. State Comm. of Revenue & Taxation
Citation: 184 Kan. 713, 339 P.2d 341
Docket Number: 41,323
State: Kansas
Issuer: Kansas Supreme Court
Date: May 16, 1959

184 Kan. 713 (1959)
339 P.2d 341
SINCLAIR PIPE LINE COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant,
v.
STATE COMMISSION OF REVENUE AND TAXATION, ROY N. McCUE, IRA C. WATSON and JOHN L. MacNAIR as Members of and Composing Said Commission; THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY; THE CITY OF INDEPENDENCE, KANSAS; THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY OF INDEPENDENCE OF THE STATE OF KANSAS; Also Known as SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 5 of MONTGOMERY COUNTY, KANSAS; GUY SHERMAN (Substituted Defendant), County Treasurer of Montgomery County, Kansas; and ELDON SLOAN, State Director of Property Valuation (Substituted Defendant), Appellees.
No. 41,323

Supreme Court of Kansas.
Opinion filed May 16, 1959.
Harold Medill and William Gough, Jr., both of Independence, argued the cause, and were on the briefs for the appellant.
John F. O'Brien, of Independence, and Peter F. Caldwell, of Topeka, argued the cause, and John P. Quinlan and Tom Crossan, both of Independence, and Glen Tongier, of Coffeyville, were with them on the briefs for the appellees.
*714 The opinion of the court was delivered by
JACKSON, J.:
This action was begun by the appellant, a Delaware corporation, to recover taxes paid under protest and assessed pursuant to G.S. 1949, 79-701 et seq. upon certain corporate stock owned by appellant. The case was tried to the court, which made extensive findings of fact, and held that the intangible tax under G.S. 1949, 79-3108 et seq. was validly assessed upon appellant's property. Appellant has appealed from that decision.
This is the second appeal in this case. In the former appeal, in Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. State Commission of Revenue &amp; Taxation, 181 Kan. 310, 311 P.2d 342, it was held that the venue of the action was correct; that the state of Kansas was immune from suit and should be dismissed as a party defendant, and that the plaintiff's petition was sufficient as against a demurrer. Any further information concerning the former appeal is readily available in the opinion of the court in the former appeal.
However, before leaving the former appeal one contention of the plaintiff concerning the former decision may be answered. In several places in the present record and briefs, which together amount to some eight hundred pages, plaintiff contends that the former opinion is in some manner determinative of its rights on this appeal, and that the trial court therefore erred in its decision. It would appear that such contention is untenable. A short answer is that the former demurrer admitted the facts alleged in the petition, while the trial court's present decision is based upon the facts shown at the trial of the case. There may be other reasons why plaintiff's contention is not valid, but the foregoing will suffice.
In the caption of this appeal, it will be noted that there have been certain substitutions among the appellees who were defendants below. The reasons therefor are readily apparent, are immaterial to the questions now before the court, and need not be set out. The parties for the sake of brevity will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants.
As already noted, the district court at the close of the trial made extensive findings of fact. These findings are of importance and are set out, or in some instances summarized, in an appendix which follows this opinion.
In a general way, it may be said that the trial court concluded that plaintiff carried on its business from its home office in Kansas and in effect operated pipe lines in three different ways for the *715 transportation of petroleum and petroleum products. Plaintiff has wholly owned pipe lines, pipe lines which it operates in conjunction with other pipe line companies in a rather unusual co-operative manner called undivided interest lines, and also holds stock in corporations which own pipe lines. The other stockholders in these corporations are other oil pipe line companies. It is this stock in the jointly owned pipe line companies which is the basis of the present action. The court found the stock company lines had a definite part in plaintiff's over-all business and had a taxable situs at plaintiff's home office in Kansas.
Based upon these findings the trial court made the following conclusions of law:
"CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
It would seem the ultimate question to be decided upon this appeal is whether the findings of the trial court support the conclusions of law made.
Plaintiff objects at considerable length to many of the findings of the trial court, but when these objections are refined, it seems that at least one of the chief complaints is that defendants were allowed to use the annual reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation, the parent holding company of the plaintiff, made under the signature of the president of the parent company, to cross-examine the executive officers of the plaintiff, and that these reports were admitted as exhibits. The facts about these reports are set forth in Finding 14 (appendix), and see also Findings 12 and 13. It is noted that plaintiff issues no published annual reports to stockholders, all of its stock being held by Sinclair Oil Corporation, but that the parent corporation regularly reports to its stockholders as to the condition of its subsidiaries including plaintiff. It will also be noted in the brief that the only actual objection urged against *716 the use of these exhibits is that it was improper cross-examination. It does not appear in the record that this line of questioning was not proper cross-examination. The trial court did at one point suggest that perhaps defendants wished to make the witness their own. Perhaps, in effect, this was done. At any rate, the exhibits themselves were in the end introduced into evidence without further objection. It would seem the objection of the plaintiff really in its most favorable light comes down to a mere objection as to the order of proof, which is a matter of the discretion of the trial court, see Cunningham v. Cunningham, 178 Kan. 97, at p. 103, 283 P.2d 405, and cases cited. It seems clear that there was no reversible error on the part of the trial court in considering the annual reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation, and in allowing the use of such reports in cross-examination of plaintiff's executives.
Another objection is that the trial court excluded as irrelevant the offer of reports made to the Interstate Commerce Commission and tax returns made by plaintiff for income tax purposes. Plaintiff's brief has failed to show that this exclusion constituted error since none of the reports are shown to have had bearing on the tax situs of the corporate stock involved in this action.
Running through all of plaintiff's objections, we feel it unnecessary to take any other objection up particularly, is a claim that the trial court erred in disregarding the corporate entities of the various corporations involved. It would almost appear that plaintiff is not really disputing any of the facts  all of the facts were shown by the testimony of its own officers and the reports issued as to plaintiff's condition by its parent corporation  plaintiff is only saying the court should have taken a narrower view of the picture. But it can hardly be maintained that the court was actually disregarding the corporate entity of the members of the Sinclair family when it merely took into account their relation to each other in the family (see Findings 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 20).
Returning to the corporate reports, in plaintiff's reply brief is found rather an unusual statement relating to these reports, which included a map (plaintiff's Exhibit "G") showing the wholly owned pipe lines, the "undivided interest lines" and the pipe lines in which plaintiff has an interest through ownership of the stock involved in this action. As to this, the reply brief states:
"Use, not a publicity gimmick, is what counts."
The only actual error in the findings of fact is that by inadvertence the trial court stated in Finding 11, see appendix, that plaintiff had paid without protest the taxes assessed by the state of Kansas on these stocks during the years "1951 to 1954" inclusive. There is no argument about the matter, the year 1951 is perhaps a typographical error, the plaintiff did not own the stocks in 1951 and did not pay taxes thereon for that year. Likewise there is no dispute that plaintiff did pay the taxes for 1952, 1953 and 1954 without making any protest or complaint.
We now return to the conclusions of law made by the trial court which have been set out, supra. As to conclusion No. 1, relating to the fact that plaintiff's commercial domicile is in Independence, Kansas, we fail to find any dissent upon the part of the plaintiff (see Findings 18 and 19). The only objection seems to be that the business and taxable situs of the stocks are not in Kansas  this will be discussed later  and that the only state having jurisdiction to tax the stock would be the state of Delaware, the state of plaintiff's origin.
The theory of a corporation's commercial domicile has not been before this court in prior cases and the concept merits some consideration. The matter of a commercial domicile of a corporation and the power to tax has been considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in several cases. In Wheeling Steel Corp. v. Fox, 298 U.S. 193, 80 L. Ed. 1143, 56 S. Ct. 773, the court in considering a case concerning the taxation of intangible property said in part:
Again in First Bank Corp. v. Minnesota, 301 U.S. 234, 81 L. Ed. 1061, 57 S. Ct. 677, we find a case involving a corporation created in Delaware and having a commercial domicile in Minnesota. The question was the power of Minnesota to tax intangible assets of the corporation. The court said:
In Newark Fire Ins. Co. v. State Board, 307 U.S. 313, 83 L. Ed. 1312, 59 S. Ct. 918, a corporation created by New Jersey law was attempting to avoid a tax upon intangibles by that state by claiming a commercial domicile and business situs of the property in New York. The court found a failure in the proof as to the connection of the corporation with New York. In Memphis Gas Co. v. Beeler, 315 U.S. 649, 86 L. Ed. 1090, 62 S. Ct. 857, the court again considered the case of a foreign corporation having a commercial domicile in Tennessee.
It would seem pertinent to inquire as to the nature of the so called domicile of a corporation in the state of its origin, and also as to the nature of a commercial domicile. The law as to corporations has grown through the years often by the use of various fictions. It will be remembered that for many years it was thought that the legal entity of a corporation could not exist outside of the state of its creation. It would seem that the concept of the domicile of origin of a corporation is an attempt to assign to the corporation a kind of state citizenship or character. The Fourteenth Amendment makes every citizen of the United States a citizen of the state in which he resides. So even a corporation, which is not a citizen, gains certain rights and is subject to the jurisdiction of the state of its origin  of its domicile. The concept of the national character  citizenship of corporations  is much clearer when the question is between independent states or nations. In the Anglo-American law the national character of a corporation is primarily of the nation of its origin, but other tests are often applied. (Hyde, 2 International Law [1945] 902-908.) In European countries, national character of corporations is often placed according to the nation of its home office  the siege social. (Hudson, International Law [1951] 154; Bishop, International Law [1953] 303.)
It should not be forgotten that international law controls the states of the United States in their relations one with another except as modified by the federal constitution. (Kansas v. Colorado, 185 U.S. 125, at p. 146, 46 L. Ed. 838, 22 S. Ct. 552; Connecticut v. Massachusetts, 282 U.S. 660, at p. 670, 75 L. Ed. 602, 51 S. Ct. 286.) In international law, a corporation is undoubtedly entitled to the *720 protection and subject to the jurisdiction of the state or nation of its national character, so as to a corporation having the state character of one of the states of the United States. It is well known that state character is usually taken from the state under whose laws the corporation is created, but where the corporation does absolutely no business in the state of its origin, and has its home office for the direction of its entire business in another state where its officers reside, where its corporate meetings are held  what then? Should not such a corporation be said to be of the character of the last state? Such a situation would seem to call for the application of the doctrine of siege social or of the commercial domicile. Cannot it be found that plaintiff in this case is in fact a Kansas corporation. Perhaps it still retains also some of its Delaware character at least in Delaware. But it is quite common for individuals to possess dual nationality. If the plaintiff possesses the character of a Kansas corporation by having a commercial domicile in the state  the state of siege social, then the doctrine of mobilia sequuntur personam would make the taxable situs of its intangible property in Kansas if that property has no business situs elsewhere.
But in this case now before the court, it is not necessary to rely on the old theory or fiction. It would seem to be an inescapable conclusion that both the business situs and taxable situs of the corporate stock owned by plaintiff are in Kansas.
In an attempt to refute the proposition that the business situs of the stocks in question is in Kansas, plaintiff urges that it is only an investor in securities, and that these stocks have nothing to do with its pipe line business. If this were true, which the findings of the trial court show is not correct, would that mean that the stocks were only taxable in Delaware?
The stocks are kept in Kansas (Finding 29) with the exception of the stock of the Great Lakes Pipe Line Company which was purchased at the time of plaintiff's incorporation from the Sinclair Oil Corporation in accord with an agreement with two national insurance companies under which agreement the insurance companies loaned plaintiff the sum of eighty million dollars. As a part of this agreement it would seem that the Great Lakes stock is kept in New York (Finding 30). The Part Interests department of the home office in Independence manages all the affairs and interests of plaintiff in these stock companies and as to the stock. It will be noticed that plaintiff does have power and authority *721 under its charter of incorporation to act as investor (Finding 1B2) as well as to own and operate pipe lines and other transportation facilities. But if plaintiff is only exercising this "second corporate power" under its charter, where would plaintiff say this business is carried on? Certainly, not in Delaware, where it is admitted plaintiff conducts no business of any kind. The stock is owned, managed and kept at the commercial domicile of plaintiff's entire business at Independence, Kansas. Even then the business situs of plaintiff's investing business must be in Kansas.
But the trial court found more concerning plaintiff's business. In Findings 21 to 32, inclusive, the court analyzes the whole manner of the plaintiff's business and finds that not only is plaintiff acting as an investor, but that it is investing only in stocks of companies which will in fact extend the pipe line system of the plaintiff.
While it will not be necessary to copy the findings referred to supra, it will be noted that in Finding 25, it is shown that the Part Interests department of plaintiff supervises the undivided interest lines, which are admitted by plaintiff to be part of the Sinclair system of pipe lines, and also supervises the plaintiff's interest in the pipe lines jointly owned by plaintiff through stock ownership. It is also the duty of this department to consider and appraise possibilities of participating in additional pipe line facilities either by way of undivided interests lines or jointly owned lines by way of corporate stock ownership. It is further shown that in participating in stock ownership companies of this character and in the formation of new companies of this type, the Part Interests department may and does call upon all of the facilities of the plaintiff company to aid in the formation and even the construction of such pipe lines.
We have not taken the space to set out all of Finding 31 in the appendix as to the details of each of the jointly owned stock companies as set forth by the trial court, but the court concluded the finding as follows:
Of course, plaintiff is represented on the board of directors of all of these jointly owned stock companies (Finding 21, II. I et seq.) with the exception of the Great Lakes Pipe Line Company as to which there is a special arrangement, see supra. Thus, plaintiff participates in the control of the stock companies. Plaintiff argues with much vehemence that plaintiff does not have complete control of the stock companies, but business has been carried on for centuries by joint ownership. Plaintiff does not have complete control of the undivided interest pipe lines, and raises no question concerning that means of doing business.
All in all, this court like the trial court "has some difficulty in perceiving any real practical difference insofar as the issues concerning this law suit are involved between the ownership of stock by plaintiff in another pipe line company and the ownership of an undivided interest in another pipe line system." (Finding 21 IC) Of course, in plaintiff's Exhibit "G" (see Finding 22) Sinclair reported to its stockholders and the public that there was no difference between the two types of ownership, but perhaps this was only a publicity gimmick as said in plaintiff's reply brief.
All of the plaintiff's objections to the findings of fact have been carefully considered and the court is of the opinion there is no material error in the findings. It is also of the opinion that the findings of fact fully support the conclusions of law, and that the decision of the trial court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
"FINDINGS OF FACT.
"1.
"That plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Delaware; that said corporation is qualified to do and transact business in the state of Kansas as a foreign corporation, and that said plaintiff at all times herein pertinent did maintain its principal business office and headquarters in Independence, Kansas. That said plaintiff maintained its commercial domicile at Independence, Kansas.
2.
The Court finds that plaintiff was authorized to do business in Kansas as a foreign corporation on December 15, 1950. That the nature and character of the business of said corporation was "Transportation of petroleum and its products by pipeline in interstate commerce."
FINDINGS 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11.
All of these findings deal with the filing of plaintiff's tax returns before the State Commission of Revenue and Taxation for the year *724 1955 and the assessment of the tax on the property, together with the protest thereof by the plaintiff and need not be set out herein.
"12.
"The Court finds from the evidence that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Sinclair Oil Corporation and that the said Sinclair Oil Corporation is organized under the laws of the State of New York. The Court finds that the Sinclair Oil Corporation bears the relationship of parent corporation to plaintiff, Sinclair Pipe Line Company.
"13.
"The Court further finds from the evidence that in addition to Sinclair Pipe Line Company that the Sinclair Oil Corporation has other wholly owned subsidiaries, some of which are as follows:
"14.
"The Court further finds that Sinclair Pipe Line Company as such publishes no annual report to stockholders and publishes no financial information available to the general public except that Sinclair Pipe Line Company does make a return and file such information as required of it by law with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Court finds from the evidence that the Sinclair Oil Corporation publishes an annual report to the stockholders in booklet form. The Annual Reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation for itself and subsidiaries for the years 1949, 1950, 1951, 1953, 1954, 1955, were marked in the trial of this action as Exhibits. Testimony therefrom was elicited from various witnesses and said Annual *725 Reports were offered in evidence and received. The court finds that each of these reports were signed by P.C. Spencer, President of the Sinclair Oil Corporation by the order of the Board of Directors of Sinclair Oil Corporation.
"15.
"The court finds that in each of these reports the word `Sinclair' is used to describe the parent company Sinclair Oil Corporation and or any of its subsidiaries, individually or collectively.
"16.
"The Court finds that the Sinclair Oil Corporation through its subsidiaries performs the functions and conducts the business of an integrated oil company. By that the Court means that the Sinclair Oil Corporation through subsidiaries, is engaged in all principal functions of the petroleum industry-production, transportation, manufacture and marketing. The Court further finds that in order for Sinclair (and here the Court uses the term Sinclair to mean and include all of the integrated functions of the various Sinclair companies) to operate profitably as a whole, it is necessary that the cost of each separate operation be kept under constant scrutiny and that it is necessary that each operation should stand on its own feet and carry its own burden of expense (1951 Annual Report, Page 3)."
17.
In this finding the Court showed the stock owned by the plaintiff in the various pipe line companies herein involved. The amount of stock in individual companies need not be set out and the companies involved were: Badger Pipe Line, Goodall Pipe Line, Great Lakes Pipe Line, Pawnee Pipe Line, Pioneer Pipe Line, Platte Pipe Line, Texas-New Mexico Pipe Line.
"18.
"The Court finds that Sinclair Pipe Line Company has no property and transacts no business within the State of Delaware in the general meaning of the terms. The Court does find that Sinclair Pipe Line Company has an office in the State of Delaware and maintains such records in the State of Delaware as are necessary to comply with the laws of the State of Delaware for incorporation purposes. The Court specifically finds that the State of Delaware is, so far as the Sinclair Pipe Line Company is concerned, its domicile, *726 a mere legal domicile, in which the corporation carries on none of its activities relating to its business operations.
"19.
"The Court finds that the State of Delaware does not levy any tax upon plaintiff by reason of its ownership of stock in corporations here in question, and that no other state other than the state of Kansas has ever levied any tax upon plaintiff by reason of ownership of said stocks or asserted, or attempted to assert, any right to tax said stocks.
"(A) The Court finds that the commercial domicile of Sinclair Pipe Line Company is located at Independence, Kansas. The Court finds that all of the directors of said Company, with the exception of one director, live in Montgomery County, Kansas, and live either in or in the immediate vicinity of Independence, Kansas. The Court further finds that all of the officers of Sinclair Pipe Line Company live either in Independence, Kansas, or in the immediate vicinity thereof. The Court finds that the principal office of the Sinclair Pipe Line Company is located in a five-story stone and mortar building located in Independence, Kansas. That in the Annual Reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation that Independence, Kansas, is listed as being the headquarters of Sinclair Pipe Line Company. The Court finds that Sinclair Pipe Line Company has approximately 475 employees in Independence, Kansas, and that the general accounting, engineering, legal and other main offices of the Company are located in said building in Independence, Kansas. The Court finds that the seat of the corporate government of Sinclair Pipe Line Company is in Independence, Kansas. The Court finds that the Company does have some other offices at various other locations but that none of the other locations may be considered in the same category as the office in Independence, Kansas.
"(B) The Court finds that the annual meeting of the stockholders of Sinclair Pipe Line Company is held in Independence, Kansas. That at said annual meeting of the stockholders a proxy of Sinclair Oil Corporation is given to various executives of Sinclair Pipe Line Company with instructions from Sinclair Oil Corporation as to the voting of said stock at the annual meeting. The Court finds that directions are given by the executive authority of the parent company to said proxy as to whom to elect as directors for Sinclair Pipe Line Company at said annual meeting. The Court further finds that the annual meeting of the directors is held at Independence, *727 Kansas, and that said directors are instructed by the executive authority of the parent company as to whom to elect as officers for Sinclair Pipe Line Company. The Court finds that customarily all meetings of the Board of Directors are held in Independence, Kansas, with the exception that on occasion meetings of the Board of Directors of Sinclair Pipe Line Company are held at other places, but that the customary and regular meeting place of the Board of Directors of Sinclair Pipe Line Company is at Independence, Kansas. The Court finds that one meeting of the Board of Directors of Sinclair Pipe Line Company was held in New York City, which meeting was held in the meeting room of the Board of Directors of Sinclair Oil Corporation.
"20.
"The Court finds that in order for Sinclair Oil Corporation, through its subsidiaries, to compete in modern business with other major oil companies that it is necessary that Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries have adequate pipe line facilities for the transportation of crude oil and refined products. The Court finds that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company is the vehicle or instrumentality which furnishes such needed pipe line facilities to Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries.
"21.
"The Court finds that the business of Sinclair Pipe Line Company, both from the statements contained in its Articles of Incorporation and in actual practice and effect, is as follows:
The Court further finds that at all times pertinent Sinclair Pipe *728 Line Company has used three types of ownership in order to carry out its business purposes above stated. These are:
"The Court has some difficulty in perceiving any real practical difference insofar as the issues concerning this law suit are involved between the ownership of stock by plaintiff in another pipe line company and the ownership of an undivided interest in another pipe line system. However, since counsel for plaintiff has so consistently *729 and strongly urged the difference between the two types of organization, the Court makes the following findings:
*731 "22.
"The Court has examined with particular care plaintiff's Exhibit `G' which was received in evidence, and which is a map published by plaintiff showing the various pipe line systems owned by plaintiff or in which plaintiff has interest. The Court has also examined the written statement contained on the reverse side of said Exhibit entitled `Sinclair's Pipe Line Systems.'
"The Court finds that said statement is of particular value in understanding the operation of the Sinclair Pipe Line System and its place in the general structure of the Sinclair Oil Corporation and, therefore, makes the following finding of fact, in accordance with said statement therein contained: `Crude Oil at a well head in Texas is of no value to the Sinclair Refinery in East Chicago, and gasoline in Houston is useless to a service station in Kansas City unless some effective method of transportation is employed. Petroleum, to be of value and service, must usually move over great distances before it can be utilized. Because pipe lines offer the lowest cost for overland movement of petroleum, they play a major role in this field. Sinclair has long recognized this fact, and through Sinclair Pipe Line Company (headquarters: Independence, Kansas) makes effective use of one of the largest pipe line systems in the world to transport, as a common carrier, crude oil and petroleum products for both Sinclair and other shippers. Sinclair's wholly owned and operated crude lines extend more than 8,700 miles and serve most of the major producing areas in the country. All of the Sinclair refineries are supplied with crude petroleum by pipe lines excepting the Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, refinery, which is supplied by ocean tanker. These lines assure Sinclair's refineries steady supplies of the proper crude oils needed to make high grade Sinclair products. They operate `round the clock, untroubled by many of the conditions which frequently hamper other methods of overland transportation. Sinclair's approximately 3,000 miles of wholly owned products pipe lines comprise the most extensive single products pipe line system in the whole world, and carry gasolines, heating oils, diesel oils, kerosene and various other refined products for Sinclair and other shippers into the most populous markets. They provide the lowest cost of transportation available in the areas served, an essential requirement in the highly competitive oil industry, where costs and prices must be figured to fractions of a cent. The magnitude of this wholly *732 owned crude and products pipe line system, which reaches from the Gulf of Mexico into the State of New Jersey, and a separate system serving the state of Wyoming is indicated by its annual delivery of approximately 135 million barrels of crude oil and 40 million barrels of refined petroleum products. Approximately 48 million people live within a 50 mile radius of Sinclair's wholly owned products lines, and over 82 million people  or more than half the population of the entire United States  live within the same 50 mile radius of Sinclair's wholly owned, jointly owned and connecting carrier lines. To supplement its wholly owned crude and products pipe lines, Sinclair is rapidly expanding its interests in pipe lines jointly owned and operated with other companies. These joint interest pipe lines, both crude and products, have now reached a total of approximately 10,000 miles.'
"24.
"To understand the integration of the Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries and the place of the Sinclair Pipe Line Company in this integrated operation, the Court makes the following findings:
"25.
"The Court finds that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company maintains at Independence, Kansas, a department which is known as the part interests department. In 1955, Mr. Earl W. Unruh, who is now president of The Sinclair Pipe Line Company, bore the title of part interests executive and was in charge of that department. The Court finds that it is the function of the part interests department to look after and supervise the interests of Sinclair Pipe Line Company in the undivided interests lines and also the interests of Sinclair Pipe Line Company in the stock ownership companies.
"In addition to such function it is the function of this department to serve and appraise the possibility or feasibility of Sinclair Pipe Line Company participating in other and additional pipe line facilities. That it is the function of this department to appraise and consider participation in further undivided interest lines as well as further participation in stock ownership lines.
"The Court finds that when the said part interest department is considering participation in other such lines that it has available and may call on and does call upon all the facilities of the Sinclair Pipe Line Company, including any of its departments whose services may be necessary or desirable such as the engineering department, accounting department and legal department for advice and assistance in its consideration of such participation in such other lines.
"26.
"The Court finds that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company through its part interest department has never considered, nor is it now considering, participation in any additional pipe line facilities which have not or would not directly or indirectly serve some wholly owned subsidiary of the Sinclair Oil Corporation.
"27.
"The Court finds that prior to the formation of the Sinclair Pipe Line Company that Sinclair Refining Company Pipe Line Division performed the functions of supplying pipe line transportation for Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries now performed by Sinclair Pipe Line Company. The Court finds that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company was organized to own and operate the pipe line *734 properties previously operated as a department of the Sinclair Refining Company. The Court finds that most of the pipe line facilities of Sinclair Refining Company were transferred to Sinclair Pipe Line Company after its organization. The Court finds that this step was taken for the purpose of obtaining increased operating efficiency and to enable Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries better to supply the increasing demands of refineries for raw material and to more efficiently accomplish distribution of products (1950 Annual Report).
"28.
"The Court finds that Sinclair Pipe Line Company was organized for profit and that any profit made by the Sinclair Pipe Line Company enures solely and only for the benefit of its only stockholder, Sinclair Oil Corporation. The Court finds that since its organization in 1951 that it has been the custom and practice of the Sinclair Pipe Line Company to keep all dividends received by it resulting from ownership of stock in the various stock companies in a segregated account and when a dividend is paid by Sinclair Pipe Line Company to Sinclair Oil Corporation to specifically designate which part of the dividend is paid with funds resulting from dividends received from other companies and which part is paid out of operating revenues. The Court, however, attaches no particular significance to the segregation of such dividends since from the evidence the Court finds that the dividends paid to the parent company representing receipt of dividends resulting from stock ownership formed a significant part of the total dividends paid. The Court finds that on December 14, 1954, a dividend of three million dollars was declared by Sinclair Pipe Line Company. Of this amount $1,251,652.00 was designated as coming from dividends received and the sum of $1,748,348.00 was designated as coming from current earnings from operations. The Court finds that of said dividend of $3,000,000.00 that 42% of said dividend resulted from ownership by Sinclair Pipe Line Company of the various stocks here involved, and that the use of these dividends resulting from stock ownership as part of the dividend paid to the parent company released exactly that additional amount of earnings from operations by it for use in its business operations. The Court also finds from testimony of Mr. J.H. Amend, auditor of the company, that it made no practical difference whether such dividend of $3,000,000.00 was declared from earnings or from earnings and dividends received. The Court also specifically *735 finds that said policy of segregating dividends received from stock ownership was in effect during the years 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, in which years the Sinclair Pipe Line Company paid the intangible tax levied upon its ownership of said stock without protest.
"29.
"The Court further finds from the evidence that the actual certificates evidencing the ownership of Sinclair Pipe Line Company of the various shares of stocks in the companies here involved are all located in a safety deposit vault owned by Sinclair Pipe Line Company in Independence, Kansas, with the exception of the certificate or certificates, evidencing the ownership of stock in Great Lakes Pipe Line Company, which certificate is located in a safety deposit box in New York City.
"30.
"The Court further finds that the Sinclair Pipe Line Company was commenced, or that the business of the Company was started with a paid capital of $100,000.00. The Court further finds that under certain debenture purchase and debenture agreements executed between plaintiff and the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States and Metropolitan Insurance Company, that Sinclair Pipe Line Company borrowed the sum of $80,000,000.00. That among other requirements contained in said debenture purchase agreements and in said debenture agreement it was required of plaintiff that plaintiff should have acquired from Sinclair Refining Company shares of stock in the Great Lakes Pipe Line Company which plaintiff now owns, and also that it should have acquired from Sinclair Oil Corporation the stock of the Texas-New Mexico Pipe Line Company which it now owns, and that it should have acquired from Sinclair Oil Corporation the shares of stock in Platte Pipe Line Company which it now owns, with the exception of 750 shares of stock of the Platte Pipe Line Company subsequently acquired. That said debenture agreement further required that Sinclair Pipe Line Company should assume the obligation of Sinclair Oil Corporation to loan to Platte Pipe Line Company the sum of $540,000.00. The Court further finds that said Sinclair Pipe Line Company subsequently did loan to Platte Pipe Line Company the sum of $540,000.00. The Court further finds that the said Annual Report of the Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries is the only general report made available to the public of the operations and *736 financial status of the Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiary companies other than such information as is required by law to be filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Court finds that said Annual Reports contain a consolidated balance sheet showing all of the assets of the subsidiaries of Sinclair Oil Corporation as well as consolidated statement of liabilities and earnings. The Court finds that said consolidated balance sheet shows the value of the stocks in question owned by the Sinclair Pipe Line Company as being a part of the consolidated assets of Sinclair Oil Corporation and its subsidiaries. Likewise, the Court finds that the liabilities of Sinclair Pipe Line Company such as the 25 year 3 3/8% sinking fund debentures referred to in the previous findings are shown as a liability in the consolidated balance sheet. Likewise, the Court finds that the dividends received by Sinclair Pipe Line Company from the stocks in question are reflected in the consolidated earnings statement. For example, the Court finds that in 1955 the consolidated income statement showed that in 1955 Sinclair Oil Corporation had a net income of $6.01 per share. The Court finds that the dividends received by Sinclair Pipe Line Company and paid to Sinclair Oil Corporation were reflected in and showed as a part of the said figure of $6.01 per share reported in the Consolidated Income Statement of Sinclair Oil Corporation."
NOTE: In Finding No. 31, the court found the specific facts concerning all of the companies in which the plaintiff owned stock and their connections to the plaintiff's business. Finding No. 32 concerns the dividends received from the stock owned by the plaintiff.