3. Corporations.—

Corporations organized under state laws may be the owners of American vessels. A corporation is a legal person having an individuality distinct from all its stockholders. It is the corporation, and not the stockholders, who owns the corporation property. For that reason the Attorney General has expressed the opinion (29 Op. 188) in a case in which a vessel was owned by a corporation of the State of New York, a majority of whose stock was held by aliens and whose directors were all aliens, except three, that, under the laws, so long as the corporation was legally organized and existing as an American corporation under the laws of New York, a vessel owned by it was entitled to American registry.

It is unlawful, without obtaining permission of the Shipping Board, to place under foreign registry, a vessel owned wholly or in part by an American corporation or to transfer such vessel to any person other than a citizen (Merchant Marine Act, 1920. See Appendix), and within the meaning of that act no corporation is deemed a citizen unless the stock control and management are vested in individual Americans. To enable a corporate-owned vessel to engage in the coasting trade, 75 per cent of the interest in the corporation must be American owned.