Are the three corporate defendants “owned and controlled . . . directly or indirectly by the same interests” witbin the meaning of section 19 (f), (4) of the N. C. Unemployment Compensation Act (chapter 1, Public Laws, Ex. Session, 1936) ? We think they are. As this question is answered in the affirmative, it becomes unnecessary to pass upon the incidental question as to the status of nonsalaried, corporate officers as “employees” of said corporation.
The agreed statement of facts presents a clear picture of three affiliated corporate enterprises, whose stock is closely held in a family corporation. The corporations are directed from a central office and are operated under a single, central management. All the stockholders (with a single exception as to the ownership of ten shares of stock in one of the corporations) are members of the same family, and the same individuals are the officers and directors of each corporate defendant. Not only does the instant case present the familiar picture of interlocking directorates so frequently evident where allied commercial interests seek to bring several related enterprises within the scope of a common, central control, but the mutuality of interest is further accentuated by the fact that the number of stockholders in each enterprise is small and the same names recur, with substantial identity, in each of the three lists of stockholders. The case presents a typical example of a particular pattern of inter-related corporate organization made subject to contribution in the interest of the alleviation of unemployment. The section of the act under consideration is clear in its intent to bring within the meaning of the act those separate corporate enterprises which have voluntarily waived the benefits of their separate identities by surrendering their control to a common management. The General Assembly has declared that if the separate enterprises are “controlled . . . directly or indirectly by the same interests,” the fiction of corporate identity is to be ignored in the face of a reality to the contrary and the affiliated enterprises are to be taxed as a single, employing unit. Here the direct, the intermediate, and the ultimate control of the individual enterprises is that of the “same interests”: The corporations have a common secretary-treasurer and general manager; they have common officers and directors; and their lists of stockholders are substantially identical. At all times the clear and undisputed “control” of each of the corporate defendants is vested in the same, small, family group of individuals.
That the General Assembly has the power to determine the scope of the act and to lay down definitions and tests to be applied in administering it, has already been determined. Unemployment Compensation Com. v. Ins. Co., 215 N. C., 479. The function of this Court is but to determine the legislative intent and, having done so, to apply to the *9particular case the yardstick devised by the General Assembly. United States v. Goldenburg, 168 U. S., 85, 103; Supply Co. v. Maxwell, 212 N. C., 624 (627); Belk Bros. v. Maxwell, 215 N. C., 10 (13), (certiorari denied by Supreme Court of United States 5 June, 1939). The test of taxability of related enterprises under this act is whether the individual enterprises are “controlled” by the “same interests.” These are words in common use normally conveying rather distinct and definite thought content. As such they are to be given their plain, natural and commonly understood meanings. Manning v. R. R., 188 N. C., 648 (659); Abernathy v. Comrs., 169 N. C., 631 (635). Corporate control normally is directed by the board of directors but the ultimate control is vested in the stockholders. Anderson, Limitations of Corporate Entity, sec. 326; Vartanian, Law of Corporations in North Carolina, sec. 236. Hence, control of a corporation is ordinarily held by that individual or group of individuals having the voting rights of a majority of the stock of the corporation. Commonwealth v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 149 Ky., 829, 150 S. W., 37. Accordingly, when that individual or group having such control of a corporation likewise has similar control of one or more affiliated and related corporations (as in the instant case), these corporations — using the plain', natural and ordinarily accepted meanings of the words — are said to be “controlled by the same interests.” When the inter-relationship existing between or among two or more business enterprises is such that a substantial unification of those enterprises emanating from a common source or fountain-head, the General Assembly has declared that, since the separate identity of the enterprises has in large measure been swallowed up in such unification, these affiliated enterprises are to be taxed under this act not as separate units but as a single, employing unit.
The view here presented is supported by, and is in keeping with, the general intent of the Unemployment Compensation Act. It regards corporate organization objectively and realistically, unencumbered by fictions of corporate identity, and thus, brushing aside form, deals with substance. 1 Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations, Eerm. Ed., sec. 45. It tends to aid a more effective administration of the act in that the number of smaller units from which contributions are to be made will be reduced, while the benefits to be derived from the unemployment insurance will be extended to a larger number of individuals. See Unemployment Compensation Com. v. Ins. Co., supra.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.