76 N.J.L. 54 | N.J. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Middlesex county board of taxation assessed three steamships as taxable in the city of Perth Amboy, a port of entry in which the vessels were registered pursuant to the acts of congress. Upon appeal, the state board of equalization of taxes affirmed the assessment. The vessels were engaged in trade between the ports of Philadelphia and Boston and the West Indies, and they have never been within the city of Perth Amboy or the county of Middlesex or the State of Hew Jersey. The principal office of the corporation owning them is, and always has been, at Plainfield, in the county of Union.
In a similar case we have held that the vessels were taxable in the township, ward or taxing district where the owner resides. Wheaton v. Mickel, 34 Vroom 525. And taxes for personal property cannot be levied on an inhabitant of this state elsewhere than at the place of his residence, unless it appear that the property was visible and was found in the taxing district on the day prescribed by law for commencing the assessment. Shillingsburg v. Ridgway, Collector, 40 Id. 113. The Supreme Court of the United States has recently decided that the place of enrollment of a vessel is irrelevant to the question of taxation, because the power of taxation of vessels depends either upon the actual domicile of the owner or the permanent situs of the property within the taxing jurisdiction. Ayer & Lord Co. v. Kentucky, 202 U. S. 409. Our Tax act enacts that corporations of this state (Pamph. L. 1903, p. 394, § 16) shall be regarded as residents, and inhabitants of the taxing district where their chief office is located. These decisions make it clear that the vessels in question were not taxable in Perth Amboy.
The taxes must therefore be set aside, with costs.