71 Md. 405 | Md. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee-sued the appellant in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, and the case was removed to Baltimore County for trial. The declaration sets up a claim for park tax from February 1st, 1885, to March 15th, 1881.
The appellant was incorporated under the G-eneral Railway Law of the State, and was, by ordinance No. 150 of the ordinances of the City of Baltimore of 1880, (Rev. City Code of 1885, page 323,) authorized to construct certain street passenger railways in the streets of the city, subject to certain conditions, as follows, to wit: “to pay to the City Register for the use of the parit fund, quarterly, twelve per centum of the gross receipts accruing from passenger travel within the city limits; and for each car in daily use upon said railways a license tax of five dollars shall be paid yearly to the City Comptroller. ”
By the Act of 1882, chapter 229, the Legislature assumed control of the whole matter, fixed the fare at five cents for aclults, and three cents for children, and reduced the park tax from twelve to nine per centum of the gross receipts. ■
The appellant had three railway lines, viz: The Huntingdon avenue line, Columbia avenue line, and the Pratt Street line. The two last named were wholly within the city limits; but the first extended beyond the city limits for the distance of one-half mile; and this fact has given rise to this controversy. For this half mile of track, beyond the city limits, of the Huntingdon
The Huntingdon avenue line travels 2.69 miles, one-half mile thereof only being outside the city. The distance travelled by a car of the Columbia avenue line is 3.58 miles, wholly within the city, and the Pratt street line, wholly in the city, travels 2.36 miles. The aggregate of car mileage is 8.63 miles; but, as certain portions of the tracks are common to each, making allowance for the distance travelled on common tracks, the total of track mileage is only 7.08 miles.
Inasmuch as one of these lines extends beyond the city, and into Baltimore County, the gross receipts from or on account of that portion of the track which is without the city limits ought not to pay any part of the nine per centum tax which has been imposed for the privilege accorded by the city to the appellant of using its streets for railway purposes. But it is self-evident that an arbitrary deduction of one-half the gross receipts of all the lines of the appellant to represent the revenues derived from the one-half mile of track outside the city cannot be right. To deduct one-half of the gross earnings before computing the tax to be paid, as representing the revenues derived from that half mile outside the city limits, which is only about one-sixteenth of the whole mileage of the appellant, is suggestive of such an enormous amount of work done and money earned by that
Having no separate fare for the part of the road lying outside the city limits, but the five cents paid outside the city entitling the passenger to ride to any part of the city on that line, and by a free transfer to any part of the city traversed by any one of the lines of the appellant, and vice versa for persons getting on in the city and going to the county, it is clear that some method must he adopted to determine with reasonable accuracy what proportion of the revenues shall be deducted as not liable to tax. The evidence shows that a very small part of the fares received were paid for'rides 'begun and ended on the county part of the track. The five cents paid, therefore, in very much the larger number of instances, represented rides wholly in the city, and those begun in the county and ended in the city, or in the city and ended in the county; and inasmuch as portions of the tracks in the city were travelled by each line of cars; and inasmuch as the system of transfers from one line to another prevailed, by which passengers could start on
The first five exceptions relate to evidence offered on hehalf of the appellant which was rejected. By that evidence it was sought to establish a proper basis of computation, on the ground that the larger part of the passengers on that line got on in the county and rode into the city, or in the city and rode into the county, than began and ended their rides in the city. Witnesses who rode on that line twice or more a day stated their estimates from casual observation as to the proportion of passengers so doing. That the exclusion of such evidence was no ground of error is apparent from several considerations. If it was impracticable, as the company stated, to keep an accurate account by a record of the passengers riding on the road, when, and where they entered, and where they alighted, it is perfectly clear, that the testimony of passengers who only observed now and then, and who did not tell and could not tell at what point outside the city the passengers they observed got on, or where they got off in the city, or vice versa, could not supply a safe method of ascertaining what was wanted. It would not only he the merest guess, resulting from only occasional observation, but it gave no possible help toward determining what proportion of the journeys of these passengers was made on the tracks in the city, and the track outside the city. Certainly, unless some method of reaching that proportion was supplied by proof 'in addition to the statements of those witnesses, their statements would not enable a jury to form a reasonably lair basis for tlie jury to determine what was the real earnings of Baltimore County track.
It appears clear that the Court thought, that as there was no evidence enabling it or the jury to find how far each passenger who rode on the cars travelled, the only way to approximate a fair basis of settlement was to act on the assumption that each part of each line carries as many as any other part. This seems reasonable, and is the principle the Legislature has sanctioned as the mode of ascertaining the taxable gross receipts of steam rail roads whose tracks are partly within, partly without the State of Maryland. Section 153, of Art. 81, found in vol. 2, Code of Public General Laws, page 1264, makes this provision: £‘Whenever the road of any railroad company, organized under the laws of this State, shall extend beyond the limits of this State into any other State or States, and the return of the financial officer of said company, made to the Comptroller, shall not show certainly and accurately the precise amount of gross receipts
In State vs. Phil., Wilm. & Balto. R. R. Co., 45 Md., 384, this Court said that “this rule is fair and reasonable.” The Court said, “it was true that the receipts on one part of the road might be greater than on another, but perfect equality in the assessment and apportionment of taxes is unattainable,”' and hence they adopted this rule as right. This Court cites The Delaware Railroad Tax Gase, 18 Wall., 208-231, where this rule was approved by the Supreme Court of the II. S. It was also approved in State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S., 608-611, and Western Union Telegraph Co. vs. Massachusetts, 125 U. S., 530-552.
There is one difference in the principle adopted in this case and that prescribed in the statute quoted, and approved in the cases decided, which ought to be noted, and which has already been alluded to. It is that this instruction adopts the basis of the full mileage traversed by the cars of the appellant instead of the simple track mileage. The reason for this, and the justice of it, grows out of the fact that there is a portion of the track common to some of the lines, and as the cars pass over the tracks they are to be presumed to be earning fares by the carriage of passengers; therefore the actual round trips made by each car represent its full earnings, and the exact distance also it has traversed, and therefore gives a more accurate method of reaching the earnings of that part of the road which is not subject to tax. Approving, as we do, the granting of the plaintiff’s second prayer, it follows', as a consequence, that the defendant’s first prayer was properly rejected. If any injustice is done the appel
Section 9 of the ordinance No. 150 of 1880 (which granted appellant its privileges and imposed the tax sued for,) provides “that whenever the amount of the gross receipts of any passenger railway company, owning or operating any railway tracks in the City of Baltimore, now required to be paid to the city register for the use of the park fund, shall be reduced from 12 per cenlum to any less amount, the said reduction shall apply to the railways hereby authorized to be constructed.”
The appellant offered evidence touching certain settlements of the city with some other railways with which the city was in controversy, in which the city submitted to certain deductions for the purpose of securing a settlement. The appellant claimed the benefit of like deductions, on the contention that it was a reduction of the per centum of tax under the ninth section of the ordinance above quoted.
It is unnecessary to elongate this opinion by the recital of what was done by the city in compromise of litigation with other companies, for it is very clear to us, that such acts on the part of the city were not what the ninth section of ordinance No. 150 was providing for, and guaranteeing to this appellant. The acceptance 'by the city of less than was due, for the purpose of ending suits and controversies on amounts claimed as due, by way of compromise, was certainly not a reduction of the per centum of tax; and was not what was
Finding no error, the judgment must be affirmed
Judgment affirmed.