3 Colo. 349 | Colo. | 1877
It is enacted by section three of “an act to provide for the assessment of and collection of reve
Personal property which has a locus here is without doubt subject to taxation under our revenue laws, which, while they, in general, can have no extra-territorial force, may reach all property within the State without reference to the residence of the owner. A herd of cattle, a flock of sheep, a stock of merchandise owned by a non-resident, but kept within the State, are proper subjects of taxation. But debts due from a resident of Colorado to a resident of California are in no legitimate sense the property of the debtor. They belong to the creditor. They have no situs apart from the residence of their owner. Although the situs of the real estate by which the notes were secured was within the jurisdiction of the taxing power, the debts evidenced by the incites were the principal things, and the trust deeds securing them were mere incidents, depending for their very existence upon what they secured. The liquidation of the debts would at once cancel the trust deeds. A trust deed itself is but a chose in action attached to the person of its owner. A debt is invisible and intangible, following the creditor’s domicile, and wherever that may be, is within réach of the taxing power. But as the domicile? of the owner of the choses in action
As the taxes were paid under protest no demand was necessary before bringing suit. The object of a demand is to give the party on whom it is made an opportunity to refund, without the expense incident to litigation, the taxes that had been illegally exacted. But where the taxes are paid under protest to the treasurer, who is armed by the law with authority to coerce payment, no further demand is required. Payment under such circumstances cannot be considered voluntary. The protest by the tax payer is of itself a notice to the treasurer that he regards the tax as illegal, and that he intends, if need be, to enforce his right by an appropriate-proceeding.
The judgment of the count below must be affirmed with costs.
Affirmed.