101 A. 663 | N.H. | 1917
The question whether the materials the plaintiffs use in building and repairing equipment are taxable by the state is common to both appeals, for if these materials are not taxable they were not taxable in 1913. Whether they are taxable depends on whether the plaintiffs use them in their ordinary business within the meaning of Laws 1911, c. 169, for s. 11 provides that "every railroad . . . shall pay to the state an annual tax . . . upon the actual value of its property and estate used in its ordinary business which would not be exempt from taxation if owned by a natural person or ordinary business corporation." The plaintiffs concede that they ordinarily carry on the business of building and repairing equipment in connection with their transportation business but contend that that is not their ordinary business within the meaning of s. 11. In other words they contend that the property in question is not used in their ordinary business within the meaning of that section and that it is not taxable even though it would be taxable if owned by an individual or ordinary business corporation. They base this contention on what was said in Boston Maine R.R. v. Franklin,
The only other question that will be considered is whether the court has such jurisdiction of the plaintiffs and their property that it can value the property that escaped taxation in 1913 and assess a tax on it in this proceeding. It is enough, in so far as this case is concerned, to say that if the court has power to assess a tax on the property in question in this proceeding it has power to assess a tax on it in a proceeding brought for that purpose; for the power make such orders as justice requires, conferred on it by P.S., c. 59, s. 11, does not include the power to compel the prevailing party in a tax appeal to pay a debt that could not be otherwise collected which he owes a stranger to the suit; as the price of a decree abating the illegal tax, and the court must have that power if it is to give the state the relief prayed for. The power to determine what property shall be taxed and by whom the tax shall be assessed is vested in the legislature subject to the limitations imposed on it by the constitution; consequently the court has no jurisdiction either to value the plaintiffs' property or to assess a tax on it, unless there is a statute giving it that power.
The only statute giving the court any power in so far as taxing the plaintiffs' property is concerned is Laws 1911, c. 169, — the act creating the tax commission. Section 8 of this act provides that the commission shall appraise the taxable property of railroads and certain other corporations and assess a tax on them for the benefit of the state. Sections 11 and 24 delimit the property taxable under the provisions of s. 8. Sections 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 prescribe how the commission shall proceed in appraising the property *468 and specify certain things that it shall consider in ascertaining the value of the property and determine the rate at which it shall be taxed. Section 18 fixes the time within which the tax shall be assessed and provides for rehearings, and section 19 gives both parties an appeal to the court from any order or finding of the commission by which their rights may be concluded. The court's power, therefore, in respect to both appraising and taxing the plaintiffs' property is the power to revise the commission's findings on appeal, for that is the only power that c. 169 confers on it. In other words, the court has no common law jurisdiction in respect to valuing and taxing the plaintiffs' property and its statutory jurisdiction is limited to revising such orders and findings of the tax commission as come before it on appeal. The court therefore has no power to impose a tax on the plaintiffs' property that escaped taxation in 1913, in this proceeding. Whether it has such power on appeal from an order of the tax commission, taxing or refusing to tax the property, is a question that is not and cannot be raised in either of these proceedings and as to it no opinion is intended to be expressed.
The order in the first case should be
Appeal sustained: tax abated.
In the second the order should be
Appeal dismissed.
All concurred.