22 F. 54 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin | 1884
This is- a general demurrer to the .first and third counts of the plaintiff’s complaint, in an action at law to recover back taxes paid to the treasurer of the defendant town. The facts in the ease are briefly these: The plaintiff is a corporation created under the laws of Minnesota, and doing business at Stillwater, in that state. It is, and for many years has been, the owner of large tracts of pine-timbered lands in northern Wisconsin, and is engaged in the lumbering business, which consists in cutting pine logs from the timber of said lands during the winter season in each year, and hauling the same upon sleds to the different streams tributary to the Saint Croix river, in Wisconsin, and placing them upon the banks of said streams and upon the ice thereof, between the banks, and there awaiting high water in the spring to transport them down said streams into the
In the springs of 1882 and 1888, on or about April 1st, while the plaintiff’s logs wore so lying piled upon the ice of said stroani in said town, the assessor of said town put them in his list and entered them for valuation and assessment for tho general state, county, and town taxes for those years, and afterwards, the said tax being duly extended against said logs and default of payment made, a warrant was issued and the plaintiff’s personal property seized for their nonpayment, whereupon the plaintiff made protest, and, to save its property, paid said taxes, amounting in all to tiie sum of §1,587.65, which this suit is brought to recover back, on the ground that the logs wore not legally and properly taxable in Wisconsin.
The first and, in my judgment, the graver contention on the part of the plaintiff is that at the time of their assessment the logs were in commercial transit from one slate to another, and were therefore exempt upon conceded principles of law, and also that they had so become the subject of commerce as to render taxation by the state authorities an unwarrantable interference, in violation of the provision of the United States constitution whicli gives to congress the power to regulate commerce between the several states. This is certainly a very important question, and I have endeavored to give to it the consideration which it deserves, and in doing so have examined all the authorities I have been able to find on this subject. If the logs were in commercial transit, or their taxation was an interference with congressional authority, they wore not taxable. Tho plaintiff contends that they became and were in transit from the time they were loaded upon sleds in the woods and started on their destination towards the river, to be rolled down the banks thereof upon the ice. But I am unable to concur in this view, and am of opinion that the logs were in no actual or legal sense in tranaitu while awaiting shipment down the river, nor had they become the subject of commerce so as to make the usual and ordinary taxation by the state authorities an interference with the proper regulation of commerce by congress.
It was a part of the business of the plaintiff to grow the timber
It is not denied by plaintiff’s counsel that the property had a legal situs in the town of Loraine from the time the logs were cut to the time they were hauled to the river; but it is claimed they lost their situs and were in transit from the time they were started on sleds, or other means of conveyance, to the stream where they were banked. I think the legal situs continued during the time they remained so banked upon the river. If so, the tax was a proper one upon the property itself where situated, and was not a tax upon commerce or upon the transportation of property, and had no relation to the matter of regulating commerce between the states, which belongs to congress. Suppose the plaintiff, instead of using these lands to grow pine timber, had used them for a farm, upon which they grew large quantities of stock for market, and in the winter should drive droves of cattle from the farm to this same Clam river, and there feed and keep them until high water in spring or summer, when they could ship them down the river out of the state to market. They still belong to the original owners, have never become the subject o'f commerce by
The case, in my judgment, would be very like the one at bar. But I cannot think the cattle would have lost their legal situs in the town where they were raised and kept, or that they would be in transit from this state to another, in any sense that would forbid their being taxed. The mere intention in such a case, where there has been no sale or transfer of shipping out of the state at some indefinite time, depending upon some circumstance so uncertain as the weather and the floods, would not amount to patting the property in actual or legal transit so as to bring them within the principle recognized in the adjudged eases. See State v. Carrigan, 39 N. J. Law, 35; Blount v. Monroe, 60 Ga. 61; People v. Niles, 35 Cal. 282; Carrier v. Gordon, 21 Ohio St. 605; State v. Engle, 34 N. J. Law, 425; Ogilvie v. Crawford Co. 7 Fed. Rep. 745; Passenger Cases, 7 How. 416; State Freight Tax Case, 15 Wall. 232; State Tax on Railway Gross Receipts, Id. 284; Conley v. Chedic, 7 Nev. 336; Hurley v. Texas, 20 Wis. 665; Erie Ry. v. State, 31 N. J. Law, 531; Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 442; Crandall v. Nevada, 6 Wall. 35; Almy v. State, 24 How. 169.
2. The next contention of the plaintiff is that the statute of Wisconsin under which the tax was levied is unconstitutional, because it violates the principle of uniformity which the constitution of the state provides for; and also that it violates the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, because it discriminates unjustly against non-residents. The general provision of the Revised Btatutes oí the state in regard to the time of assessing property is that personal property shall be assessed as of the first day of May in each year, and real estate during the months of May and June. Section 1040 provides that “ail personal property shall be assessed in the assessment district where the owner resides, except as hereinafter provided. If such owners he non-residents of the state, but have an agent residing in this state in charge of such property, then the same shall be assessed in the district where such agent resides; otherwise, in the district where the same is located, except as hereinafter provided. Merchants’ goods, waros, commodities kept for sale, tools and machinery, manufacturers’ stock, farm implements, cord-wood, live-stock, ánd farm products, excepting grain in warehouse, shall be assessed in the district where located. Saw-logs and timber which are to he savred and manufactured in any mill within this state, which is owned or leased by the owner of such logs and timber, shall be assessed as manufacturers’ stock, in the district where such' mill may be located. Saw-logs, timber, railroad ties, lumber, and other articles not being manufacturers’ stock, shall be assessed where the owner or his agent, in the case aforesaid, resides.” This has been, substantially, the law of the state for many years.
“Section 1. All saw-logs, timber, railroad ties, or telegraph poles cut in this state, owned by any person or corporation not residing in this state and having no agent in this state, shall be assessed in the assessment district where the same shall be banked or piled for shipment either by water or railroad.
“See. 2. It shall be the duty of the assessor of the assessment district in which saw-logs, timber, railroad ties, or telegraph poles, owned by non-residents as aforesaid, may be located, to ascertain, at anytime during the month of April in each year, the amount of such property in his assessment district, by actual view, as far as practicable, to fix the value of said property and assess the same to the said owners as other personal property is valued and assessed. ”
It is claimed (1) that this law violates the principle of uniformity in providing for an assessment of the logs of a non-resident at a different time than that provided in the case of residents; (2) that for the same reason it discriminates unjustly against the non-resident. But I am of opinion that the case does,not come within either of these principles. The constitution provides that the rule of taxation shall be uniform. This would be the law if there were no constitutional provisions on the subject. It is of the very nature of a tax that it should be assessed according to some uniform rule, otherwise it would be confiscation and not taxation. But this does not mean that the time and method of assessment shall be identical, but only that after the legislature has declared what classes of property shall be subject to taxation, the tax itself shall be levied upon such property, or the owners thereof, according to a uniform rate of valuation. It is not claimed that this has not been done in the present case. Indeed, so far from setting up one standard of valuation for one class of persons, and another for another class possessing the same kind of property, the purpose of the law would seem to be to bring about that substantial equality in taxation which the common law as/well as the constitution requires. The legislature was aware that the logs of nonresidents as well as resident owners were liable to be floated out of the state in the month of April, or, if not run out of the state, might • become mixed with the logs of other persons in the different streams in such a manner as to render it quite impracticable to take any separate account of them in the month of May, when the logs of resident owners are assessed. Very often they would be beyond the jurisdiction of the taxing officer of the town, (as the plaintiff alleges they were in this case,) and as the owner could not be reached and had no local agent in the state, escape taxation entirely. The law, by providing that the situation, amount, and value of the logs be taken in April at the place where piled or banked, seeks to put nonresident and resident owners upon the same footing. But it is claimed that the law which waits until May before it takes account of the res-
There is one other objection which, perhaps, should be noticed, which is that as the law' provides for the taxation of tho plaintiffs lands in May or June of each year, the laying a tax upon tho logs in the following April is a second tax upon the same property within the same year or tax period. This objection is specious, and has no solid foundation. The statute provides for tho assessment of personal property as of the first day of May in each year, except as to saw-logs, telegraph poles, and railroad ties belonging to non-residents, without any agent in the state, which may be assessed in April. Heal property is assessed any time between the first day of May and the time of the sitting of the board of review, which meets on the last Monday in June; sq that one time is fixed for the assessment of personal property, and another for that of real estate. But when either is once assessed it is exempt for the usual taxing period of one year. The circumstance that personal property is manufactured from what was once part of the realty, and so rendered liable to assessment twice within 12 months, results in no inequality, injustice, or double assessment, and without it, it is evident that largo quantities of this class of property, mined or manufactured from real estate, would escape taxation altogether. The land is assessed, generally speaking, in the month of June. In the winter succeeding, the timber is cut off and made into logs, lumber, or shingles, and in that form is assessed in April or May of the next year. Tho value of these articles consists, partly, in the stumpage, but in still greater part, perhaps, in the labor bestowed upon it. In the June following, when the land is again assessed, no account can be taken of the timber that has been cut during the year by way of valuing it as a part of the land. So that for the two years the owner is assessed upon his real estate and personal property for their correct value; and this would be so for any number of years together. And precisely tbe same principle applies to resident as to non-resident owners.
Demurrer sustained.
See Schulenberg-Boeckeler Lumber Co. v. Town of Hayward, 20 Fed. Rep. 422.—[Ed.