delivered the opinion of the court.
A suit fоr injunction brought in a state court by Anderson against Durr, then Auditor, and Cooper, then Treasurer, of Hamilton County, Ohio, raised the question whether a certain property tax imposed under authоrity of the State of Ohio upon plaintiff, a resident of that State, by reason of his owning a membership — figuratively termed a “ seat ” — in the New York Stock Exchange, infringed his rights under the commerce clause of the Constitution. of the United States or the
“
due process of law ” or
“
equal protection ” provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment. His assault upon the tax was sustained by the court of first instance (20 Ohio N. P., N. S., 538), but overrulеd by the Court of Appeals (
The essential facts are as follows: Plaintiff holds a membership or seat in the New York Stock Exchange for which he paid $60,000, аnd which carries valuable privileges and has a market value for the purposes of sale. The Exchange is not a corporation or stock company, but a voluntary association consisting of 1100 members, governed by its own constitution, by-laws and rules, and holding the beneficial ownership of the entire capital stock of a New York corporation which owns the building in which the business of the Exchange is transacted, with the land upon which it stands, situated in the City of New York and having a value in excess of $5,000,000. A member has the privilege of transacting a brokeragе business in securities listed upon the Exchange, but may personally buy or sell only'in the Exchange building. Membership is evidenced merely by a letter from the secretary of the Exchange notifying the reсipient that he has been elected to membership. Admissions to membership are made on the vote of the Committee on Admissions. Membership may be transferred only upon approval of the transfer by the committee, and the proceeds are applied first to pay charges and claims against the retiring member arising under the rules of the Exchange, any surplus bеing paid to him.. On the death of a member, his membership is subject to be disposed of by the committee; but his widow and descendants are entitled to certain payments out of a fund known as the “ Gratuity Fund.” In the búsiness of brokers in stocks and bonds a differentiation is made between members of the Exchange and nonmembers, in that business is transacted by members on account of other members at a commission materially less than that charged to non-members. A firm having as a general partner a member of the Exchange is entitled to *108 have its business transacted at the rates prescribed for members.
That a membership held by a resident of the State of Ohio in the Exchange is a valuable property right, intangible in its nature but of so substantial a character as to be a proper subject of property taxation, is too plain for discussion. That such a membership, although partaking of the nature of a personal privilege and assignable only with qualifications, is property within the meaning of the bankrupt laws, has repeatedly been held by this court.
Hyde
v.
Woods,
The chief contention here is based upon the due process of law provision of the Fourteenth Amendment: it being insisted that the privilege of membership in the Exchange is so inseparably connected with specific real estate in New York that its taxable situs must be regarded as not within the jurisdiction of the State of Ohio.
Louisville & Jeffersonville Ferry Co.
v.
Kentucky,
Nor is plaintiff’s case stronger if we assume that the membership privileges exercisable locally in New York enable that State to tax them even as against a resident of Ohio. (See
Rogers
v.
Hennepin County,
That plaintiff is denied the equal protection of the laws, within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, cannot be successfully maintained upon the-record before us.' The argument is that other brokers in the same city are not taxed upon the value of their memberships in the local stock exchange, nor upon thе privilege of doing business in New York Stock Exchange securities. As to the *110 local exchange memberships, it may be that the failure to tax them is but accidental or due to some negligenсe of subordinate officers, and is not properly to be regarded as the act of the State. If it be state action, there is a presumption that some fair reason exists to support the exemption, not applicable to' a membership in the New York Exchange, and plaintiff has shown nothing to overcome the presumption. As to the privilege referrеd to, it already has been shown that the rights incident to plaintiff’s property interest give him pecuniary advantages over others in the same business. Manifestly this furnishes a reasonable ground for tаxing him upon the property right, although others enjoying lesser privileges because of not having it may remain untaxed.
The contention that the tax constitutes a direct burden upon interstate commerce is groundless. Ordinary property taxation imposed upon property employed in interstate commerce does not amount to an unconstitutional burden upоn the commerce itself.
Pullman’s Palace Car Co.
v.
Pennsylvania,
Writ of error dismissed.
Writ of certiorari granted.
Judgment affirmed.
The question whether a seat in the New York Stock Exchange is taxable in Ohio consistently with the principles established by this Court seems to me more difficult than it does to my brethren. All rights are intangible personal relations between the subject and the object of them created by law. But it is established that it is not enough that the subject, the owner of the right, is within the pоwer of the taxing State. He cannot be taxed for land situated elsewhere, and the same is true of personal *111 property permanently out of the jurisdiction. It does not matter, I tаke it, whether the interest is legal or equitable, or what the machinery by which it is reached, but the question, is whether the object of the right is so local in its foundation and prime meaning that it should stand likе an interest in land. If left to myself I should have thought that the foundation and substance of the plaintiff’s right was the right of himself and his associates personally to enter the New York Stock Exchange building аnd to do business there. I should have thought that all the rest was incidental to that and that that on its face was localized in New York. If so, it does not matter whether it is real or personal property or that it adds to the owner’s credit and facilities in Ohio. The same would, be true of a great estate in New York land.
