Cum. Telep. & Teleg. Co. v. Hopkins

121 Ky. 850 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906

Opinion by

Judge O’Rear

Reversing.

The two eases styled above present a common question, -though the former presents in addition a single other question for decision. The cases were-heard together -in this court. Appellant telephone company operated a telephone exchange in the town of Eminence, in connection with its long distance telephone service, extending through that town to-other and remote points in and out of this State: Appellant, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company,, is a chartered railroad corporation, created by the laws of this State and operating lines of railroad in and out of the State, one of which passes through the town of Eminence. Eminence is a city of the-fifth class of this State. Among its corporate pow*855ers conferred by the Legislature is section 3637, subsection 4, Kentucky Statutes 1903, which reads: “To impose and collect license fees and taxes on stock used for breeding purposes, and on all franchises, trades and occupations,” but “not in conflict with the Constitution or laws of this State or of the United States.” This power was expressly allowed by the Constitution by section 181 of that instrument, which is as follows: ‘‘ Section 181. The General Assembly shall not impose taxes for the purposes of any county, city, town or other municipal corporation, but may by general laws confer on the proper authorities thereof respectively the power to assess and collect such taxes. The General Assembly may, by general laws only, provide for the payment of license fees on franchises, stock used for breeding purposes, the various trades, occupations and professions, or a special or excise tax; and may, by general laws, delegate the power to towns, cities and other municipal corporations, to impose and collect license fees on stock used for breeding purposes, on franchises, trades, occupations and professions.” The city of Eminence by its council enacted ordinances imposing a license fee of $50 per annum upon the business for handling for pay telephone messages in, the city, and upon the business of selling railroad tickets in the city of Eminence or for handling freight for pay in said city an annual license fee of $25. Penalties were provided for carrying on either business without first having paid the license fees. These suits were brought against the police judge and the city for a writ of prohibition to test the constitutionality of the ordinances, each appellant being proceeded against for their violation. The circuit court dismissed the petitions, thereby holding the ordinances valid.

*856Railroad and telephone companies are required to pay to the State a franchise tax, as well as being required to pay a franchise tax to each county, city or town in which it may be exercised, if such municipality imposes, an ad valorem tax. (Section 4077, Ky. Stats. 1903; section 174, Constitution.) These companies are included in what are called “public service corporations,” exercising powers-and having , privileges not enjoyed by natural persons or other corporations. The main point of contention is, what is the franchise upon which these taxes are imposed? A corporation’s franchise may be one thing or another. The word is not always used with reference to the same meaning. It is sometimes. regarded as the mere right to be a corporation. Again, it is treated as the right to do the particular and peculiar business for which the corporation was created. It is also spoken of as the right to do its business in a certain locality, as, for example, where the Constitution requires certain franchises to be sold by cities and towns. (Section 164, Constitution.) The other two qualities of a corporate franchise may have existed before the acquisition of the latter, and are, therefore, in a sense quite distinct from it. For the purposes of taxation, it may be all of them and more. (Henderson Bridge Co. v. Commonwealth, 99 Ky., 623, 31 S. W., 486, 17 Ky. Law Rep., 389, 29 L. R. A., 73.) While corporate franchises have long been recognized factor’s of incorporated beings, they have only recently come to be regarded as separate subjects of taxation. In the rapid development of these artificial creatures of the law (corporations) as means of holding and using property in active business, the corporate franchise has come to have a recognized value of enor*857mods magnitude, when viewed in the aggregate. It is not the least — indeed, frequently is the greater —element of the corporation’s wealth. That it should be taxed, should be made to bear its share of the public burden, together with all other wealth, is fundamentally true in justice and" in political economy. So far, no exact definition of it ha,s been given upon which the eouits have felt willing to finally rest the matter. And perhaps it is well enough for the present-that this is so. Still certain qualities of the corporate franchise are so well known and classified as to be beyond dispute as being elements of its taxable value. The mere right to be a corporation is taxed, in the exacting of the organization tax upon its creation. This is collected once, and absolutely without reference to its property or- whether it ever engages in the business contemplated by its articles. (Section 4226, Ky. Stats. 1903.) The right of certain corporations to do business in a city which it must acquire (if acquired since the present Constitution) by purchase of the franchise from the city, includes the compensation for occupying the public thoroughfares of the city. But it also may include more than that, which will be further noticed in this opinion. Each of these are qualities of the general corporate franchise. Yet, as used in the taxing statute of this State, the word has a more comprehensive meaning. Tt is treated as property. It is property. It adds materially to the value of the tangible property of the corporation. The right to exercise the powers allowed to the corporation by law, the peculiar and exceptional privileges it enjoys, partaking partially of the quality of sovereignty, give to its use of its tangible property, as well as to its intangible property comprised within its capital stock, a value which *858otherwise could not attach to them, so that this privileged use becomes to the visible assets of the corporation what the leaven is to the loaf. While it -may not be laid hold of separately, it is quite capable of being conceived and valued as a thing worth so much money. This value will depend largely upon its. money earning capacity-as it may be employed, and depends at last upon its being exercised. Unless used substantially as outlined in the articles under which it is created, it could scarcely be said to have a money value at all. For, .unlike tangible property, or even choses in action, it can not be sold and trafficked in, nor consumed, nor otherwise enjoyed than in the corporate use of it. It is true.that by statute, as construed by this court in Henderson Bridge Co. v. Commonwealth, supra, when treating of railroad corporations, the franchise is deemed to include so much of the capital of the corporation and of its other intangible assets as is represented by the difference between the total value of its money earning capacity and the separate value of its tangible property. The franchise .of a railroad company may then be accepted for purposes of taxation as the earning, value ascribed, to its capital by reason of its operation as a common carrier of freight and passengers. Further .than that the legislation in this State on that subject has not gone.

Railroads are required to pay taxes upon their tangible property. The mode of taxing it is set out by statute. (Sections 4096-4104, Ky. Stats. 1903.) It is to be valued as an entire piece of property “for the purpose of being operated as a carrier of freight and passengers.” (Section 4096, Ky. Stats. 1903.) That is, the roadbed, including right of way and tracks, depots, sidings and its cars, equipage and *859tools, are to be taxed in the aggregate as a railroad. The franchise fax is “in addition to the other taxes imposed on it by law” (section 4077, Ky. Stats. 1903), and is meant to cover all the intangible property of the concern, as represented by the earning value of its capital, employed in the specific business of a carrier of freight and passengers. The valuation of this corporate franchise by the State Board of Valuation and Assessment is made by section 4077, supra, the basis for municipal taxation in every municipality in which the corporate franchise may be exercised. In the case at bar it is conceded that appellant railroad company’s franchise was so valued and was certified as apportioned to the city of Eminence and the franchise tax paid thereon for the year in controversy. The power given to municipal corporations by section 181, Constitution, and section 3637, Ky. Stats. 1903, to impose and collect license fees upon all franchises, is a revenue provision. It is so treated in its classification by the Constitution, and though in the statute it is coupled with other matters more properly coming under the head of police powers, it is in its scope and effect still an act to raise revenue for the town in one of the ways permitted by the Constitution. For appellees, it is contended that the franchise tax, which is collected off of appellant railroad company under the general assessment of its franchise, being a property tax, is quite distinct from the occupation tax which the town, under the legislative authority, has imposed. But it is not. It is the same thing. At least, the franchise tax includes the valuing of the capital stock of the railroad when and in the event only it exercises the very privileges sought to be taxed again by the ordinance. The same property may be indir*860ectly and incidentally taxed twice is conceded, as, for example, where the owner of mortgaged land pays taxes on it, and the owner of the mortgage . pays taxes on the evidence of the debt. But it is not the policy of the State to tax the same property twice as against the same owner. The Constitution requires that taxes shall be uniform upon all property subject to taxation. (Section 171, Constitution.) If the same property were taxed twice for the same purpose fas against the same owner, whereas other property was taxed but once for that purpose as against its owner, the taxation would not be uniform. It would violate, not only the letter of the Constitution, but that spirit and absolute equality before the law which is at the bottom of all free government. The owners of other tangible property in Eminence are not taxed on the privilege of employing it in a certain business, either directly or indirectly, when it is assessed ad valorem. Therefore, when they are required to pay an occupation tax, as they have no franchise to be taxed or which is taxed, the license fee which they pay is not duplicate taxation in any sense.

Railroad property has always been regarded as an entirety in this State for purposes of taxation. (Applegate v. Ernst, 3 Bush, 648, 96 Am. Dec., 272; E. & P. R. R. Co. v. Trustees, 12 Bush, 233; Graham v. Mt. Sterling Coal R. R. Co., 14 Bush, 425, 29 Am. Rep., 412.) It is made the subject of special consideration by the present Constitution (section 182), which directed that until changed by legislation the mode of taxation then in existence should prevail. No such change has been indicated, save as taxation of its franchise. General terms, not necessarily indicating a departure from a long settled policy of taxation, which is, indeed, continued in the present *861statutes, will. not be deemed as applicable to that policy, where it appears they were not used in special connection with the subject of such policy, but were employed broadly, so that they embrace many other matters coming within their meaning, and can be applied only inferentially to the particular subject. As was said in Neumeyer, Auditor v. Krakel, 110 Ky., 624, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 190, 62 S. W., 518: “It is a well settled rule that an isolated expression in an act will not ordinarily be so construed as to conflict with a general legislative policy.” If so radical a change in the existing and long continued policy of the State to tax such properties as entireties, and not fragmentarily, had been contemplated by the Legislature, it would not-have undertaken to make it in such an obscure way as lids. It was not contemplated by section 181 of the Constitution, quoted, that the Legislature could authorize a city to tax the same privilege twice for the same year as against the same owner. The railroad being operated in Eminence is a part of appellant’s railroad company’s system. It no longer has an option whether it will continue to carry freight and passengers to and from that town. It is bound to do it or forfeit its charter. Never before has it been thought that the State could require, its creatures under such severe penalties to do a service, and then put it in the power of a part of the State government to keep them from doing it.

The telephone case involves substantially and in the main the same question discussed above. In addition, it appears that the city of Eminence some few years ago offered for sale for a term of twenty years the franchise to erect, maintain and operate a telephone exchange and to do a telephone business in that city. Appellant telephone company, being an *862accepted bidder, bought this privilege for the price of $50 per year, payable annually. In addition it furnishes the services of two instruments and the use of its poles for certain purposes to the city free of other charge. Under this agreement the plant of appellant was installed. It is since that agreement that the ordinance in suit was enacted. The court is of opinion that, after having sold the telephone company the privilege of putting up and operating its line and conducting its business in the town, the municipality cap not afterwards, without the consent of the telephone company, impose an additional charge for the identical privilege. This franchise sold by the city to appellant telephone company was the creature of the city. It was not only to occupy its streets, the consideration being compensation for right of way, but it was for operating its exchange in the city and receiving tolls thereat upon its business. It was that or nothing. The city could not impart to the telephone company any corporate quality. That it already had, of must get from the State. The ordinance selling the. franchise by its terms went further than to grant the right to occupy the city streets and alleys. It expressly dealt with, and sold for a consideration, the privilege of doing the identical business within the city that it is doing. We concede that if it should be necessary, in the fair exercise of its police power by the city, to compel the (telephone company to conform to some different plan of conducting its business, or even that it should be excluded altogether, if it were such a business as was deleterious to the health or safety of the citizens, the sale of the franchise would not preclude the city in the matter, for it is beyond the power of a municipality, or-of the State itself, for that matter, to bargain away its police power by contract.

*863Wherefore the judgments are each reversed, and causes remanded, for proceedings not inconsistent herewith.

Judge Faynter dissents.

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