delivered the opinion of the court.
In this proceeding we are asked to review and reverse a judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, holding valid an act of the General Court (General Acts, 1919, c. 314), providing for the distribution of the proceeds of an income tax among the towns, cities and taxing districts of that State, against the contention that it violates the due process and equal protection of thé laws
By amendment' to the constitution of Massachusetts, approved by the people in 1915 (XLIY), the General Court was given power to iinpose a tax at different rates upon income derived from different classes of property but at a rate uniform throughout, the Commonwealth on incomes derived- from the same class of property and to exempt the property producing such, income from other taxes. •. •'
: Pursuant to this authority, a law was enacted in 1916 (General Acts, 1916,- c. 269), .which it is sufficient' to describe as taxing, with exceptions "negligible here: income received from bonds, notes, money at interest and debts due the person paying the tax; dividends on shares of any corporations not organized. under the laws of Massachusetts; dividends on shares in partnerships, associations or trusts, the beneficial interest in which is represented by transferable, shares; and income, derived from professions, -employments, trade or business. Intangible property, the income from which is taxed by the act, is practically exempted from local taxation.
The validity of this act is not assailed.
Prior to the enactment of this law,- the taxing subdivisions of the State, had taxed the real estate and tangible and intangible personal property, within their respective jurisdictions; for both state and local purposes, and the exemption from local taxation of intangible property, provided for in, the act, necessarily resulted in an important reduction in their revenues.
The proceeds of the income tax thus provided for were distributed by temporary acts applicable' only to the years 1917 and 1918, but in the year 1919 the act was passed, the validity of which is. assailed in this proceeding, which proyides, in substance: that the State Treasurer shall pay to each city, town and district, from the income tax
It is obvious that it was the purpose of this act to reim-' burse, the various taxing subdivisions until the year 1928 to the extent thought necessary to supply the loss which each would sustain by the withdrawal from its taxing power of the intangible property the income of which was taxed by the State, and that prior to 1928 any excess of the income tax fund over such requirements, and beginning with that year and continuing thereafter the whole of that fund should be distributed to such, subdivisions in proportion to the 'amount of the state tax paid by each.
The petition in the case is one. for mandamus and the essential allegations pf .it are: that the petitioner, an inhabitant of the. town of Brookline, in the years 1919 and 1920 derived income from intangible personal property and otherwise which rendered him subject to the provisions of the income tax act of 1916; that the state tax in Massachusetts is imposed upon towns and cities in proportion to the value of the real estate and tangible-personal property and polls taxable therein, without regard
Upon demurrer the petition was dismissed.,
This statement of the case shows that it is admitted: that the income tax act of 1916 is a valid law; that the contention is, only, that the act of 1919, providing for. distribution of thé tax, is unconstitutional; and that this contention rests wholly upon the allegation of the petition that such amount of the income tax collected by the State from the plaintiff in error and from other inhabitants of Brookline as may be returned to any other subdivision thereof, may, if the subdivision so elects, be used for local or "proprietary” purposés such that no benefit whatever •will accrue from the expenditure of the tax. to the plaintiff
It is argued that from these conditions it must follow that the plaintiff in error and other inhabitants of Brook-line are taxed for the exclusive benefit of the inhabitants of other subdivisions of the State, and that this violates the due process of law clause, or, if not that, the equal protection of the laws clause, of the Fourteenth Amendment, to the Constitution of the United States, and that therefore the proposed distribution of the tax should be restrained.
The.relation of the power of the federal courts to the taxing systems of the States has been the subject of much discussion in- the opinions of this court, ííotably in the following cases:
McCulloch
v.
Maryland,
. While the nature of the subject does not permit of much .finality of general statement, it may plainly be derived from the cases cited that since the system of taxation has not yet been devised which will return precisely the same measure of benefit to éach taxpayer or class of taxpayers, in proportion to payment made, as will be returned to every other individual or class paying a given tax, it is not within either the disposition or power of this court to. revise, the necessarily complicated taxing systems of .the States for the purpose of attempting to produce what might be thought to be a more just distribution of the
-The application of this summary of the law renders our conclusion not doubtful".
The income tax involved is uniform in its application to all income within the description of the act of all inhabitants of the State without regard to the taxing subdivision in which they may reside. .It is collected by the State and the capital value producing the tax is practically exempted from other taxation.- The tax was authorized by the people of the State and the act was given form by the legislature, for the purpose of correcting flagrant inequalities of taxation, resulting from what the Supreme Judicial Court, in the opinion in this case, called the “colonization” of wealthy owners of intangible securities in
-Accepting as true, as we must, the allegation of the petition, admitted by the demurrer, that the local subdivisions of the State may, “if they so elect,” devote the money derived from the income tax through ..the distribution provided for in the act assailed, to purposes which might not confer any certain benefit upon the plaintiff in error or persons in like situation, yet, it must be accepted on the other hand that it is entirely clear that there are many purposes to which these subdivisions may devote the money, “if they so elect,” which would be of such.state-wide influence that the plaintiff in error and those similarly situated would very certainly be benefited
The case presented is clearly not one of that extreme inequality in taxation of which the federal courts should lay hold, but involves rather a question of state policy, of a character which the people have been satisfied to léave to the judgment, patriotism and sense of justice of representatives in their state legislature.
The judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts is
Affirmed.
