after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania bases its decision in this case on the authority of
Commonwealth
v.
Pennsylvania Coal Co.,
197 Pa. St. 551, which it regards as controlling upon the question involved. The right to include the value of the coal in question in the valuation of the capital stock of the company is based upon the construction given by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to the Pennsylvania statute of 1891, and this court is concluded by that construction.
People
v.
Weaver,
The only question for this court to determine is whether, in. refusing to deduct the value of the coal mined in Pennsylvania, and which at the time of the appraisement was situated outside the jurisdiction of the State, from the value of the capital stock, the state court denied any right of the plaintiff in error, which was protected by the Federal Constitution.
The coal itself, when the appraisement of the value of the capital stock was made, was concededly beyond the jurisdiction of the State of Pennsylvania. It was taxable (and in fact was taxed) in the States where it rested for the purpose of sale, at the time when the appraisement in question was made.
Brown
v.
Houston,
Now, was this tax, in substance and effect, laid upon the coal which was beyond the jurisdiction of Pennsylvania? The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has held that a tax on the value of the capital stock is a tax on the property and assets of the corporation issuing such stock.
Commonwealth
v.
Standard Oil Co.,
101 Pa. St. 119, 145;
Fox’s Appeal,
112 Pa. St. 337;
Commonwealth
v.
Delaware &c. R. R. Co.,
165 Pa. St. 44. This court has also frequently held that a tax on the
*354
value of the capital stock of a corporation is a tax on the property in which that capital is invested, and in consequence no tax can thus be levied which includes property that is otherwise exempt.
Bank of Commerce
v.
New York City,
. The cases of the taxation upon the value of the capital stock of -the banks, or on a valuation equal to the amoúnt of their capital stock paid in or secured to be paid in, as reported in 2 Black and 2 Wall.,
supra,
involved the question of the taxation of United States bonds and other securities of the United States, in which the capital of the banks was invested, which were exempt from taxation; but the holding of the court was that those bonds and securities were in fact taxed by a tax upon the value of -the capital of the bank, which was invested in such bonds and securities. Of course, the distinction between the capital stock of a corporation-, and the shares into which it may be divided- and held by individual shareholders, is borne in mind and recognized, and nothing herein affects that distinction. The question here is simply as to the value of the capital stock with reference to the assessment and taxation upon the corporation itself which issues it, and has nothing to do with the individual shareholder.
Van Allen
v.
Assessors,
Counsel for defendant in error find no fault with the principle stated in Brown v. Houston, supra, and that line of cases, nor with the general proposition laid down in the other cases cited, that a tax on the valúe of the capital stock is' a tax on the property of the corporation in which the capital is invested. They deny, however, their applicability to the facts of this case. They , concede that the courts of Pennsylvania have held that tangible property, permanently located outside of the State, for the use and benefit of the corporation, and owned by it, is exempt from taxation under this statute. *355 They also concede that it was never within the intent or the power of the legislature to impose a tax upon tangible property when held outside of the territorial limits of the State; but they insist that this tax is not eo nomine or specifically upon tangible property outside the State, and they contend that the State has the right to consider the value of the coal as having entered into the value of the capital stock as soon as it was mined, and that the State then had the right to treat the coal as one of the items that went into the value of the capital stock, just the same as they' contend for the right to so treat the money realized from the .coal upon its sale in the foreign State when it has been returned to the State and has gone into the surplus fund. The position of the defendant in error, then, is this: The tax in question is not a tax upon coal, treated as tangible' property and a tangible asset specifically subject to tax, but is a tax upon the value of the capital stock of the Pennsylvania corporation at the fixed rate of five mills for each dollar of the actual value of the whole capital stock, including bonds, mortgages, moneys at interest, franchises, and property of other kinds, and that the statute- in question does not impose a tax on the coal, itself. Counsel do not contend that a tax on the value of the capital stock of a corporation is not a tax on its property in a certain sense, but they contend that while a tax on capital stock is a property tax, yet the property of the corporation, for the purpose of taxation, is reached through the tax imposed directly upon the stock (197 Pa. St. 553), and that there is a distinction between a tax on capital stock and a direct tax on personal property.. Therefore tangible property situated outside-the State, under the circumstances set forth in this ease, is not directly taxed, by a tax on the value of the capital stock, or at least there is no specific tax upon it, and the tax is not illegal. It is also said that by reason of the alleged transitory character of the coal it has never, in law, lost its original domicil, wliich still remains in Pennsylvania and is subject to be there included in the value of the capital stock of the corporation.
*356
The asserted transitory nature of this property does not seem to us to be material. At the time of the appraisement it had been transported beyond the jurisdiction of the State, never to return in kind, but was intended to be sold in the foreign State. Such property is entirely unlike the property involved. in
Commonwealth
v.
American Dredging Co.,
122 Pa. St. 386. That property consisted of vessels, or scows, or tugs, only temporarily out of the State of Pennsylvania, for the purpose of engaging in business, and liable to return to the State at any time, and was without any actual
situs
beyond the jurisdiction of the State itself. However temporary the stay of the coal might be in the particular foreign States where, it was resting at the time of the appraisement, it was definitely and forever beyond the jurisdiction of Pennsylvania. And it was within the jurisdiction of the foreign States for purposes of taxation, and in truth it was there taxed. We regard this tax as in substance and fact, though not in form, a tax specifically levied' upon the property of the corporation, and part of that property is outside and beyond the jurisdiction of the State which thus assumes to tax- it. This is not a question as between direct or indirect taxation, such as arises under the Federal Constitution when Congress lays and collects taxes by virtue of the power given it by that instrument. No question of uniformity or apportionment of taxes arises here. The question now discussed is simply whether, under this statute of the State, property of the corporation is in substance and effect taxed while it is beyond the jurisdiction of the State and is never' to return. When the Federal Constitution says no tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any State, -such articles cannot be taxed, directly or .indirectly, and a tax on foreign bills of lading is void because it in effect is a tax on exports.
Fairbank
v.
United States,
So, if the State cannot tax tangible property permanently outside the State and having no situs within the State, it cannot attain the same end by taxing the enhanced value of the *357 capital stock of the corporation which arises from the value of the property beyond the jurisdiction of the State.
We think the state court is right in deducting, as it does, the value of the tangible property, when permanently held in another State, and we think that for the same reason the same rule should obtain in the case of tangible property situated, as this coal was. We cannot see the distinction, so far as the question now before the court is concerned, between a tax assessed upon property, eo nomine, or specifically, when, outside the State; and a tax assessed against the corporation -upon the value of its capital stock to the extent of the value of such property, and which stock represents to that extent that very property. If the property itself could not be specifically taxed because outside the jurisdiction of- the State, how does the tax become legal by providing for assessing the tax on the value of the capital stock to the extent it represents that property and from which the stock obtains its increased value? Can the mere name of the tax alter its nature in such case? If so, the way is found for taxing property, wholly beyond the jurisdiction of the taxing power by calling.it a tax on the value of capital stock or something else, which represents that property. Such a tax, in its nature, by whatever name it may be calleáis a tax upon the specific property which gives the added value to the capital stock.
Although the coal may have entered into the .value of the capital stock, when mined, the question is whether the value of the stock iii November, 1899, when the appraisement was directed by the statute to be made, should not be decreased by deducting the value of the coal therefrom which was not in the State at the time of the appraisement. We think it should; otherwise the tax amounts in substance to a specific tax on the coal. Taking the different prices of the stock at different times in the year, and the average-price thereof, and otherwise following the provisions of the statute, simply makes a way of finding the value of the stock between the first and fifteenth of November in each year. That is the material *358 time when the value is to be ascertained, and at that time this coal was not in the State. An appraisement thus made, which includes such property, is to that extent without jurisdiction and illegal. It is true that in general an appraisement of, or an assessment of a tax upon, value is a decision upon a question of fact, and a difference of opinion as to the value between the assessing officer and the court is immaterial, and the decision of the former is final. But where the appraisement is arrived at by including therein tangible property, which is beyond the jurisdiction of the State, and which, therefore, the assessing officers had no jurisdiction to appraise (and none could be given them by the statute), such an appraisement or assessment'is absolutely illegal, as made without jurisdiction.
The next question is whether there is a right to relief in a case like this, founded upon the provisions of the Federal Constitution. We think there is. The collection of a tax under such circumstances would amount to the taking of property without due process of law, and a citizen is protected from such taking by the Fourteenth Amendment. In
Louisville &c. Ferry Co.
v.
Kentucky,
It is plain that in the case at bar the coal had lost its situs in Pennsylvania by being transported from that State to foreign States for the purposes of sale, with no intention that it should ever return to its State of origin. It was, therefore, as much outside the jurisdiction of the State of Pennsylvania -to tax it as was the Indiana franchise in the case just cited, and it has been taxed just' as directly and specifically under, the facts stated in this case as was the Indiana franchise taxed in Kentucky by the valuation of the Kentucky franchise, which value was increased by the value of the franchise created *361 by Indiana. Taxation of the coal in this case deprived the owner of its property without due process of law, as is held in the above case, and the owner is entitled to the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment, which prevents the taking of its' property in that way.
The judgment of the' Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion of this court.
Reversed.
