57 Mich. 598 | Mich. | 1885
' Complainant filed his bill for the purpose ■of enjoining the collection of a tax upon a portion of the gross earnings of the Merchants’ Despatch Transportation 'Company for the year 1883. The general demurrer to j;he bill was overruled, and defendant appeals..
The bill of complaint sets forth that the Merchants’ Despatch Transportation Company is a joint-stock associa
The prayer of the bill is that the said tax upon the said gross receipts of complainant may be decreed to be invalid ; and that any tax upon the earnings or receipts of said transportation ’company, from the soliciting of freights and the making of contracts for the through transportation of the same, and from the use of its cars in manner aforesaid, may be decreed to be unauthorized by said act; and that the Auditor General may be restrained from collecting or enforcing, or proceeding to collect and enforce, the said tax upon the receipts of the said transportation company, or any part thereof.
It will be perceived, from the statement made in the bill, •that the only tax which the Auditor General has laid under the act against the complainant is upon the gross earnings of its cars, computed upon the mileage of said cars used in transportation of freight from - points without the State to
The sections of the act necessary to be considered in the •disposition of the case read as follows:
“ An act to provide for the taxation of persons, copartnerships, associations, car-loaning companies, corporations, and fast-freight lines engaged in the business of running cars over any of the railroads of this State, and not being exclusively the property of any railroad company paying taxes on their gross receipts.
“ Section 1. The People of the State of Michigan enact, 'That every person, copartnership, corporation, association, ■car-loaning company or fast-freight line engaged in the business of running cars over any of the railroads this State, and not being exclusively the property of any railroad ■company paying taxes in this State, on their gross receipts, who are or may hereafter be engaged in the business of •carrying passengers in any palace, drawing-room, sleeping, chair, or other car over or upon any railroad in this State, ■or any part thereof, for the right of occupancy of which passengers are required to pay a sum additional to that charged upon the ordinary cars of the road over which said palace, drawing-room, sleeping, chair, or other car as aforesaid may be hauled, shall keep, in such manner as shall be prescribed by the Commissioner of Railroads, a just and true .account of all sums so received by them as additional charges for the occupancy of such cars over any road or portion thereof, within the limits of this State, and shall, on or before ■the first day of April of each year, report to said Commissioner of Railroads, on blanks to be furnished by him for such purpose, the gross amount of such receipts as aforesaid, ■earned within the limits of this State, for the year ending on the thirty-first day of December next preceding the date of .such report.
“Sec. 2. Every person, association, copartnership, or corporation owning running or interested in any special, fast, through, or other stock, coal, or refrigerator car freight lines, the cars of which are not the exclusive property of railroad companies, also any car-loaning company, incorpo*604 ration, copartnership, or association doing business in or running cars over any of the railroads of this State, — shall keep accounts and make reports in like manner as is provided for in the case of palace, drawing-room, and other passenger cars by the first section of this act.
“ Sec. 3. The reports required to be made, by sections one and two of this act, shall be verified, in the case of corporations, by the oath of the president and secretary thereof, and in the case of copartnerships, associations, or persons, by the oath of their proper agents or accountants, as the Commissioner of Railroads shall-require.
“ Sec. 4. The Commissioner of Railroads shall, on or before the first day of June of each year, make and file with the Auditor General a computation of the amount of tax which will become due on the first day of July next succeeding, ''from each person, association, copartnership, or corporation, liable to pay taxes under the provisions of section five of this act, which computation shall be based upon the report of such person, association, copartnership, or corporation, required to be made by the provisions of sections one and two of this act, and any such person, association, copartnership, or corporation neglecting or refusing to make such report, or who shall willfully make a false report, shall be liable.to a penalty of one thousand dollars, and it shall be the duty of the Auditor General and he is hereby required, in case such penalty shall be incurred as aforesaid, to forthwith issue his warrant for the collection of the same, in the same manner, and to levy and collect the same in all respects as is herein provided for the collection of taxes against such person, association, copartnership,, or corporation, and the collection of said penalty shall in no wise absolve the person, association, copartnership, or corporation, from making the report or payment of the taxes as herein provided.
“Sec. 5. Every corporation, association, copartnership, car-loaning company, or person as specified in sections one and two of this act, shall, on or. before the first day of July in each year, pay to the State Treasurer, upon the statement of the Auditor General, an annual tax of two and one half per cent, upon their gross receipts as computed by the Commissioner of Railroads, and derived from passengers or from the loaning, renting, or hiring these cars to any railroad or other corporation, association, copartnership, or party, and such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes upon the cars used for the purposes mentioned in sections one and two of this act.”
Under the first point it is urged that the Act cannot be • broader than its title, and if the title does not comprehend the company, the tax in question laid under its authority is void; that the Act by its titles reaches companies “ engaged in the business of running cars over any of the railroads of this State;” and that this company furnishes cars toother companies which were engaged in the business of running cars, but itself was not engaged in that business. The case stated by the bill, however, is that this company was possessed ■of certain freight cars which were used and run by the railroad companies in whose possession they chanced from time to time to be, and that the several railroad companies thus making use of said cars during the year paid to the said transportation company, as compensation therefor, a definite sum per mile for the distance traveled by the said cars over the respective lines. This method of doing business with the freight cars possessed by the complainant brings them within the class named in the title called “ Car-loaning Companies,” and also within the.description of associations engaged in the business of running cars over any of the railroads of this State; and I have no doubt that complainant’s business is •comprehended in the title of the Act.
Under the second point the complainant’s counsel claim that the tax in question is laid, either on the company by reason of business done within the State, measured by its gross -earnings, or upon the gross earnings of the company within the State as specific property; that the tax in either case is void, (1) because the business of the company is inter-state transportation; and (2) because the earnings or assets are not within the jurisdiction of the State. And it is contended that the application of the Act above recited to the Merchants’ Despatch Transportation Company is enjoined by the Federal Constitution, which gives to Congress exclusive power to regulate commerce among the states. Art. 1, section 8, ■ subd. 3.
The difficulty of drawing the line between constitutional and unconstitutional taxation by state authority has been recognized by that tribunal. It was held in the case of State Tax on Railway Gross Receipts 15 Wall. 284, that a statute of a state imposing a tax upon the gross receipts of the railroad corporation was not repugnant to the clause of the Constitution above cited. But counsel for complainant insist that the decision in that case is not authority for a like holding in this, because the corporations upon which the tax was laid were home corporations, and subject to the control of the state which enacted the law, and also because the reasoning of the court in sustaining the tax proceeded upon the ground that they were domestic corporations, and held their franchises under authority of the state imposing the tax, anfl it was competent for the legisláture to adopt this mode of exacting an excise tax from its corporations. But the point decided was that such a tax was not invalid because in conflict with the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the states. The law under which the present tax is exacted makes no distinction between domestic and foreign corporations, and. applies to all persons and associations doing business in the State. It is a tax upon business done in the State, and the fact that the complainant is a non-resident doing business in the State is the mere accident of place. Indeed, if the law made a distinction against non-residents, it might be invalid for that reason. The objections to the validity of the law on the ground urged by the complainant would be equally potent if taken by a resident of the State. It is general in its application.
Following the case last cited is that of Osborne v. Mobile 16 Wall. 479, in which the court held that a tax in the shape of a license fee imposed upon an express company,, which was a foreign corporation, having a business extending beyond
I think the tax in question is within the conceded authority of the State to tax persons, property, business or occupations within its limits; and that, within the principles of the cases above cited, the tax imposed is a valid exercise of such authority. The decree of the circuit court must be
Reversed, and the bill dismissed.