95 P. 187 | Ariz. | 1908
Lead Opinion
This appeal is prosecuted upon the theory that section 1 of Act of March 16,1899, page 79, No. 68, which provides “that for the purpose of inducing and encouraging the construction of railroads, other than street and electric railroads, within this territory, the capital stock, franchise, right of way, superstructures, betterments, telegraph lines, and all other real, personal and mixed property used or necessary in the construction and operation of railroads to be conducted as common carriers of freight and passenger, other than street and electric railroads, hereafter constructed in accordance with the provisions of this act, and whether owned or operated by a person or persons, association or railway corporation, his, their or its successors or assigns, be and the same is hereby declared to be exempt from any and all manner of taxation for and during the period of ten years from and after the date of the passage of this act,” established a valid exemption from taxation for the stock, franchises, right of way, superstructures, and all other real, personal and mixed property used or necessary in' the construction and operation of railroads constructed in accordance with the provisions of that act, whether owned and operated by the original associations or corporations that constructed said roads and created or established such other property in compliance with the provisions of said act, or owned and operated by the successors of such associations or corporations.
It is contended by the appellees that appellant, having acquired the property by virtue of the provisions of Act No. 3, page 5, of the Nineteenth Legislative Assembly, is subject
In regard to the acquisition by a successor of an exemption granted to a corporation personally (being the first class mentioned) the United States supreme court has said in a recent ease: “The state, by virtue of the same power which created the original contract of exemption, may, either by the same law or by subsequent laws, authorize or direct the transfer of the exemption to a successor in title. In that ease the exemption is taken, not by reason of the inherent right of the original holder to assign it, but by the action of the state, authorizing or directing its transfer. As in determining whether a contract of exemption from a governmental power was granted, so in determining whether its transfer to another was authorized or directed, every doubt is resolved in favor of the continuance of the governmental power, and clear and unmistakable evidence of the intent to part with it is required.” Rochester Ry. Co. v. Rochester, 205 U. S. 236, 27 Sup. Ct. 469, 51 L. Ed. 784. The case at bar presents an instance in which the grant is not personal, but is made direct to the property. The Territory, in Act No. 68, page 79, Laws 1899, to induce the early building and construction of rail
This leaves for consideration only the question whether there is such limitation placed upon the appellant by its certificate of incorporation, or by the terms of Act No. 3, page 5, Laws 1897, under which it was incorporated, as would deprive it of the power of claiming or enjoying this exemption.
Counsel have referred at length to the grants and limitations of Act No. 2, page 4, and Act No. 28, page 65, of the Nineteenth Legislature, hut have at last agreed that these acts are not applicable in this ease. Act No. 2, page 4, as amended by Act No. 28, page 65, Laws 1897, empowers territorial or federal corporations to acquire railroads sold under decree of court by direct purchase at foreclosure sale, and Act No. 3, page 5, Laws 1897, authorizes such purchase by private persons, and the subsequent incorporation of such persons and their associates as a domestic corporation under the laws of this territory, which was the mode of procedure by the appellant. It is not necessary to notice the very interesting discussion that has been presented in the briefs as to the power
The language of Act No. 68, page 79, Laws 1899, clearly granting the exemption from taxation to the property when owned by the successor of the original corporation, and there appearing nothing in the charter of the appellant, or the law under which it was incorporated and authorized to acquire this property, to deprive it of the benefit of such exemption, but both such charter and law empowering in express terms the appellant to receive and enjoy the benefit of such exemption, the district court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, and in rendering judgment upon such order against the plaintiff. /
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the case remanded, with instructions to the district court to overrule the demurrer to the complaint, and take such further proceedings as are not inconsistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur substantially in the foregoing opinion. To my conception the purport- of section 8, Act No. 3, page 6, Laws 1897, is that a corporation created pursuant to that act should not be deemed to acquire, by reason of any of its terms, an exemption from taxation, and, further, that it should not be held that property acquired by it should be exempt from taxation merely because, by operation of an existing or subsequent exemption act, it was exempt under its former ownership, or because, by operation of such exemption act, its former owner was exempt. I take it that Act No. 3, page 5, Laws 1897, was not intended (it could not be operative if it were intended) to prevent future legislatures from expressly permitting a tax exemption to accompany the exempt property to a successor in interest, or to be availed of by the successor to an exempt owner. By unequivocal terms the exemption from taxation created by Act No. 68, page 79,
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result. I concur in the views expressed by Mr. Justice NAYE. I do not understand, them to be at variance with the views expressed by Mr. Justice DOAN on the same points. I concur also substantially' in the views expressed by Mr. Justice DOAN; but I am not fully in accord with some distinctions made by him in his opinion, or his reasons for such distinctions. On these points it is not desirable to elaborate the reason for my nonassent.