126 Ga. 504 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the facts.) Prior to the passage of the act of 1889 (Acts 1889, p. 29) now embodied in the Political Code, §§ 784 et seq., the property of railroad companies in this State could not be subjected to taxation for county purposes, except that under the act of 1883 (Acts 1882-3, p. 39) the property
After securing the return required to be made by section 784, the next step required to be taken by the comptroller-general (§ 786), after receiving the tax levies as provided by section 785, ■is to “assess the amount of each and every railroad company’s
The identical stock in question is personal property (Civil Code,, §3010), and is taxable in this State. Georgia Railroad Co. v. Wright, 124 Ga. 596; Wright v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 195 U. S. 219. If it is taxable by the State, then it certainly is subject to county and municipal taxation. Political Code, §§ 185, 125. The stock in question is intangible personal property; a chose in action. The general rule is that bills, notes, etc., have a situs for taxation at the domicile of the creditor. Political Code, § 116; City of Augusta v. Dunbar, 50 Ga. 393; 21 A. & E. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 928. Prior to the act of 1858 (Acts 1858, p. 105, Political Code, § 776) the rule in Georgia was different. Bridges v. Griffin, 33 Ga. 113. In City Council v. Dunbar, supra, the court says: “But the current of authorities, as to stocks, bonds, and notes for money very decidedly fixes their locality at the residence of the owner of them. At any rate this is true -under the authorities for purposes of taxation.” In Wright v. Southwestern R. Co., 64 Ga. 738, this court, held that stock in railroads without the limits of this State is not taxable here. This case adjudicated merely that the situs of such stock, for taxable purposes, was in the State where the road lies. This rule was changed by the act of 1885 (Acts 1884-5, p. 30).
The word “situs” means, site, situation, location, a place where a thing is. 25 A. & E. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 1071. In City Council v. Dunbar, supra, the court, in dealing with intangible personal property for purposes of taxation, used this language: “This can only be [that choses in action are taxable in this State] on the idea that the locality of such property is with the owner of it.” In the case of Trustees v. Augusta, 90 Ga. 648, the court says: “In the absence of statutory provisions to the contrary, choses in action follow tiie person of the creditor.” An exception to this rule can be found in the case of Armour Packing Co. v. Augusta, 118 Ga. 552, the court holding that, “Choses in action in the hands of an agent of a nonresident corporation doing business in a municipal corporation of this State, and which were received in the course of business so conducted,” are taxable by such municipality. In that case the general rule is recognized that the situs of intangible personal property for taxation is-at the domicile of the owner, the court at the end of the opinion saying: “The right of this State or one of its subordinate political divisions to tax all the intangible property of a person, resident in this State or a domestic corporation, at the place of residence of such person or at the principal office of such corporation, is not involved in this ease.” Without citing further authorities on this point we conclude that intangible personal property has a situs for purposes of taxation at the domicile of the owner and is there subject to taxation for State, county, and municipal purposes, and that this was the law at the time of the passage of the act of 1889. It was at the domicile of the owner in this State that it was located, and there and there alone could it be found by the tax officer. We can perceive no difference in principle, so far as the purpose in view is concerned, between tangible and intangible personalty. One has form, occupies space, is tangible; the other has none of these characteristics, but is nevertheless fixed and located for taxation with as much certainty and definiteness as if tangible. The act (§ 776) says: “First, it shall be assessed on the property located in each county.” The word “located” was not introduced by judicial construction, but by the legislature, and no hint is given that it refers only to realty and tangible personalty. The word is broad enough to include
While the precise question we are now considering was not before the court in the case of Georgia Railroad Co. v. Wright, 125 Ga. 589, the court, in discussing the question before it relating to this stock, said: “If the shares of stock in the foreign corporation upon which it is sought to collect a tax in this case had been owned by an individual residing in Richmond county, he would have been required to return the same for taxes to the tax-receiver at their true market value, and also to the proper officer of the City of Augusta. That is, the location of the property would be in the county and city where the owner resided. Being owned by the plaintiff, a corporation whose principal office is in the City of Augusta, it is taxable in the county and municipality where the company resides; that is, in the place where its principal office is located.” The residence of a domestic corporation is where its principal office or place of business is situated. McCall v. Central Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 604. The principal office of the Georgia Railroad •and Banking Company is fixed by an act of the legislature in the City of Augusta, in the County of Richmond. Acts 1841, p. 174. We hold, therefore, that the 15,000 shares of stock of the Western Railway of Alabama, owned by the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company, is located property in the meaning of the act of 1889, and is taxable in the County of Richmond and City of Augusta, where the principal office of the owner, the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company, is fixed by law. We are confirmed in this view from a consideration of that part of the act of 1889 designating the property which shall be distributed to the several counties through which the road runs. That part of said act does not embrace, in the definition of the property to be distributed, property ■of the character now under discussion. The purpose of the act of 1889, as we have seen, was to tax located property, both tangible .and intangible, in the county where located,- and that the rolling-stock and other unlocated personalty should be distributed to the ■several counties through which the road runs.
In the Columbus Southern case (89 Ga. 459) the words, “rolling-stock and other personal property” are held to mean the rolling-stock and other unlocated personalty; the word “other,” there
From a consideration of the nature of the property, the right simply to participate in the profits of the company, and upon a dissolution of the corporation to share in its assets, it will readily appear that it has no existence in this State separate from its-owner. It has no domicile separate from the domicile of the owner. Therefore it can have none of the characteristics of rolling-stock and can not be classed with property of like nature with rolling-stock. Its taxable situs or location is at the domicile of the owner, and does not change except as the domicile of the owner changes.. It is urged that this construction is destructive of all distribution, for all personal property prior to the statute was thus fictitiously located by the law, and that the words “other personal property” would include nothing; that the rolling-stock itself was so located. This contention is unsound. The rolling-stock, for the reasons heretofore stated, was made by said act the subject of distributive taxation, as was also any other unlocated personal property. The legislature, no doubt, could have gone further and could have made the intangible personal property likewise the subject of distribution; but it has not done so. The legislative act, as construed in the Columbus Southern case, defines the property to be distributed. The rolling-stock is to be distributed, and other unlocated personalty, or personalty of like nature with rolling-stock.
Inasmuch as shares of stock in a foreign corporation, owned by a domestic corporation in this State, as we have shown, do not belong to the class of property to be distributed, no new domicile or residence was given to them, either expressly or by implication, by the act of 1889. The same course of reasoning is applied in respect to suit against a railroad corporation. The constitution requires that all civil cases shall be tried in the county where the defendant resides; and this applies to corporations as well as to natural persons. A railroad company must be sued, as a general rule, in the county where its principal office is located. The only exceptions to the general rule are contained in the Civil Code, § 2334, which relates to actions to recover damages for injuries to person or property or actions on contract. McCall v. Central Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 604. “It is within the power of the legislature to make a railroad company a resident of each and every county in which the railroad is located, for the purpose of certain specified suits brought against it. ‘Unless the right to sue elsewhere is specifically given by the statute, suits against a railroad company of this State should be brought in the county of its principal place of business.' Central Ry. Co. v. State, 104 Ga. 835.”
Judgment affirmed.
There should be but little danger of falling into error if this case is viewed from the proper standpoint, and if we apply to words their ordinary signification. The State creates a railroad corporation and prescribes the mode of taxing it. The simple question is, what mode has been prescribed? The statute prescribing the mode appears to be plain; and to go at length into the doctrine of domicile, or the construction of statutes, only tends to confusion. A railroad corporation derives all its powers from
The word “located,” used in section 786, should be given its ■ordinary signification, and it should be construed as antagonistic to legal or fictitious location. The word “located,” as used in this section, can only have reference to that class of property actually
The question naturally arises, why should the act of 1889 change,, so far as taxation is concerned, the effect of fictitious legal situs (location) of one class of personal property and not of all such?' The law of ejusdem generis is said to apply. For the purpose of'
If we change the statute and Inake it read, “rolling-stock and ether like personal property,” the personal property of the company which was not “like personal property” and which was not ■“located” in a county would escape taxation, although it was embraced in the returns and was a part of “the whole property of the company.” . To tax all the company’s property the comptroller-general must assess that “located in each county” and “the rolling-,stock and other personal property,” that is the rolling-stock and .all other personal property mentioned in section 784 and in the returns. That he can not do if the word "Mice" is construed into the .statute. This case is simplified by giving to the word “located” its ordinary signification and by resorting to very little construction where construction is not needed.