224 N.W. 653 | Mich. | 1929
The Truscon Steel Company is a Michigan corporation maintaining an office at Detroit, where a small amount of business is conducted. Its main plant and executive offices are maintained at Youngstown, Ohio. The controversy here involves the use of three items of intangible personal property in the computation of the specific tax required by Act No. 85, Pub. Acts 1921, as amended. These items are as follows: (1) Due from banks located outside the State for money on deposit, $404,353.33; (2) notes and accounts receivable, $4,903,298.75; and (3) deferred charges amounting to $77,113.06. These sums are attributable to the business outside the State, having been acquired by and used in such business. We again have before us the question of whether the maxim mobilia sequuntur personam — movables follow the person — shall be followed in the computation of this excise, or whether we should adopt for convenience the theory of business situs. The same question has *176
been before us on four occasions: White Bros. Lumber Co. v. TaxAppeal Board,
But counsel for the company insist that if the act is to be so construed, it offends section 2, Art. 10 of the State Constitution, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. This contention was made in Union Steam PumpSales Co. v. Secretary of State,
"Plainly, therefore, our only duty is to inquire whether the Constitution prohibits a State from taxing, in the hands of one of its resident citizens, a debt held by him upon a resident of another State, and evidenced by the bond of the debtor, secured by deed of trust or mortgage upon real estate situated in the State in which the debtor resides.
"The question does not seem to us to be very difficult of solution. The creditor, it is conceded, is a permanent resident within the jurisdiction of the State imposing the tax. The debt is property in his hands constituting a portion of his wealth, from which he is under the highest obligation, in common with his fellow-citizens of the same State, to contribute for the support of the government whose protection he enjoys. * * * The debt, then, having its situs at the creditor's residence, both he and *178 it are, for the purposes of taxation, within the jurisdiction of the State. It is consequently, for the State to determine, consistently with its own fundamental law, whether such property owned by one of its residents shall contribute, by way of taxation, to maintain its government. Its discretion in that regard cannot be supervised or controlled by any department of the Federal government, for the reason, too obvious to require argument in its support, that such taxation violates no provision of the Federal Constitution."
And in Southern Pacific Co. v. Kentucky,
"The difficulties attendant upon the taxation of intangible property elsewhere than at the domicile of the owner have largely preserved the domicile of the owner as the proper situs for purposes of taxation.
"The legality of a tax is not to be measured by the benefit received by the taxpayer, although equality of burdens be the general standard sought to be attained. Protection and taxation are not necessarily correlative obligations, nor precise equality of burden attainable, however desirable. The taxing power is one which may be interfered with upon grounds of unjustness only when there has been such a flagrant abuse as may be remedied by some affirmative principle of constitutional law."
See, also, State Tax on Foreign Held Bonds, 15 Wall. (U.S.) 300; Kansas City, etc., R. Co. v. Kansas,
The action of the secretary of State and the appeal board will be affirmed.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred.