220 U.S. 472 | SCOTUS | 1911
J.W. PERRY COMPANY
v.
CITY OF NORFOLK.
H. WHITE
v.
CITY OF NORFOLK.
Supreme Court of United States.
*474 Mr. Tazewell Taylor and Mr. Walter H. Taylor, with whom Mr. William Leigh Williams was on the brief, for plaintiffs in error.
Mr. Nathaniel T. Green for defendant in error.
*477 MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1792, at a time when it had no right to tax, the municipality of Norfolk, Virginia, leased to Lee and others several lots of land for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, the lessees and their assigns to pay the annual rent and "the public taxes which shall become due on said land." Subsequently the city was given the power of taxation, but made no effort to assess these lots until 1906. The lessees then sought to enjoin their collection on the ground that the "public taxes," they had assumed, were those which might be due to the State and to the United States. They contended that for Norfolk to assess land belonging to Norfolk for taxes payable to Norfolk constituted an invalid charge, and was not a lawful public tax of the kind which the lessees had agreed to pay, and that if such a tax could be assessed it was by virtue of statutes passed since the contract was made, and for the city to exert this new statutory power against them would impair the obligation of their contract.
In support of their claim that the city as lessor could not tax its own property, so as to make it a valid public tax payable by the lessee, they rely on the general rule that taxes are assessed to the owner, and as the landlord receives the rent he ought to bear the burdens imposed upon the property. On the authority of State v. Mississippi Bridge Co., 134 Missouri, 321; Thruston v. Mustin, Fed. Cases, 14,013, and like cases, they insist that this is a liability arising out of the relation of landlord and tenant, *478 and is not limited to short term leases, but applicable to those for ninety-nine years, renewable forever.
It is true that in the present case the indenture uses apt words to create a lease, and the Virginia court held that it was technically such. But there are other and controlling features which show that, even if the legal title is in the city, the lessees have rights different from those usual in a mere leasehold estate.
On condition broken, they do not ipso facto lose all interest in the property and its proceeds. The contract does not contain the common stipulation that the tenant shall be compensated for his permanent improvements. On the tenant's default the city cannot at once enter into possession, but "the lot and improvements shall be leased out at public outcry for the remainder of the term," and after deducting unpaid rent and taxes the overplus, if any, shall be paid to the lessees. This overplus would represent, in part, the value of permanent improvements and also of the unexpired term. Selling the city's property to pay rent due the city is not at all consistent with the idea of a mere lease. It indicated rather that the tenant had a substantial interest in the property which was security for the payment of whatever he owed the city. The contract creates an estate somewhat like the perpetual lease of the civil law, where the tenant was for many purposes treated as owner, and liable for taxes. Merlin Rep., vol. 10, p. 232; Cooper's Inst. 277, 278; Sohmn's Inst., 3d ed., 346. It was also similar in its nature to ground rent, where an annual rental and public taxes are perpetually charged on the land, instead of a gross sum being paid or secured. There the grantor is treated as having a fee in the rent reserved, and the grantee a fee in the land, subject, among other things, to the payment of public taxes. Duane on Landlord & Tenant, 96; Cadwallader on Ground Rent, 101; Robinson v. County of Allegheny, 7 Pa. St. 161.
The Court of Appeals held that in Virginia the general *479 rule that the landlord is responsible for the taxes "has no application to the case of a perpetual leaseholder where the tenant is in effect the virtual owner of the property and entitled to its use forever. For the purposes of taxation the mere legal title remaining in the landlord will be disregarded." It adopted that part of the language in Wells v. Savannah, 87 Georgia, 397, affirmed in 181 U.S. 531, where, in speaking of the liability of one who had a perpetual lease and a right to convert it at will into a fee, Judge Bleckley said: "The value of property consists in its use, and he who owns the use forever, though it be on condition subsequent, is the true owner of the property for the time being." Crowe v. Wilson, 65 Maryland, 479; Brainard v. Mayor of Colchester, 31 Connecticut, 407.
Ordinarily it would be a useless thing for a city to tax its own property. But this can be done under Virginia practice, and is not a vain thing if thereby property of the city, subject to taxation, is listed in its name as holder of the legal title, so as to fix the amount of the tax on the property which the tenant may have agreed to pay. Cooley on Taxation (3d ed.), 263. This ruling of the Virginia court presents no Federal question, but does establish that the tax was not illegal, as claimed, but was based on an assessment valid under the laws of the State.
Whether it is a "public tax" contemplated by the contract, or whether forcing the lessees to pay it impairs that contract, is a matter we must consider; for a valid contract of exemption from taxation may be impaired by wrongful construction as well as by an unconstitutional statute attempting a direct repeal. This court, therefore, "has power, in order to determine whether any contract has been impaired, to decide for itself what the true construction of the contract is." Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U.S. 657; Bryan v. Board of Education, 151 U.S. 639; Mobile & Ohio R.R. Co. v. Tennessee, 153 U.S. 495; Jefferson Branch Bank v. Skelly, 1 Black, 446.
*480 It is admitted that the lessees have expressly agreed to pay taxes due Virginia or the Federal Government, regardless of the character of the estate created. And, while it is true that when the lease was made the borough had no authority to tax, both parties were charged with notice that such power might, and probably would, be conferred when increase of population made it necessary. Even if the borough could have made a valid contract of exemption in 1792, there is nothing to show that it did so. On the contrary, the provision that the lessee was to "pay public taxes" was sufficiently comprehensive to embrace municipal taxes whenever they could thereafter be lawfully assessed on land or the improvements which were a part of the land. Where one relies upon an exemption from taxation, both the power to exempt and the contract of exemption must be clear. Any doubt or ambiguity must be resolved in favor of the public. St. Louis v. United Railways, 210 U.S. 273. Here there is not only no language of exemption, but a positive agreement on the part of the lessees to pay public taxes on the land. In compelling them to do so the contract is enforced instead of impaired. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia is therefore
Affirmed.