120 Va. 137 | Va. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an application of plaintiff in error, J. V. Jamison, to the Circuit Court of Page county, made under the statute, to be relieved from the payment of taxes and levies assessed against him on intangible personal property consisting of bonds and notes evidencing loans in the aggregate amount of $36,650, to sundry persons, residents of Page county, and secured by deeds of trust on lands situate in said county.
The application was defended and contested by the Commonwealth, and at the hearing of the cause upon the evidence adduced for and against the relief asked, the court refused to correct the assessment as erroneous and dismissed the application; whereupon Jamison applied for and was allowed this writ of error.
Assessment of the bonds and notes in question was made by the examiner of records for the judicial circuit embracing Page county from the records of the clerk’s office of the county, and certified to the commissioner of the revenue for taxation against Jamison, as the owner of the bonds and notes as of February 1, 1915, the assessment being made by virtue of section 9 of the act of March 17, 1915, Acts 1915, p. 163, which, so far as applicable, is as follows:
“The provisions of this section of this schedule shall apply with equal force to any person or corporation representing in this State business interests that may claim a domicile elsewhere, the intent and purpose being that no non-resident person or corporation either personally or through an agent shall transact business here without paying to the State a corresponding tax with that exacted of its own citizens, and all bills receivable, obligations or credits and other intangible assets arising from the business done in this State are hereby declared assessable
The schedule referred to in this provision of the statute is schedule “C” of the general tax law ,as amended, and which classifies intangible property — bonds, notes, etc. — ■ intended to be subjected to taxation in this State.
The trial court certifies the evidence in the case, which shows the manner in which the bonds and notes in question were acquired by Jamison and the manner in which he deals with them, and the court’s certificate then adds: “The court further certifies that it was clearly proven as a fact at the hearing of said application, and indeed admitted by the applicant, Jamison, that said applicant was regularly engaged in lending money in Page county, as a business conducted for profit, and that the bonds assessed to him by the examiner of records, constituting the assessment here in question, were given for and evidenced loans made by him in the course of such business.”
Jamison, as is conceded, was at the hearing of the cause and had been for eighteen years prior, a resident of Hagerstown, in the State of Maryland, but previous to that period of time had been a resident of Luray, Page county, Va. The testimony given by him on his own behalf before the trial court, so far as material to the issue in the cause, is as follows:
“I am the same J. V. Jamison against whom the examiner of records for Page county returned $36,650 worth of bonds, belonging to me, for assessment for the year 1915. All of said bonds are secured by deeds of trust on lands situated in Page county, Va. I have loaned a great deal of money in Page county, and have some cash now that I would be glad to place here should I have a desirable application. I do not have an agency nor an agent in Page county to make loans for me, nor for any other
Upon being shown certain deed books in which two deeds of trust appeared to be marked satisfied on the margin by “C. S. Landram, agent for J. V. Jamison,’ the attorney for the Commonwealth asked the witness, Jamison, to explain the use of the term “agent” as it there appeared, and in answer to which Jamison said: “I do not know by what authority Mr. Landram used the term agent, but the fact is that upon receiving payment of several bonds I remember, after having cancelled them, I have sent them to Mr. Landram with a letter requesting him to take them to the clerk’s office and enter satisfaction on the margin
C. S. Landram, to whom Jamison referred in his testimony, was examined as a witness for the latter, and the substance of his testimony is that he was not the agent for Jamison and had never been; that he (witness) dealt in and sold a great many mortgage loans, many of which he sold to Jamison; that when he had an application for a loan that he thought would be acceptable to Jamison, he would write and give him the name of the applicant, the terms of the loan and the property offered as security; that sometimes these applicatio3is were accepted by Jami-son and he would advise witness that he would purchase or take the loan described, in which case the deed of trust would be prepared by witness in Jamison’s name and all papers forwarded to him, upon receipt of which Jamison would send witness his check to cover the loan; that in some cases Jamison would not advise witness definitely whether he would purchase the loan until he (Jamison) could come to Page county for the purpose of inspecting the property offered as security * * *; that Jamison had often refused to purcahse loans offered him by witness and that he (witness) was the trustee in all loans that he negotiated and that he had negotiated’ a large number of real estate loans, with quite a number of different purchasers and did not remember ever haying collected either any principal or interest for Jamison except in one or two cases in which he increased or renewed old loans, in which' case Jamison assigned the bonds to witness and they were merged in the new loan, after which they were released on the margin of the deed
With respect to the marginal releases which were made by witness in the deed books shown to Jamison, he stated that in these cases the notes were paid direct to Jamison by the borrower and that Jamison sent witness the can-celled notes, requesting that he make the release for him. Witness further stated that in these cases he designated himself the agent of Jamison for the purposes of these releases, thereby conforming to the language of the statute authorizing marginal releases and further, “I have never retained in my hands, for any purposes, any notes or bonds or other papers connected with Mr. Jamison’s loans, nor have I ever had in my hands any moneys belonging to Mr. Jamison to be used in making loans or for any other purpose. “I often have aplications for loans and agree to make them, when at the time I do not know with whom I will negotiate the loan; but they are subsequently sold by me to any one who is willing to buy them.”
G. T. Chapman, a resident and merchant of Luray, Va., testified: “1 am the G. T. Chapman who was the maker of the deed of trust recorded in the deed book shown Mr. Jamison, and which was released on the margin by Chas. S. Landram, agent for J. V. Jamison. I paid this bond by a remittance direct to Mr. Jamison in Hagerstown. He sent me the cancelled bonds, and subsequently-wrote Mr. Landram requesting him to go to the clerk’s office and make the marginal release there. I remitted my interest on this loan direct to Mr. Jamison in Hagerstown by my personal check. The last bond covered by this trust, but not the one released by Mr. Landram, I paid through the Page Valley National Bank, and the bank made the release on the margin of the record.”
The Commonwealth introduced no testimony to controvert that given by Jamison and his witnesses, Landram and
As we read the evidence quoted above, and which the circuit court certifies as being all the evidence adduced in the case by either party, it proves (1) that the bonds or notes in question, assessed for taxation against Jami-son in the county of Page, Virginia, were not in the State; (2) that Jamison had no agent in this State for any purpose — not even for the purpose of collecting the bonds or notes when due and remitting the proceeds; and (3) that these bonds or notes, since they were purchased or taken up as loans by Jamison, have been at all times in his possession at his place of residence in the State of Maryland, where they have been regularly “rendered” — ■ that is, listed and returned — for taxation, and the tax thereon paid.
It is conceded on the part of the Commonwealth that this State has no jurisdiction over the person of Jami-son, a resident of Maryland, and that “the case resolves itself into whether or not the bonds or notes, evidences of credit in the hands of a non-resident, arising from the non-resident’s regularly engaging in the business of lending money in Virginia, had a situs for taxation in this State where the business from which they arise is conducted, with or without the intervention of an agent.” In other words, that “we are not dealing with a single credit or a series of separate credits, but with a business.”
We do not gather from the evidence in the ease that Jamison was regularly engaged in lending money in Page county, Virginia, “as a business, conducted for a profit” within the meaning and intent of the provisions of the statute, swpra. Certainly it cannot be arbitrarily said
The learned Attorney General cites a number of cases decided in the Supreme Court of the United States as supporting the contention that the test of the right of the State to tax these evidences of credit is not the presence in the State of the evidences of credit, not the jurisdiction over the person of the owner, nor the intervention of an agent, but the localization of the business from which they arise. An examination of these cases shows that the power of the State of origin of the credits to assess the same for taxation- was upheld because transactions in connection therewith were conducted within the State by agents of the creditor on the latter;s behalf. So, in the recent case decided by this court of the Commonwealth v. United Cigarette Machine Co., 119 Va., 447, 89 S. E. 935, the power of the State to impose and collect the tax there in question upon the intangible property. of the foreign corporation, consisting of “notes and bonds,” accounts and money, was upheld upon the ground that the evidences of these credits were all lodged and kept in the company’s offices at Durmid, Campbell county, Va., and adhered to the company’s office at that place, and their actual situs had always been there. In other words, the authorities, some of which are cited, pro and con, in the instant case, are reviewed in the case just cited, and the tax in question there was upheld upon the ground that the facts in the case brought it under the recognized exception to the rule that intangible property is taxable at the owner’s domicile — that is, where a corporation or person residing in one State has an agent in another, who conducts the business of his principal, and . has notes, or other evidences of credit in his hands for col- ■ lection or renewal, with the view of keeping up a permanent business — then the actual situs of the evidences of
Landram, in no single instance, according to the evidence, acted as the agent for Jamison in the negotiation of a loan. On the contrary he is shown to have acted in such instances as agent of the proposed borrower in soliciting for him the loan from Jamison. That he may have, at Jamison’s request, examined some of the titles to real estate security offered, or that, upon the payment of the loan, he, acting under specific authority for that purpose, relased the lien, falls far short, as it appears to us, of constituting him the agent for Jamison in the conduct of a localized business, such as is essential to uphold the tax in question.
Not only so, and aside from the question of the power of the State to impose the tax, irrespective of the business upon which alone, as we have seen, the tax is sought to be upheld, the State has not, as we view the statute, attempted to impose such tax. The statute, supra, reads: “The provisions of this section of this schedule shall apply with equal force to oMy person or corporation, representing in this State business interests that may claim a domicile elsewhere, the intent and purpose being that no non-resident person or corporation, either p&i'sonally or through an agent, shall transact business here without paying to the State a corresponding tax with that exacted of its own citizens,
In any view to be taken of the instant case, it is not sufficiently clear that the purpose and intent of the statute in
“Laws imposing a license or a tax are strictly construed and whenever there is doubt as to the meaning or scope of such laws they are construed more strongly against the government and in favor of the citizen.” Brown v. Commonwealth, 98 Va. 366, 36 S. E. 485; Supervisors v. Talbott, 96 Va. 723, 32 S. E. 479.
For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion that the circuit court erred in denying to Jamison, appellant here, the relief sought by him in this proceeding and its judgment will be reversed and this court will enter the order which the circuit court should have entered, relieving Jamison, the appellant, from the payment of the taxes assessed against him, of which he complains.
Reversed.