This case involves the liability to State taxation of property sold by the United States to a private corporation with possession given and the purchase money partly paid, but with the legal title retained to secure the balance due. An injunction and a declaratory judgment were sought by Ken Realty Company against the State Tax Assessor, to stop the assessment against itself of any tax in respect of the site of the former postoffice in Birmingham, Alabama. The District Court sustained a motion to dismiss the complaint on its merits, filing an opinion,
The material facts are these: The United States desired to dispose of the old postoffice site, and on March 30, 1940, accepted a written bid made therefor by Ken Realty Company. According to the written contract thus made the property was purchased for $255,010, of which $12,-750.50 was paid down, and the balance was
The District Judge thought the case similar to any other in which a purchaser on instalments, having possession, with title retained to secure the purchase money, is taxed for the full value of the property, and the seller is taxed on what is the equivalent of a mortgage held by him; except that of course the United States is immune from taxation on its mortgage. The Attorney General contends that the full value is assessable as the court held, but that the proposed assessment at $130,-000 is not on the full value of the property, but only on the Ken Realty Company’s present interest in it, which is measured by the full value less the amount of the balance of purchase money.
Everyone recognizes that not only the instrumentalities of government but all the property of the United States, however used, are exempt from State taxation, by reason of a mutual immunity implied in the Federal Constitution, and first stated in McCulloch v. State of Maryland,
By Alabama Code, Title 51, § 21, the subjects of taxation, except as exempted, are declared to include “(a) Every piece, parcel, tract or lot of land in the State, including therein all things pertaining to such land * * * and every separate or special interest in any land, such as mineral [etc.] * * * or any other interests when such interests are owned by persons other than the owner of the surface or soil, except growing crops. * * * (n) All other property real, personal or mixed not hereinbefore specified.” This language reaches every interest in land not exempt from taxation, and whose owner is not immune. Special interests may be separately valued and taxed whenever they ought to be.
When no exemption of the property or immunity of the owner thereof is involved, but all interests, though separately owned, are taxable, it is usual to fix the value of the whole lot or parcel of land and assess the tax against that owner who is in possession and receiving the rents, issues and profits of the land. Thus in case of a life estate and remainder the owner of the life estate is assessed. Where title is conveyed to secure a debt, the • debtor in possession is assessed. Where land is sold with title retained to ■secure purchase money, the purchaser in possession is assessed. Recognizing that the vendor retaining title is more than a mortgagee, since he commonly sustains the loss if the property is destroyed, the Su
But when a separate interest, in a piece of property is exempt, or its owner is immune from taxation, the several separate interests must be recognized. In the White Furniture Co. case, supra [
Since the immunity of the United States under the Federal Constitution is a federal question, the Alabama decisions do not control, but rather those of the Supreme Court of the United States. Under the latter, though the immunity is personal and not transferable, it is held that in disposing of the public lands to settlers, the immunity protects the land from taxation until all has been done or paid which is necessary to entitle the settler to a conveyance. Typical is Irwin v. Wright,
A purchaser of the taxpayer’s interest, whether by tax sale or private sale, would pay no more than the value of the lots, less the amount of the unpaid purchase money. Therefore that difference is the value that ought to be considered the true value of the purchaser’s taxable interest. A tax sale on the terms prescribed in the-New Brunswick case would merely put the purchaser in the shoes of the taxpayer, and would do no prejudice to the United States.
But to hold that the purchaser’s interest in property so situated is to be untaxed because legal title is not yet de-mandable by him, might result in great injury to the State without benefit to the United States. The purchaser of this postoffice site might put a million dollar building on it, and pay all the purchase money except a few thousand dollars, and by securing further time to pay that balance might escape just taxes for many years. And if the transaction were reversed and the government should buy land on installments with the title retained, it would, if legal title is to control, enjoy no freedom from taxes on its investment until such title should become demandable. We áre convinced that the Ken Realty Company has a taxable interest whose value is measured each tax year by the value of the whole property diminished by the amount of unpaid purchase money. The unpaid purchase money measures the interest of the United States, which can neither be assessed nor sold.
We consciously refuse to follow Lincoln County v. Pacific Spruce Corp., 9 Cir., 26 F.2d 43S. We express no opinion as to the correctness of the. proposed valuation of $130,000; nor as to the date when taxability began, those questions not being made or argued. Since the appellant by its petition does not show itself entitled to the injunction or to the declaration for which it prays, the judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
