delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for taxes brought by the State of Alabama against the executrix of the will of a citizen of Alabama. It appears on the record that the property in dispute is stock in *731 railroads incorporated in other States than Alabama, and that the objection was taken seasonably by plea and by requests for instructions to the jury that 'the tax was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment, because no similar tax was levied on the gtock of domestic railroads or of foreign railroads doing business in that State. Demurrers to the pleas were sustained, there was a verdict for the plaintiff and judgment, which latter was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State without discussion, on the authority"of its decismn at an earlier stage, State v. Kidd, 125 Alabama, 413, and the case is brought here by writ of error.
The statutes levying the tax in question are the Code of 1886, § 453, cl. 13, and the Code of 1896, § 3911, cl. 14. They are general clauses, which need not be set forth, as their effect is not disputed under the construction given to them by the Supreme Court of the State. The exemption by the Code of 1886 of stock in domestic railroads, and in others that list substantially all their property for taxation,
Sturges
v.
Carter,
If the argument went further and denied the right to tax on fiction at all; and therefore denied the right to tax foreign stocks, it would seem to us. to have more logical force, although we are far from implying that it would be unanswerable or that it can be regarded as open. Very likely such taxes can .be justified without the help of fiction.
Sturges
v.
Carter,
We say that the State in taxing stock may take into account the fact that the property and franchises of the corporation are untaxed, whereas in other cases they are taxed ; and we say untaxed, because they are not taxed by the State in question. The real grievance in a case like the present is that, more than probably, they are taxed elsewhere. But with that the State of Alabama is not concerned. No doubt it would be a great advantage to the country and to the individual States if principles of taxation could be agreed upon which did not conflict with each other, and a common scheme could be adopted by which taxation of substantial!}' the same property iri two jurisdictions could be avoided. But the Constitution of the United States does not go so far.
Coe
v. Errol,
Tt is said that the State may not tax a man because by fiction his property is within the jurisdiction, and then discriminate against him upon the fact that it is without. The State does *733 nothing of the kind. It adheres throughout to the 'fiction, if it be'one, that the stock, the property of the plaintiff in error, is within the jurisdiction. There is no inconsistency in the State’s recognizing at the same time that the property of the corporation, that which gives the plaintiff’s stock its value, is taxed or untaxed, as the case may be. There is no inconsistency in recognizing that it is untaxed because it cannot be reached. Shares of stock may be within a State, and the property of the corporation outside it.
We need not repeat the commonplaces as to the large latitude allowed to the States for classification upon any reasonable basis.
Pacific Express Co.
v.
Seibert,
Practically the law before us, in the broad aspect in which alone we are asked to consider it, seems to us to work out substantial justice and equality, if we leave on one side the probable taxation by other States, which does not affect the State of Alabama’s rights.
Judgment affirmed.
Kidd v. Alabama, No. 157. This cage was to abide the result of the foregoing.
Judgment affirmed.
