Mayor of Baltimore v. County Commissioners

57 A. 632 | Md. | 1904

This appeal requires us to determine the interpretation and validity of chapter 579 of the Acts of 1900, entitled "An Act to add a new section to Art. 1 of the Code of Public Local Laws, title `Allegany County,' under the sub-title `Taxes,' to follow section 230 of said Article, and to be numbered section 230A," which is as follows:

"The incorporated institutions and companies of Allegany County, whether they shall or shall not have declared any dividends or earned any profits, shall pay the State and county taxes levied upon the assessed value of their capital stocks held by stockholders, residents or non-residents of Allegany County; but the holders of said stock shall not be liable to taxation upon the stock held by them."

The case originated in a bill of interpleader filed by the Barton and George'a Creek Valley Coal Company of Allegany County, a body corporate of that county, engaged in mining coal therein, against the County Commissioners of Allegany County and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, for the purpose of determining which of the two municipal corporations last named was entitled to receive the taxes upon 500 *3 shares of the capital stock of said Coal Company held and owned in the city of Baltimore, said taxes being claimed by each of said municipal corporations, and the Coal Company being unable to decide between said claimants.

A decree was made by consent requiring the claimants to interplead, designating the Mayor and City Council as plaintiff, and the County Commissioners of Allegany County as defendants, and ordering the Coal Company to pay into Court to the credit of the cause, the amount of taxes admitted to be payable upon said 500 shares of capital stock, if the same was payable to the City of Baltimore, that being larger than the amount payable if the same was payable to Allegany County. The cause was then submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, from which it appeared that the capital stock of said Coal Company consisted of 1,000 shares, of which 498 were held by the Black Sheridan and Wilson Company, a corporation of the State of Maryland, whose certificate was recorded in Baltimore City, and whose principal office and place of business was in said city, and one share was held by H. Crawford Black, and one share by Van Lear Black, both being residents of Baltimore City; and, that of the remaining 500 shares of capital stock, 250 were held and owned by Adam E. Hitchens, and the other 250 shares by the personal representatives of Owen Hitchens, deceased, the said Adam E. Hitchins, and the heirs, personal representatives, and distributees of said Owen Hitchens, deceased, being all residents of Allegany County, Maryland. It was also admitted that the State Tax Commissioner of Maryland had duly valued all the capital stock of said Coal Company for the purposes of taxation for the year 1903, and had duly certified the same both to the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City and to the County Commissioners of Allegany County; that the former had valued and assessed the said 500 shares held by the Black, Sheridan and Wilson Company, and by H. Crawford Black and Van Lear Black, to their said respective owners in Baltimore City and had duly levied thereon the proper tax for the year 1903 for Baltimore City; and the latter *4 had valued and assessed the entire capital stock of said Coal Company (as well the 500 shares owned and held as aforesaid by residents of Allegany County, as the 500 shares owned and held as aforesaid by residents of Baltimore City), to the respective owners thereof, in Allegany County and had duly levied thereon the proper tax for the year 1903 for Allegany County, and that none of said taxes for the year 1903 had been paid to either of said claimants, but that the amount ordered to to be paid into Court had been duly paid in. It was admitted that prior to the enactment of said Act of 1900, the said 500 shares held and owned in Baltimore City had for a long time been valued and assessed to the owners in said city, and the taxes levied thereon had been paid by the Coal Company to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and it was agreed that all irregularities, if any, in any of the proceedings, including the assessment and levy of taxes on said stock should be waived, and that the sole matter to be determined by the Court was the construction and validity of said Act of 1900, as affecting the right of the respective claimants to receive the taxes for the year 1903 upon the shares of stock held by residents of Baltimore City. The right of appeal was reserved to either party, and the decree being against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, this appeal has been brought.

It cannot be questioned in this State that the Legislature has the power to fix the situs of the capital stock of a corporation for the purposes of taxation, unless restrained by some constitutional provision applying to the enactment drawn in question. The first contention of the appellant is that the Act of 1900, according to the proper interpretation thereof, makes no change, so far as the situs of the stock for the purposes of taxation is concerned, in the general law of the State relating to the taxation of stock of corporations. If this position be correct, it will be unnecessary to consider the constitutional objections which would otherwise have to be decided, and we shall therefore consider at once the interpretation of the Act of 1900.

The general law of the State referred to above, is found in *5 sections 2 and 141 of Art. 81 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland.

Section 2 provides that "all shares or interest in any joint stock company * * * and all shares of stock in any corporation incorporated under the laws of the State, shall be valued and assessed for the purpose of State, county and municipal taxation, to the owners thereof in the county or city in this State, in which the said owners may respectively reside." Section 141 of Art. 81, after providing how the State Tax Commissioner shall ascertain and determine the taxable value of shares of stock in corporations, provides that "the said taxable value of such respective shares of stock in such corporations or joint stock companies, owned by residents of this State, and taxable within this State, shall, for county and municipal purposes, be valued to the owners thereof in the county or city in this State in which such owners shall respectively reside; and the taxable value of such of said stock or shares as are held by non-residents of this State, shall for county and municipal purposes be valued to the owners thereof in the county or city in which said corporation or joint stock company is situated." This section was construed in Hull v. Southern DevelopmentCompany, 89 Md. 10, where it was held that such tax was not due by the corporation, but by the individuals who own the stock, and that the corporation is made, for the sake of convenience, the agent of the State and county to collect the tax, and may charge it when paid to the account of such stockholders.

The appellant argues that the only change made in the general law by the Act of 1900, is that the holders of stock in corporations of Allegany County shall not be liable to taxation upon their stock, so that these corporations cannot under that Act, charge the taxes when paid to the account of such stockholders; but that the stock must still be valued and assessed to the owners in, and the taxes thereon be leviedby, the county or city where the stockholders respectively reside, and must still be paid by the corporation, as heretofore,to such county or city, and not to Allegany County, except in *6 the case of stockholders residing there. But we cannot adopt this construction. The obvious purpose of this Act of 1900 was to give to Allegany County all the local taxes upon the assessed value of all the stock of its corporations, no matter where such stock was held and owned. And since it provides that none of the holders of such stock should be liable to taxation thereon, and that those corporations should pay all the taxes levied on the assessed value of their capital stocks, we think this Act, if valid, must be held by clear implication to repeal, as to corporations of Allegany County, the provisions of secs. 2 and 141 of Art. 81 of the Public General Code, as to the mode of assessing and levying the taxes on such stock, and that under this Act, if valid, the ascertained value of all such capital stock should have been assessed in Allegany County, not to the respective owners, as was done, but to the respective corporations, and that the taxes should have been levied accordingly against those corporations. It would seem that it must have been the anticipation of such a possible view which led counsel to insert in the agreed statement of facts, the clause which waives "all irregularities, if any, as to the form of theassessment and levy of taxes on said stock." The Act of 1900 is an almost literal re-enactment of sec. 160 of Art. 1 of the Local Law of Allegany County, Code of 1860, which was before this Court in Alexander v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore,53 Md. 100, where it was said, "The effect of this provision is to make the corporation liable to pay all the taxes which the stock in the hands of the individual owners would be charged with; so that the State would get all its taxes at once, and Allegany County would get all the taxes which would otherwise be distributed among the various counties or cities where the stockholders lived." The appellant contends that this is obiterdictum, because, it is said, the only question there before the Court, was whether sec. 160 of Art. 1 of the Local Code had been repealed by the Act of 1860, chap. 157, providing for the general valuation and assessment of property in the State, as the Court decided it was; while the appellees contend that in order *7 to determine whether there was such repeal, it was first necessary to determine the construction of the local law in order to ascertain whether there was such conflict as to work a repeal. We agree with the view of the appellees upon this point, and we also agree, as we have said, with the construction placed upon the local law in 53 Md., supra. When the Legislature in 1900, re-enacted this repealed local law, in the same words, it is presumed that they had in mind, and intended it to bear, the interpretation given to it by this Court in the case cited above which strengthens the conclusion we have reached in reconsidering its language.

We come now to the consideration of the constitutional objections urged to this Act. The first of these objections is that it is in violation of Art. 3, § 51, of the Constitution of Maryland which declares: "The personal property of residents in this State shall be subject to taxation in the county or city where the resident bona fide resides for the greater part of the year for which the tax may or shall be levied, and notelsewhere, except goods and chattels permanently located, which shall be taxed in the city or county where they are so located." We have already said that while "the situs of property of this kind, for the purpose of taxation, is ordinarily at the domicile of the owner, the Legislature has the power to fix a differentsitus, provided of course, there be no conflict with some provisions in the Constitution." Baldwin v. WashingtonCounty, 85 Md. 156. As to stockholders non-residents of this State, and who are not embraced in the language of the aboveconstitutional provision, the exercise of such power was upheld in Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Balt. City PassengerRailway, 57 Md. 35, and in American Coal Company v. Co.Commrs. of Allegany County, 59 Md. 193. In the latter case JUDGE ALVEY said: "The American Coal Company is a Maryland corporation, deriving its existence and all its powers and franchises from this State. And such being the case, it is settled that the sovereign power of taxation extends to everything which exists by the authority of the State, or which is introduced by its permission *8 except where such power is expressly or by necessary implication excluded. The separate shares of the capital stock of the corporation are authorized by its charter, derived from the State, and are subject to its control in respect to the right of taxation, and every person taking such shares, whether resident or non-resident of the State, must take them subject to such State power and jurisdiction over them. Hence the State may give the shares of stock held by individual stockholders, a special or particular situs for the purposes of taxation, and may provide special modes for the collection of the tax levied thereon." In the last clause of the passage just quoted it must of course be understood that only non-resident stockholders are referred to, as only these were before the Court, and the taxing power of the Legislature as to these was not restricted by the Constitution. In an earlier part of the same opinion, in speaking of the same general provisions for taxation of stock which are now the law of this State, the Court said: "The manifest design of the law, so far as the local right of taxation is concerned, is to give to the City of Baltimore, and to each of the counties, the full benefit of all the taxable property, having either an actual or constructive situs within their respective limits;" and hence it held that where 58,700 shares of stock out of a total number of 58,800 in an Allegany County corporation, were owned by non-residents of this State, the Legislature could fix theirsitus for taxation in Allegany County and that the policy of the law as it was declared was thereby effectuated. That policy as to personal property of residents of the State, is fixed and imbedded in the Article of the Constitution above. It is founded on the 15th Article of the Declaration of Rights which requires every person in the State to contribute his proportion of public taxes for the support of the government according to his actual worth in real or personal property, and is a recognition of the fundamental principle that taxes are paid in return for the protection and services of government, from which it results that local taxes upon personal property, not permanently located elsewhere, should be rendered to the local government, which *9 gives protection and renders service to the person, and to the personal property which follows his domicile. As pertinent illustrations of the application of these principles, and of the policy of the law as declared in 59 Md., supra, we may cite the case of Bonaparte v. Mayor and City Council of Balt.,63 Md. 465, where an executor living in Baltimore County, took letters testamentary from the Orphans' Court in Baltimore City upon the estate of a deceased resident of that city, where the Court held that "personal property of an intangible nature, not permanently located elsewhere, such as bonds and stocks, must be deemed to remain within the jurisdiction of the Court pending the settlement of the estate, and be there liable to taxation." Also the case of Baldwin v. Washington County, supra, where a guardian appointed by the Orphans' Court for Washington County, and his ward both resided in New York, but the Court, nevertheless, held that the property of the ward in the custody of his guardian was subject to taxation under the Code, Art. 81, sec. 9, in the county where the guardian was appointed. The latest case in this State upon the situs taxation of stock is the Mayor and City Council of Balt. v. Safe Deposit and TrustCompany to be reported in 97 Md. 659, in which it is held that where property is capable of a two-fold situs for taxation, the Legislature may select either as the place where the tax shall be laid, and that the Act of 1902, chapter 486, which provides that railroad stocks and bonds held in trust, shall for purposes of taxation, be treated as belonging to the cestui qui trust, and not to the holder of the legal title, did not violate either Article 15 of the Bill of Rights, or sec. 51, of Art. 3 of the Constitution. In this case the Court was careful to say, "We must not be understood by what we have said in this opinion, to hold that the Act of 1902 is valid or effectual in so far as it may conflict with the special provision made by sec. 51 of Art. 3 of the Constitution for the taxation of goods and chattels permanently located or of mortgages and the debts thereby secured, or that the Act was intended to apply to leaseholds or any other interests in lands." *10

No Maryland case has been cited, and we know of none, either deciding or intimating that shares of stock held by a resident of the State can be taxed elsewhere than at the bona fide residence of the owner.

If shares of stock are personal property, belonging to the holder of the shares, the position of the appellant upon the point we are now considering, needs no argument to support it. In passing upon this question, the Judge of the Circuit Court in the course of his able opinion, said that shares of stock are muniments and evidences of a holder's title to a given or designated share in a portion of the property and franchises of the corporation of which he is a member, rather than the property itself. * * * And unless the substance is taken in place of the shadow, the thing itself for the evidence thereof, then the State is taxing the shadow, and not the substance causing the shadow, muniments of title, and not that to which title is held. Shares of stock are intangible, and the Legislature, in and by the Act in question, has only substituted the tangible for the intangible, the substance for the shadow."

But it will be seen by a comparison of the language of the Act of 1900, with that of sec. 141 of Art. 81 that it makes no such substitution. Each of these enactments deals with precisely the same subject-matter, the assessed or taxable value of shares of stock, ascertained and fixed in each case in the same mode and by the same machinery. If under the general law, sec. 141 of Art. 81, the State is taxing the shadow and not the substance, it is doing this none the less under the Act of 1900. Under one, the assessed value of the shares of the respective owners are valued (or charged) to them respectively, while under the other, the aggregate assessed value of all the shares of all of the respective owners are (or should be) valued (or charged) to the corporation. The only material change is in the requirement that all the local taxes levied on all the stock, shall be paid to Allegany County, instead of being distributed among the various counties where the respective stockholders live, thus clearly demonstrating that the *11 sole real purpose of the Act was to devote the whole of this local tax to Allegany County If this be forbidden, as we think it is, by the section of the Constitution referred to, the argument of the appellees that as the wealth of Allegany County is made up largely of coal mines operated by corporations like the one in question, and that as this source of wealth is decreased from year to year by the removal of the coal, and as the cost of police protection to the property of these mining corporations is borne by Allegany County, justice requires that all the local taxes on the stock should be paid to that county, would in no event be a consideration to be addressed to the Court.

But can it be seriously questioned that shares of stock are personal property of the respective owners for the purpose of taxation? We think not. Desty in his work on taxation, vol. 1, p. 364, says, "The property of a corporation, and the shares of stock may be taxed, they being different properties;" and again, on p. 355, he says: "the property in shares of stock is completely vested in the owner." Cook on Stockholders, vol. 1, sec. 12, says: "Stock, though personalty, is not a chattel; it is rather a chose in action, or as some older authorities declare,property in the nature of a chose in action." And in sec. 565, speaking of the right of a Legislature of a State to tax its citizens, who are stockholders in a foreign corporation, upon their shares of stock, at their residence, he says: "This principle of law is based on the fact that shares of stock arepersonal property, and are distinct from the corporate property, franchises and capital stock." In Farrington v.Tennessee, 95 U.S. 687, the Supreme Court of the United States said: "The shares are held and may be bought and sold, and may be taxed like other property." In U.S. Electric Light and PowerCompany v. The State, 79 Md. 70, this Court, speaking of shares of stock in the company, said: "These shares areproperty, and under existing law, taxable property, and belong to the shareholders respectively and individually." We cannot, therefore, adopt the view of the learned Judge below, and must hold that these shares of stock are personal property *12 belonging to the respective shareholders, and are within the scope and operation of sec. 51 of Art. 3 of the Constitution of Maryland.

It is further objected that the Act in question violates section 33 of Article 3 of the Constitution of Maryland, which provides that "the General Assembly shall pass no special law for any case for which provision has been made by a general law;" since provision has been made by an existing general law for the taxation of shares of stock in the hands of the owners and to the owners, at their places of residence, while by this Act, all shares of stock in any corporations of Allegany County, are assessed and taxed in Allegany County to these corporations, and the shareholders are exempted from taxation thereon. In Cooley'sConstitutional Limitations, 165 note, it is said: "The termgeneral, when used in antithesis to special, means relating to all of a class, instead of to persons only, of that class." In Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Rawle's ed., p. 1034, it is said: "The features of local and special legislation overlap, but they are not coterminous. The matter to which a local law relates may be either general or special, but in either case the law itself is not in force outside of the locality for which it is passed." Recognizing this distinction, this Court, through JUDGE ALVEY, in State v. County Commissioners, 29 Md. 520, said: "Local laws of the class to which the Act under consideration belongs, are distinguished from public general laws only in this, that they are confined in their operation to certain prescribed or territorial limits." The Act of 1902, though professing to be a local law for Allegany County, is not confined in its operation to the limits of that County. It operates in every county in the State in which there is resident any stockholder of an Allegany County corporation, and withdraws from every such county, under a special provision, relating to one class of corporations only, the tax upon shares of stock held by residents of such county, which under the existing general provision would go into the treasury of every such county. If this law is valid, a similar law, professing to operate only in Baltimore City, would be *13 valid, although it would in fact operate in every county in the State where stock in Baltimore corporations was held by residents of the counties, with the effect not only to deprive the county treasuries of the tax upon such stock payable to them under the existing general law, but also to subject these stockholders indirectly to the increased rate of taxes imposed by Baltimore City for the numerous benefits, in their nature available only for residents of that City.

For the reasons stated the decree of the lower Court will be reversed, and the cause be remanded in order that a decree may be passed in conformity with this opinion.

Decree reversed and cause remanded.

(Decided March 23rd, 1904.)