91 Tenn. 566 | Tenn. | 1892
On March 11, 1867, the Washington Eire and Marine Insurance Company, of Memphis, Tennessee, was chartered by the State, “with all the rigtits and privileges of the DeSoto Insurance and Trust Company.” Acts 1866-67, Ch. 71, See. 1. The latter company had previously been chartered “ with all the powers, privileges, AND immunities” of the Bluff City Insurance Company. Acts 1858, Ch. 166, Sec. 12. By' the tenth section of the charter of the Bluff' City Insurance Company it was provided, “that said company shall pay to the State an annual tax of one-half of one per cent, on each share of the
On March 28,. 1881, the name of the Washington Fire and Marine Insurance Company was, by legislative enactment, changed to the “ Phcenix Fire and Marine Insurance Company, of Memphis, Tennessee.” Acts 1881, Ch. 28, Sec. 1.
This bill was filed by the State, on behalf of the city of Memphis, against the last-named company and its secretary, to recover certain ad valorem taxes alleged to be due on capital stock, or, in the alternative, on shares of stock.
Defendants, by demurrer, claimed immunity from all assessments, except one-half of one per cent, on each share of capital stock subscribed, which the bill concedes has been paid to the State.
The Chancellor sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill. Complainant appealed.
The controlling question for our decision is this: Did the Washington Fire and Marine Insurance Company — -in whose shoes the Phoenix Fire and Marine Insurance Company now rightfully stands— acquire, by its charter from the State, the same immunity granted to the Bluff City Insurance Company by the tenth section of its charter, here-inbefore set out?
If it did, the decree of dismissal must be affirmed, for reasons stated in the recent case of Memphis v. Union and Planters’ Bank, ante, p. 546; if not, then the decree must be reversed and the bill entertained.
Did the last-named words, “ rights and privileges,” carry the tenth section of the Bluff City Insurance Company’s charter into the charter of the Washington Eire and Marine Insurance Company, and thereby give it immunity from all taxation, except that therein prescribed? Clearly it did not. Such, in our opinion, was not the legislative intent. In the absence of an intent to that effect, unmistakably manifested by the terms of the grant, the immunity must be held not to have been conferred. No presumption is to be indulged in its favor.
The Constitution of 1834, under which all of the foregoing charters were granted, used- in the same connection, one after the other, in the same clause, all the words, “ rights,” “ privileges,” “ immunities,” and “ exemptions,” as follows :
“ The Legislature shall have no power to suspend any general law for the benefit of any particular individual, nor to pass any law for the benefit of
Properly, the language of these charters' should be interpreted in the light of that provision of the organic law in which each word has its own office to fill, and no one that of another.
When the Legislature said the LeSoto Insurance and Trust Company should enjoy “all the powers, privileges, and immunities” of the Bluff City Insurance Company, more was meant than when it afterwards said that the Washington Pire and Marine Insurance Company should have “all the rights and privileges” of the JDeSoto Insurance and Trust Company. The words used in the former case, of necessity, have greater scope and fullness of meaning than those used in the latter case. It cannot, with any satisfactory process of reasoning or definition, be contended that the measure of the State’s grant was the same in each instance. There is a marked difference, and that difference lies, mainly, in the word immunities, whose use in the one case, admittedly, includes the limited tax prescribed
The words “rights and privileges,” as employed in the charter before us, do not embrace immunity from taxation in any degree.
The eases of Railroad Co. v. Hicks, 9 Bax., 442, and The State v. N., C. & St. L. Ry., 12 Lea, 538, are not necessarily in conflict with this ruling, for, in each of those cases, the purchaser was held to have the immunity of' the original corporation, upon the ground that the statute authorizing the sale, and the decree directing it, provided that “ all the rights, privileges, and immunities” of such corporation should be transferred to, and vested in, the purchaser.
The other cases of the E. T., Va. & Ga. R. R. Co. v. Hamblen County, MS., Knoxville, September, 1877, and Wilson v. Gaines, 9 Bax., 546, are in accord with the ruling made herein. Each of these latter cases went into the Supreme Court of the United States on writ of error, and the judgments of this Court were there affirmed. Railroad Co. v. Hamblen County, 102 U. S., 273; Wilson v. Gaines, 103 U. S., 417.
In still other cases has this Court held that the words “ rights and privileges,” do not embrace immunity from “taxation. Memphis and Charleston R. R. Co. et al. v. James L. Gaines, Comptroller, et al., MS., March, 1878, and citations therein.
The last named case was also affirmed in the
The opinion of ■ Mr. Justice Field, in Morgan v. Louisiana, 93 U. S., 217, was aptly cited as authority for the main proposition in Wilson v. Gaines, 9 Bax., 552, and also in Memphis and Charleston R. R. Co. et al. v. James L. Gaines, Comptroller, et al., MS.
A different ruling seems to have been made in Tennessee v. Whitworth, 117 U. S., 146, wherein the reasoning adopted by this Court in Wilson v. Gaines, 9 Bax., 546, was disapproved. But as late as 1889, the question here under consideration came again before the Supreme Court of the United States, in a case originating in this State, and involving the construction of a Tennessee charter, and in that case, Mr. Justice' Field, speaking for a unanimous Court, among other things, ' said: “ It is true, there are some cases where the term ‘ privileges ’ has been held to include immunity from taxation, but that has generally been where other provisions of the Act have given such meaning to it. The ■ later, and, we think, the better opinion is, that unless other provisions remove all doubt of the intention of the Legislature to include the immunity in the term ‘ privileges,’ it will not be so construed. It can have its full force by confining it to other grants to the corporation.” Pickard v. E. T., Va. & Ga. R. R. Co., 130 U. S., 642, citing and appi'oving, on this proposition, Railroad Co. v. Hamblen County, 102
Without referring to other authorities, we hold, upon what seems to us the clear weight of reason and judicial decision, that the Washington Eire and Marine Insurance Company did not, by its charter’, acquire any of ' the immunities of the De-Soto Insurance and Trust Company, and that its successor, the Phoenix Eire and Marine Insurance Company, and the owners of its shares of stock, are subject to taxation in the same manner as other like corporations and stockholders having no exemption.
The facts stated in the bill do not make a case of res adjudicata.
Complainant, upon the allegation of the bill, is entitled to a discovery of the names and residences of the stockholders, or, by proper amendment, to proceed against the corporation directly, for the purpose of appropriating dividends to payment of all proper assessments against shares of stock. State of Tennessee, for the use, etc., v. Home Insurance Co. et al., ante, p. 558.
Reverse and remand.