after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The unconstitutionality of a statute may depend upon its conflict with the constitution of the State or with that of the
In the case at bar the rate of taxation imposed upon the railroad and other corporate property is the average rate of taxation upon other property subject to ad valorem taxes, and that average rate is ascertained by dividing the total tax levy oh all such property by the value of the property. In Board of Education v. State Assessors, 133 Michigan, 116, the following case arising under the statute Was presented (p. 117):
“This is an application for a mandamus. It sets out, in substance; that the state board of assessors, in levying the tax upon the railroad property of this State, has assumed to fix the rate
This application was sustained, the court holding that the state board of assessors had no power to increase the value as returned to them by the local assessors and board of state tax commissioners, and saying (p. 119):
“A fair reading of this language of the statute, we think, leads to the conclusion that the board of assessors has imposed upon it the duty, ministerial in character, of determining by a computation from data, which the law provides for placing in its hands, the rate of taxation which other property in the State is subjected to, as it appears by assessment rolls which are supposed to contain an accurate and true assessment of all property at its full cash value. ”
While this case did not directly determine the constitutionality of the statute, a fair implication is that it was not regarded as obviously in conflict with the state constitution, for in that event the court would scarcely have taken time to consider the validity оf proceedings under its authority.
We, therefore, proceed to inquire whether the provisions of this act and the method of taxation therein prescribed are open to any constitutional- objection. We have had frequent occasion to consider questions of state taxation in the light of the Federal Constitution, and the scope and limits of National interference are well settled. There is no general supervision
“There can at this time be no question, after the frequent and uniform expressions of the Federal Supreme Court, that it was not designed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution to prevent a State from changing its system of taxation in all proper and reasonable ways, nor to compel the States to adopt an ironclad rule of equality, to prevent the classification of-property for purposes of taxation, or the imposition of different rates upon different classes. It is enough that there is no discrimination in favor, of one as against another of the same class, and the method for the assessment and collection of the tax is not inconsistent with natural justice.
Bell’s Gap Railroad Company
v.
Pennsylvania,
The first and principal matter of attack is the “ average rate. ” It is contended that the fixing of the rate of taxation is a legislative, function; that in ascertaining the average rate by the method described there is no exercise of the. legislative judgment, but that it is determined by the action of the various local assessing and taxing boards, who, though charged with no
There might be a question whether, еven if there were a clear delegation of legislative functions to other departments of the state government, it would be void under the Federal Constitution. Whatever, in view of the distinct grant in the Federal Constitution to the. President, Congress and the Judiciary of separately the executive, legislative and judicial powers of the Nation, may be the power of Congress in the delegation of legislative functions, a very different question is presented when the restrictions of the Federal Constitutiоn are invoked to restrain like action in a State. . Crimes against the Nation must be prosecuted by indictment, yet a State may proceed by information. Suppose a State by its constitution grants legislative functions to the executive, or to the judiciary, what provision of the Federal .Constitution will nullify the action? Will the grant work an abandonment of a republican form of Government, or be a denial of due process, or equal protection?
But it is unnecessary to enter into a discussion оf this question, for in the case at bar there is no abandonment by the legislature of its functions in respect to taxation. The statute prescribes as the rate of taxation upon railroad property the average rate of taxation on all other property subject to ad valorem taxes. It provides the most direct way for ascertaining such áverage rate, deducing it from a consideration of all the other rates. No authority is given to the local assessors to apply their judgment to the question of the railroad rate. Their authority in. respect to the matter of taxation is precisely the same as it was before and independently of this statute. Their duty is to act according to their .judgments in respect to local taxes committed to their' charge. When they have finished their action, taken, as it must be assumed to have been, . in conscientious discharge of the duties assigned, from it by a simple mathematical calculation the average rate оf taxation is determined. If the legislature should be convened after they
“The only security against the abuse of this power, is found in the structure of the Government itself. In imposing a tax
And again, in
Providence Bank
v.
Billings,
“This vital power may be abused; but the Constitution of the United States was not intended to furnish the corrective fоr every abuse of power which may be committed by the state governments. The interest, wisdom and justice of the representative body, and its relations with its constituents, furnish the only security where there is no express contract, against unjust and excessive taxation; as well as against unwise legislation generally. ”
Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway Company,
But this court, reversing that judgment, held that the reference to the receipts was simply to ascertain the value of the business done by the corporation, and thus obtain a reasonable conclusion as to the amount of tax which should be levied, saying (p. 229):
“If the amount ascertained were specifically imposed as the tax, no objection to its validity would be pretended. And if the inquiry of the State as to the value of the privilege were limited to receipts of certain past years instead of the year in which the tax is collected, it is conceded that the validity of the tax would not be affected; and if not, we do not see how
See also
Home Insurance Company
v.
New
York,
It may be laid down as a general proposition that where a legislature еnacts a specific rule for fixing a rate of taxation, by which rule the rate is mathematically deduced from facts and events occurring-‘within the year and created without reference to the matter of that rate, there is no abdication of the legislative function, but, on the contrary, a direct legislative determination of the rate.
Again, it seems more reasonable that the average rate should
While the peculiar method of ascertaining the average rate . prescribed by this statute may be . new, yet the application of an average rate to the taxation of railroads is not new, nor confined to Michigan. Sеe § 1, chap. 64, Public Statutes and .Session Laws of New Hampshire of January 1, 1901, section first enacted in 1878; Revised Laws of Mass. (1902) vol. 1, chap. 12, § 93, p. 227; chap. 14, §§ 37, 40, pp. 266, 268, incl., taken from laws of 1864, 1865 and 1880; Revised Statutes of Missouri (1899), vol. 2, pp. 2175, 2176, §§ 9363, 9364; Laws of Wisconsin (1903), chap. 315, §§ 7-14, incl., pp. 496-499; Railroad v. The State, 60 N. H. 87; The State ex rel. Brown v. The Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 92 Missouri, 137; Chicago & Alton R. R. Co. v. Lamkin, 97 Missouri, 496; The State ex rel. v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co., 161 Missouri, 188, 199.
We.have thus fár assumed that there was equity and justice in applying to railroad property the average rate of taxation' imposed upon other property. But this assumption is challenged. For instance, the. Chicago and Northwestern Rail- ■ road Company’s property is situate in- the Upper Peninsula of the State of Michigan—
“and yet the average rate of tax applied to its property depends upon, and increases with, the taxes raised on all the counties of the ‘Lower Peninsula’
or
Michigan, and in all the cities, towns, villages and school districts of those, counties, for purely local purposes. If Detroit spends $10,000,000 for local govemmént, the Northwestern Railway Company has to pay proportionately more tax on its property in Northern Michigan than if Detroit’s tax for local government were $5,000,000; and, beyond that, if Detroit spends $1,000,000 or $5,000,000 for purely domestic or private enterprises, such as
«£» fel* *1# *3* «1» it* •J* rj* ip ^ ^ ip
■ ''It may well be that (as respects the immediate, point) the unity of railroad property would justify a statutе requiring a railroad to pay taxes to the State at a rate derived by averaging the taxes, state and local, paid by others in the same taxing jurisdiction; but the question before the court is whether it can be made to pay a tax directly dependent upon, and measured by, the local taxes of. counties, cities, towns, villages and school districts where it has no part of its property and no office. Such a plan operates to tax the railroad because of the еxpenses (public and private) of local communities whose benefits it does not enjoy.” •
But these, considerations appeal mainly to the discretion of the legislature, and do not make against its power. Unless there be some specific provisions in the state constitution compelling other action the State may treat its entire territory as .composing but a single taxing district, and deal with all property as within the district and subject to taxation accordingly. There is no magic in Cоunty organization, no inherent necessity of dividing the State into small taxing districts. Frequently railroads are separated from other property, assessed by a state board, and the taxes collected therefrom applied to the’ general purposes of the State. Sometimes, it is true, a portion of the taxes thus collected is distributed
pro rata
to the counties along the lines of the roads, but the power of the State to apply the taxes from railroad property to only state purposes eánnot be doubted, and is often exercised. If it may take all the taxes received from railroad property and apply it to general state purposes, and, to that extent, relieve counties' in which there is no railroad property from their contribution to the support of the State, it has equal power to say that the average rate of taxation shall be determined, not by the rates upon other
Further, it must be borne in mind that the taxes collected from railroads in Michigan are, by sec. 16 of the act, applicable- ' to state purposes, and whiíe it is doubtless true that the appropriation- of these taxes to state purposes diminishes the tax burden which will fall upon other property, yet the case presented is one in which the legislature, taking a class of property, imposes upon it through state authorities a state tax for strictly state purposes. That, so far as the restraints of the Federal Constitution are concerned, it is within the power of a State to separate a particular class of property, subject it to assessment and taxation in a mode and at a rate • different from that imposed upon other property, and apply the proceeds to state rather than to local purposes-is not open to question.
Kentucky Railroad Tax Cases,
“But there is nothing in the constitution of Kentucky that requires taxes to be levied by a uniform method upon all. descriptions of property. The .whole matter is left to the discretion of the lеgislative power, and there is nothing to forbid the classification of property for purpqses of taxation and the valuation of different classes by different methods. The rule of equality,-in respect to the subject, only requires'the same means and methods to be applied impartially to 'all the constituents of each class, so that the law shall operate equally and uniformly upon all persons in similar circumstances.” -
See also
Pittsburgh &c. Railroad Company
v.
Backus.,
That no provision is made for a general equalization оf railroad with other property in the State does not vitiate the assessment. See
Cummings
v.
National Bank,
. “While it may be true that this system of submitting the different kinds of .property subject to .taxation to different boards óf assessors and equalizers,, with no common superior to secure uniformity of the whole, may give opportunity for maladministration of the law and violation of the principle" of uniformity of taxation and equality of burden, that is riot the necessаry result of these laws, or of any one of them; ' arid a law- cannot be held unconstitutional because, while its just interpretation is consistent with the Constitution, it is unfaithfully administered by those who are charged with its execution. Their doings may - be • unlawful while'the statute is, valid.”
While there may -be no provision for an equalization of-railroad with other property, it w'
1
! be perceived that the statute names the time and place for tm sessions of the assessing board,- gives to any person or company ' 'terestеd the right
Other questions are discussed by counsel in their briefs, but in view of the exhaustive and well-considered opinion of the trial judge, with the general trend of . which we concur, it is unnecessary to further extend this opinion. It is sufficient to refer to that opinion for a consideration of those questions. We - have noticed those which seem to us paramount and controlling.,
It is charged in the bill that there was a systematic undervaluation of other property in the State which resulted in denying to this plaintiff the equal protection of the law. The trial court - found against this charge. It is enough to say that, generally we accept the finding of a trial court upon a question of fact when the testimony respecting it is conflicting. It may also be said that a legislature is not bound to impose-the same rate of tax upon one class of property that it does upon another. ' As it may exempt all of one class so it may impose a different rate of taxation. It is sufficient if all of the same class are subjected to the' same rate and the tax is administered impartially upon them.
Affirmed.
Cases 'on the docket, numbered from 462 to 487, inclusive, are. suits brought by different railroad companies against this appellee, and are submitted on the same record. The same , decree will be entered in each of them. 1
