52 Miss. 127 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
The case stands on bill and demurrer. By the bill the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company claim exemption from state and county taxation under and by virtue of the 3d section of their original charter, granted by act of 17th of February, 1848, which section' is in the following words: “ That whenever any portion of said railroad shall be completed through this state, and is paying an interest of eight per cent, per annum on its cost, and not before, such portion may be taxed the same percentage, and no more, upon the capital expended in the construction thereof, as lands in this state shall be taxed.”
The bill alleges that neither the whole road, nor that portion •of it located exclusively in this state, nor auy part of that portion, is now paying, nor ever has paid, eight per cent, per annum upon the capital expended in the construction thereof; nor, indeed, has it ever paid such per cent, upon the capital invested in its construction if its whole net earnings during its thirteen years of completed existence were aggregated, much less an annual interest of eight per cent, upon such cost. Notwithstanding these facts it is alleged that the tax assessor of Lauderdale county has assessed against, and the tax collector thereof is attempting to collect from, said corporation a large sum for state and county taxes alleged to be due by it. The prayer was for an injunction.
It is insisted by the demurrer to the bill and by counsel for the tax collector that the words of the section of the charter relied on are too vague and uncertain to support the claim for exemption, which, it is correctly argued, is never presumed nor allowed unless explicitly and clearly granted.
That such exemption from taxation contained in the charter of a corporation organized under it is irrepealable and inviolable, is too well settled to need elucidation or citation of authorities. No principle has been more repeatedly or more violently assailed ,• none has more successfully withstood the shock of every assault. It is believed that no good purpose can be subserved by an extended discussion of it.
. The claim of exemption can only be successfully met in this case, so far as the point now under consideration is concerned, by answer and proof showing that, in point of fact, the earnings of that portion of the road located in Mississippi have been sufficient to pay an annual interest of eight per cent, tipon the capital expended in the construction thereof. If it can be shown that the earnings have been really sufficient for that purpose, but that they have been fraudulently diverted with a view to the continuance of the exemption, the same end would be accomplished We incline further to the opinion that if it can be shown that the earnings of the Mississippi portion of the road have sufficed to pay the required interest on such portion, and that this result has only been defeated by their abstraction and expenditure on those portions lying in Alabama, Tennessee, and Kentucky, the exemption must cease.
It is urged, however, that the exemption was repealed, and the repeal acquiesced in or accepted by the road, by the provisions of 15th section of an act incorporating the Southwestern Air Line Extension Railroad, approved 27th of February, 1854 (acts of 1854, p. 516), by the terms of which all the
It is argued, however, that it is not shown by the bill that, during the twenty years following the act of 1854, the road was in the habit of making any showing of its earnings to the authorities of the state with a view of entitling itself to the exemptions of its charter, and that this must be taken as an abandonment of such exemption and an election of that granted by the act of 1854. We cannot so regard it. There was nothing in the charter of the company requiring any exhibit of its earnings. There is nothing to show that any such exhibit was ever made, either before, during, or since the period covered by the act of 1854. If it was done it was an act of super
If this decision results in the exemption, practically perpetual, of an enormous moneyed monopoly, we can only express the hope that it may at least serve as a warning to future legislatures.
The bill alleges that, in addition to the real estate belonging to the company which may be said to be immediately annexed to and necessary in the conduct of its business, the corporation holds large bodies of land in various counties of the state which are detached from the road itself, and it claims that these lands are also exempt from taxation.
These lands were derived from the United States government, through the state of Mississippi, in the following manner :
. On the 20th of September, 1850, two years after the incorporation of complainants’ company by the state of Mississippi, the Congress of the United States granted to the states of Illinois, Alabama, and Mississippi large bodies of lands, situated in those states respectively, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of a railroad from Chicago to Mobile. Said lands were to be applied to the construction of said road exclusively, and to no other purpose, and the road when built was to remain forever free for the transportation of all troops or property of the United States. The road was to be completed in ten years,
By act of the legislature of this state of January 28, 1852, the lands so granted to the state were vested in complainants’ corporation. By act of Congress of February 18, 1859, this action of the Mississippi legislature was ratified, and the time for the completion of the road extended to 1865.
Of the lands thus coiiveyed to complainants they allege in their bill that a large portion remains still unsold by them, and it is claimed that such is protected from taxation.
This claim is vestéd upon two grounds : 1st, that the state holds said lands as a trustee, and therefore cannot tax them; 2d, that they are covered by the general exemption from taxation contained in the charter.
It may be readily admitted that if the state occupies towards these lands a fiduciary relation she cannot impose a tax upon "them, since the power to tax carries with it the power to sell, and thus to defeat and destroy the object of the trust. On the familiar principle that a trustee can do nothing to impair the value of the trust estate, or to diminish its ultimate enjoyment by the cestui que trust, it may be conceded that the state cannot derive a source of revenue for herself from that which has been intrusted to her for the benefit of another.
It is impossible, however, to see how the state bears at present this relation to the lands in question. They were granted to her by Congress for a certain purpose. By the act of 1852, in execution of this purpose, she conveyed them to complain,ants. Under the terms of the grant to her she came under •obligations to the federal government, if the road was not completed within ten years, to return to the United States all money •derived from sales of the land. By her act of conveyance to •complainants she exacted of them a bond to hold her harmless ;against the obligations exacted by the general government. It
If any doubt existed as to the correctness of-.these views, they must be considered as put at rest by the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case off Tucker v. Ferguson, 22 Wallace, 528, which is strikingly analogous. In that case lands had been granted by Congress to the state of Michigan to aid in the construction of a railroad, and these lands were subsequently conveyed by said state to a railroad corporation, with an exemption from taxation for seven years embraced in the statute of conveyance. The seven years having expired, and much of the land remaining unsold in the hands of the company, the latter resisted the imposition of any tax thereon by the state on the ground, among others, that as to said lands the state occupied a fiduciary relation which forbade her to tax them. Speaking-of the obligations under which the state had come to the-general government in relation to these lands, and which were-•in all respects similar to those in the case at bar, the court, say : “ We see no ground upon which it can be claimed that, she bound herself any further. Upon general principles she-could not tax the lands while the title remained in the United-. •States, nor while she held them as the trustee of the United.
We consider this case as decisive of the point under discussion, and we entirely concur in its reasoning.
The only material point of difference between the case of Tucker v. Ferguson, supra, and the one at bar consists in the fact that in that case the railroad company had mortgaged their unsold lands, while it is not- shown by the bill in this case whether the lands have been mortgaged or not;
We cannot see that this affects the principle, unless, indeed, the mortgage would make a stronger case for the road, inasmuch as it might be argued that the lands had thereby becomé directly connected with the superstructure itself, and the holders of the mortgage debt might claim that it should stand to them as a security, untouched .by the state, for the money which they had invested in the enterprise. Indeed the general solicitor of complainants, in a printed argument, prepared we presume before the decision in Tucker v. Ferguson was announced, states that the lands of complainants have been mortgaged, and suggests the argument indicated above.
The only case we have found militating in any degree against the conclusions here reached, and that very slightly if at all, is the case of Railway Company v. Prescott, 16 Wall., 603 ; and that case is expressly overruled in Railway Company
Are the lands protected from taxation by the 3d section of ■complainants’ charter? That clause provides for the 'exemption of ‘‘ any portion of said railroad,” etc. At the date of its enactment the lands in question had not been granted by Congress to the state. They were not conveyed by the state to the company for more than four years thereafter. It is impossible, therefore, that they could have been within the legislative contemplation. But are they covered by the language of the act?”
The very numerous cases involving a consideration of what species of property is embraced within a legislative exemption from taxation in favor of corporate or individual enterprises will be found in the copious notes to Mr. Cooley’s recent work on Taxation. He states the rule generally to be that such exemption will embrace all the property held by the corporation “necessary to effect the purpose of the incorporation, but not other property held by it, which, though convenient and tending to increase the profits, is not necessary to the corporation and its business.” Cooley on Taxation, 151; ib., 149, 150, and notes.
An examination of the authorities has not disclosed any case where the exemption was held to embrace property so entirely disconnected with the business of the corporation as are the lands in this instance. The rule already announced in the preceding portion of this opinion is as broad as that established by any well-considered case, and more liberal than that held in many of them.
We are of opinion that complainants’ lands, held under the grant from the federal government through the state, are proper subjects of taxation by the latter.
The demurrer challenges the jurisdiction of a court of equity to entertain this suit, upon the ground that a bill will not lie to enjoin the collection of taxes.
The bill, seeming to concede this general principle, seeks to
It is alleged that complainants are under contract with the United States government for the daily transportation of its mails, with heavy penalties provided for each and every failure to deliver them promptly; that the use of their entire rolling stock is necessary for this purpose, and that a levy and sale thereof by the tax collector would subject them to irreparable loss at the hands of the government, and to countless suits at the hands of passengers and affreighters; that the road trav erses a large number of counties; that a multiplicity of suits with the tax collector of each county is unavoidable ; and that tax sales of the real estate of complainants will cast clouds -upon their title. These allegations are, we think, sufficient to .give the court jurisdiction under the principles recognized in McDonald v. Murphree, 45 Miss., 705, and Richardson v. Scott, 47 Miss., 236. See, also, Watson v. Sutherland, 5 Wallace, 74; Davis v. Chicago, 11 Wallace, 108.
It is well settled that where a portion of a tax sought to be •enjoined is legally due, and a portion not, that the bill for injunction cannot be maintained unless the portion properly collectible is paid or tendered. Cooley on Taxation, 537, and authorities cited in note.
There was no payment nor offer of payment of the taxes due ■on the detached lands in the case at bar, but, there having been final decree in the court below against complainants and the •sureties on the injunction bond for the statutory damages on the whole amount of the taxes assessed, the decree will be reversed, and caíase remanded to be proceeded with in accordance "with the views here announced, and with leave to defendants to ¡answer in sixty days.
Upon final hearing decree for damages will be rendered upon the amount of taxes assessed and enjoined as to the detached lands, and such decree as to the taxes on other property as may then seem right and proper in view of the answer and proofs.