104 Minn. 179 | Minn. | 1908
This is an appeal from an order denying the right of the appellant to the return of certain money paid by it to the clerk of the district court under the provisions of chapter 328, p. 448, Laws 1907.
The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, a foreign corporation, with its home office in Newark, New Jersey, engaged in business in Minnesota under the authority of the laws of this state, as required by section 1625, R. L. 1905, on March 1, 1907, paid to the state treasurer of the state of Minnesota a sum equal to two per cent, of all premiums received in cash or otherwise by it in Minnesota for business done within that state for the year 1906. Ever since its execution the company has been the owner of a certain mortgage upon real estate located in Martin county, Minnesota, given to secure the payment of a promissory note for the sum of $2,500, payable April 1, 1907. The mortgage bore date of August 15, 1902, and was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds in and for Martin county. On June 5, 1907, the insurance company executed an extension agreement whereby it extended the time for payment of the note for a period of five years from the maturity thereof. This extension agreement was on July 24, presented to the county treasurer of Martin county, Minnesota, with the request that the treasurer indorse the agreement for extension as "exempt from registration taxes” in order that the mortgagee might have the extension agreement filed and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Martin county, with
The statute contemplates that the right to the return of the money thus deposited with the clerk of the court shall be determined upon motion. The making of findings of fact and conclusions of law is not required; but as the appellant elected to treat the order for judgment as equivalent to an order determining a motion, and appealed from it as such, the irregular practice maybe disregarded.
The appellant attacks the constitutionality of chapter 328, p. 448, Laws 1907, upon various grounds, and claims that, even if the statute is constitutional, it does not apply to an agreement extending the time for the payment of a debt secured by a mortgage upon real estate, and, further, that this insurance company, having fully complied with R. L. 1905, § 1625, is exempt from the operation of the registry statute.
The amendment to article 9 of the constitution of the state (chapter 168, p. 216, Laws 1905), which was adopted at the 1906 general election, provides that “taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects and shall be levied and collected for public purposes.” This amendment removes some of the restrictions which were imposed upon the legislature by the constitution as it stood before the adoption of the amendment. It provides for the classification of the subject-matter of taxation, and requires that taxes shall be uniform upon the subjects of the particular class upon which they are imposed. In making a classification the legislature has a very wide range of discretionary power. The classification must be reasonable, and such as
The right to possess and enjoy property is secured by law. This protection is extended to all by general laws; but by particular statutes the state often enables the owners of property to secure special protection therefor upon compliance with certain prescribed conditions. Thus, A. has $1,000 in cash, which he loans to B., and the law protects his rights in B.’s obligation to repay. But B.’s responsibility may be questionable, and A. may further protect himself by causing a lien to be created upon the real estate belonging to B. Thus, by a transaction collateral to that out of which the debt grew, A. secures absolute security for the return of his property according to the promise of his debtor. Under our system the land is not conveyed. It is merely pledged as security. The state has thus enabled A. to secure something of special value under conditions imposed by a statute designed primarily for his benefit. There can be no doubt of the right of a state to tax the benefit which its laws enable a person to secure, and which cannot be secured without the aid of such laws. The state may tax this species of property, which it calls a “mortgage lien,” as it may tax the right to succeed to an inheritance, and measure the amount of the tax by the money secured or inherited.
There were good and sufficient reasons why a special method should be devised for the taxation of this kind of property. It is a notorious fact that the owners of securities in the form of bonds and notes have not been in the habit of paying their proportionate share of the taxes,.
It is contended that the method thus provided violates the constitutional requirement that taxes shall be uniform upon all subjects of the same class. Under this provision all property belonging to the same class must be treated alike. There must be no discrimination between the subjects of that class. The same means and methods must be applied impartially to all the constituent elements of the class. The amount of the debt secured by the lien furnishes the normal and natural standard for measuring the amount of tax which shall be paid when a mortgage is recorded under this statute. The manner in which the value of the lien is to be determined must necessarily be left to the legislature, and it certainly seems reasonable to take for this purpose
The statute requires the payment of a fee of fifty cents for each $100 of the debt secured, regardless of thé time when the debt matures. The security is regarded as the same, whether the debt is payable in one or in .ten years; and as the tax is on the security, and not on the money secured, it operates uniformly upon all the subjects of the class. The provision that, if any mortgage shall describe any real estate situated outside of the state, the tax shall be imposed upon such proportion of the whole debt secured thereby as the value of the real property therein described, situated in this state, bears to the value of the whole of the real estate described therein, instead of being a ground of objection to the statute, is in fact made necessary by the requirement’ of uniformity. As the tax is imposed upon the security, and not the debt, there would have been an absence of uniformity, if the statute had not provided for the reduction of the tax in proportion to the value of the foreign security not taxable in this state.
R. T. 1905, § 1625, provides that every foreign life insurance company doing business in this state shall pay. annually a sum equal to two per cent, of all premiums received by it in this state in cash or otherwise during the preceding year, and that this payment shall be in lieu of all other taxes except those upon real and personal property owned by it’in this state, which shall be taxed the same as like property of individuals. Section 3, c. 328, p. 449, Raws 1907, the act under consideration, provides that “this act shall not apply to mortgages taken in'good faith by persons or corporations whose per
An agreement to extend a mortgage is an instrument creating or evidencing a lien, and is therefore a mortgage, within the meaning of the word as defined in this statute. The effect of the renewal is to create a lien distinct from and in addition to that created by the original mortgage. For illustration, a mortgage due January first will remain in force for fifteen years thereafter. If on the date of its maturity the mortgage is renewed for a period of five years, the date when the statute of limitations begins to run is postponed, and the lien thereby extended, for five years. The lien during this five years owes its existence to the renewal agreement, and therefore is not only created, but is also evidenced, thereby.
Order affirmed.