25 Wash. 95 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Suit to enjoin the collection of taxes levied upon property belonging to appellant in Chehalis county. The assessor listed and assessed to appellant some reservoirs and lines of pipes in the town of Hoquiam, and also listed and assessed three steam tugs, — the Traveler, Astoria, and Printer. The complaint states that the acts of the assessor were invalid, and questions his right to his
The material controversy here is the validity of the assessment upon the three tugs. Counsel for plaintiff urges that, as these tugs were registered in the port of San Francisco, they are not liable to taxation in this state. The question is not entirely free from doubt. In 1854 the right to tax a vessel engaged in interstate commerce was considered by the supreme court of the United States in Hays v. Pacific Mail Steamship Co., 17 How. 596. The facts were that the steamship company was incorporated under the laws of Hew York; that all the stockholders were residents and citizens of that state; that the principal office for transacting business was in the city of Hew
“These provisions, and others that might be referred to, very clearly indicate that the domicile of a vessel that requires to be registered, if we may so speak, or home port, is the port at which she is registered and which must be the nearest to the place where the owner or owners reside.”
In speaking of the vessels it was said:
“They are thus engaged in the business and commerce of the country, upon the highway of nations, touching at such ports and places as these great interests demand, and which hold out to the owners sufficient inducements by the profits realized or expected to be realized. And so far as respects the ports and harbors within the United States, they are entered and cargoes discharged or laden on board, independently of any control over them, except as it respects such municipal and sanitary regulations of the local authorities as are not inconsistent with the constitution and laws of the general government, to which belongs the regulation of commerce with foreign nations and between the states. . . . Besides, whether the vessel, leaving her home port for trade and commerce, visits in the course of her voyage or business, several ports, or confines her operations in the carrying trade to one, are questions that will depend upon the profitable returns of the business, and will furnish no more evidence that she has become a part of the personal property within the state and liable to taxation at one port than at the others. She is within the jurisdiction of all or any one of them temporarily, and for a purpose wholly excluding the idea of permanently abiding in the state, or changing her home port.”
Again, in Morgan v. Parham, 16 Wall. 471, the facts were that a vessel, the Frances, was brought to Mobile, Alabama, which was duly registered at the port of Few York, under the ownership of the plaintiff, according to the acts of congress. The plaintiff was, and had since remained, a citizen of Yew York, and the vessel was the
“The fact that the vessel was physically within the limits of the city of Mobile, at the time the tax was levied, does not decide the question. Thus, if a traveler on that day had been passing through that city in his private carriage, or an emigrant with his worldly goods on a wagon, it is not contended that the property of either of these persons would be subject to taxation as property within the city. It is conceded by the respective counsel 1hat it would not have been. On the other hand this vessel, although a vehicle of commerce, Avas not exempt from taxation on that score. A steamboat or a post-coach engaged in a local business Avithin a state may be subject to local taxation, although it carry the*100 mail of the United States. The commerce between the states may not be interfered with by taxation or other interruption, but its instruments and vehicles may be. It is not, therefore, upon this principle that we are to decide the case. . . . The imposition in this class of cases was a tax upon the use of the public waters of the country, and tended immediately to interfere with and to obstruct the commerce between the states. In the instance before us the tax was upon a vessel at the wharf. It was in this respect as if a tax had been laid upon lumber or cotton lying on the dock at Mobile. This vessel was owned by and employed in the service of a resident of the state of Mew York. It was primarily and presumptively taxable under the authority of that state, and of that state only.”
And again the court concludes:
“It is the opinion of the court that the state of Alabama and no jurisdiction over this vessel for the. purpose of taxation, for the reason that it had not become incorporated into the personal property of that state, but was there temporarily only, and that it was engaged in lawful commerce between the states with its situs ‘at the home port of Mew York, where it belonged and where its owner was liable to be taxed for its value.”
It is also said that it was immaterial whether the steamer, the Frances, was actually taxed in Mew York or not; she was liable to taxation there.
Again, in Moran v. New Orleans, 112 U. S. 69 (5 Sup. Ct. 38), a municipal ordinance of the city of Mew Orleans to establish the rate of license for professions, callings, and other business, which assessed and directed to be collected from persons owning and running towboats to and from the Gulf of Mexico and the city of Mew Orleans was adjudged to be a regulation of commerce among the states and invalid. It will be observed that the first two cases seem to put the invalidity of the tax upon the ground of an interference with commerce among the
“Under the admitted facts of this case we are of the opinion that the vessels of the appellee were not subject to taxation in Duval county. The vessels were owned by a Mew York corporation and had acquired a situs in that state by being duly registered in the port of Mew York,*102 the nearest to the residence of the owner, and were engaged in commerce in that state where, it is conceded, the most profitable employment could be procured for them. The mere fact of being employed in interstate commerce would not exempt them from taxation, and we do not say that registration in a foreign port and nonresident ownership should control absolutely, but such ownership and registration render them primarily and presumptively taxable only in their home port.” •
But in the well considered case of National Dredging Co. v. State, 99 Ala. 462 (12 South. 720), the facts were that the dredging company was a Delaware corporation, and the tugboat was registered at Wilmington, Delaware, and afterwards was in Mobile Bay for a long time, engaged in dredging in connection with other scows and machinery owned by the same company. The contract for dredging was with the government of the United States. The court observed of the tugboat Curtis:
“. ... a special consideration is advanced in sup port of its non-taxability. It is a sea-going vessel, propelled by steam, and is entitled to registry under statutes of the United States at the port of its owner’s domicil. As a matter of fact, it is registered at the custom house in the city of Wilmington, Delaware. On this the contention is that that being home, it cannot be taxed elsewhere. There are many cases which hold that such vessel, engaged in commerce between its home port and others, or even wholly between other ports than that of its registry, can he taxed only at the port of registry. It is not our purpose to question these decisions; ■ it is not necessary that we should. They all proceed upon the theory that vessels thus engaged are never in foreign jurisdiction except temporarily, and as an incident to the commerce to which they are devoted, and hence that they do not and cannot acquire a situs in foreign ports for the purposes of taxation; they do not become incorporated with the property of other states and countries which they touch intermittently, are never indefinitely there, and*103 their business, the work they perform, the uses to which they are put, is not done and performed within, and are not local to, the foreign state or country.”
And the court concludes:
“The question, indeed, is at last one of situs in fact, and where this is shown neither foreign registry nor foreign ownership is of any consequence.”
Sound reasons exist for the right of the state to tax these vessels that are permanently here transacting local business. They receive the full protection of the local government, and, if mere registry in another port is conclusive against the right to tax here, a boat can operate in our local waters, confined entirely tb local business, and, if owned elsewhere, may evade all taxation in this state. Such construction should not be adopted unless imperatively demanded by superior authority. Under the revenue law of this state, personal property is taxed at its situs, and without reference to the residence of the owner.
We have examined the evidence in the record upon the exception made to the findings of the superior court and fully coincide with the findings. The evidence discloses that for from four to seven years the three tugs have been at Hoquiam, in Ohehalis county; that their business has been towing in the waters of Gray’s and Willapa Harbors in this state; that the corporation plaintiff, for some fifteen years last past, has owned and operated large saw mills, owns large areas of timber lands, and has manufactured from twenty to thirty million feet of lumber annually ; that these tugs tow vessels usually from Hoquiam through the harbor to the ocean; that all contracts of tow-age are made by the captains of the respective tugs, who reside at Hoquiam; that the crews reside there; that the assistant secretary and manager of the company resides
The judgment is affirmed.
Dunbab, Tuxleeton and Andebs, JJ., concur.