137 P. 386 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Under the grant of July 2, 1864, section 23, township 3 south, range 8 east, and section 31, township 4 north, range 10 east, in Park county, were transferred by the government to the Northern Pacific' Railroad Company. The Northern Pacific Railway Company succeeded to the ownership of these lands, and some time prior to the first Monday of March of this year it conveyed section 23 to Bernhard Blome, and section 31 to another purchaser. Each deed contained this provision: “Excepting and
We are called upon to determine whether that which the company reserved to itself in each of these parcels of land constitutes property which is subject to taxation under the Constitution and laws of this state.
That neither deed conveys the entire estate to the land described is apparent. That each carves out some interest which the grantor retains is not open to question, and that this interest is an estate in land must be conceded. The coal deposits which underlie section 31 form a part of the real estate within the definition given in section 2501, Revised Codes; and the reservation of those deposits, with the right to mine, constitutes an interest in real estate. While subsequent development may demonstrate that there are not any minerals or coal in section 23, still the right to explore for minerals, which includes the right to the possession of any portion, or all, of the'surface if necessary, is an interest" in the land as a whole. Section 2501, above, provides that “the term ‘real estate’ includes: The possession of, claim to, ownership of, or right to, the possession of land.” And this would be the rule independently of statute.
Our Constitution is not a grant of power, but a limita
During the life of the territory, public property was always exempt; but in addition certain private property as well shared the privilege of being relieved from the burden of maintaining the government. Doubtless, as an aid to the encouragement of the mining industry, mines and mining claims were placed in the exempt class, except for the period from 1872 to 1879, during which time patented mining claims were subject to taxation as other property; but this was corrected by the Act of the Eleventh Session above, and, at the time section 3 of Article XII was under consideration, mines and mining claims, as such, were exempt from taxation. The net proceeds of mines were taxed as other taxable personal property, and the surface of a patented mining claim was subject to taxation as other taxable real estate. When, then, the framers of the Constitution removed this species of property from the exempt to the taxable class, they must be held to have acted deliberately with the purpose, as disclosed by their debates, of subjecting mines and mining claims to what in their judgment was the equitable proportion of the burden of governmental expense.
Instead of section 3, Article XII, being a provision exempting property from taxation, it is in fact a revenue measure. It fixes an arbitrary valuation upon the surface of patented mining claims, as such, and provides the method by which the value of a mine shall be determined, viz., by the net value of its proceeds; but neither is relieved from producing its proportion of the revenue upon the basis thus established. While this provision does not exempt the nonproducing mine, by implication at least it determines that such a mine, independently of its surface, does not
Counsel for appellant apparently concede that most of what has been said is correct, but insist that since the surface of each of these parcels of land has been assessed to the purchaser, and since neither parcel has ever yielded any net proceeds from mining operations, there is not anything upon which to fix a valuation for the purpose of assessment, and consequently nothing to tax. The indispensable premise to this conclusion, however, is that the thing which is reserved in each instance is a mine or it is something without value. That definitions of the word “mine” sufficiently comprehensive to include the reservation in section 31, and possibly that in section 23, may be found, must be .conceded at once. To indicate their scope, a few illustrations will suffice: A mine is: “An opening or excavation in the earth for the purpose of extracting minerals.” (Anderson’s Law Dictionary.) “An excavation in the earth for the purpose of obtaining minerals.” (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.) “A pit or excavation in the earth from which metallic ores or other mineral substances are taken by digging.” (Black’s Law Dictionary.) “An excavation in the earth from which some useful product is extracted. A deposit of useful material.” (English’s Law Dictionary.) “An opening in the earth made for the purpose of taking out minerals, and in case of coal mines, commonly a worked vein.” (Kinney’s Law Dictionary & Glossary.) “A work for the extraction of minerals by means of pits, shafts, levels, tunnels,” etc. (Rapalje & Lawrence’s Law Dictionary.) “An underground excavation made for the purpose of getting minerals.” (Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary.) “Quarries or places where anything is digged.” (Jacob’s Law Dictionary.) “An excavation properly underground for digging out some useful product as ore, metal or coal. Any deposit of such material suitable for excavation and working, as a placer mine.” (Standard Dictionary.) “An excavation in the earth
The determination of this controversy depends upon the meaning attached to the term “mine.” Of necessity any definition adópted must be formulated more or less arbitrarily—grounded, as it will be, upon the intention of the framers of the Constitution as that intention is gathered from the Constitution itself and from contemporaneous history. Starting our investigation with the premise that in formulating section 3 the constitutional
When the framers of the Constitution formulated their ideas into Article XII, they caused all private property, except that enumerated in section 2, to be transferred from the exempt to the taxable class. In their zeal to compel every species of property to contribute to public expense, they included, as subject to taxation, the net returns from development or representation work on mining claims, however insignificant they might be. They also impliedly declared that a nonproducing mine has no taxable value, and there is not the slightest evidence that they used the term “mine” in any different sense from that employed in the Act of 1879. On the contrary, aside from the persuasive fact that they were dealing with the subject “revenue” and must have contemplated something in a condition which would or might produce revenue, we have the added force and effect of a
There has been no. period in the history of the state when the provisions of the Act of 1879, in every substantial particular, have not been in full force and effect. They were reproduced in the first revenue measure enacted after statehood (Laws 1891, p. '93, see. 50 et seq.), carried into the Political Code of 1895 (secs. 3760-3768), and are now found as the existing law upon the subject, in sections 2563-2571, Revised Codes. The identity of expression, the harmony of plan, and the unity of purpose, pervading these several measures, forbid the imposition of a different definition for the term “mine” in our state statutes, from that which-was attached by the legislative assembly of 1879.
While it is impossible for anyone to know with certainty what meaning the framers of our Constitution attached to the terms “mines” and “mining claims” in section 3, the application of those tests, denominated rules of construction, adopted and acted upon by courts throughout the civilized world, leads us to the
It will not do to say that, because neither of these reservations produces revenue, it is not of any value. From the very act of making the reservation, the presumption arises that each interest has some appreciable value, or the reservation would not
The asserted right to tax these reservations rests entirely upon the fact that each constitutes an interest in real estate, and that neither is a mine or a mining claim within the meaning of section 3, Article XII, of our Constitution.
Section 1 of Article XII imposes upon the legislative assembly the duty to “prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, except that specifically provided for in this article.” But this is only one of several injunctions laid upon the lawmakers by the Constitution. Of course, the legislative assemblies should give heed to these commands, but if they fail there is not any remedy. They cannot be coerced except by public opinion. We doubt, however, that anything more was contemplated by this provision of the Constitution than has been provided by law. Section 2502 declares that “all taxable property must be assessed at its full cash value.” The duties of the county assessor are prescribed. A
In the absence of any allegation bringing either of these rights within the definition of a mine, or disclosing that they are, or •either of them is, valueless, the complaint fails to state a cause of action. If this conclusion in its ultimate analysis involves a classification of property, which will result in denying to any person within this jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws— and we do not think that it does—the responsibility must rest upon the framers of our Constitution, who, in their zeal to promote the mining industry, arbitrarily gave to mines and mining claims a status before the law not enjoyed by other species of property.
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.