after making the foregoing statement,', delivered the opinion of the court.
Many questions which might otherwise be perplexing are. settled by the' decision of the Supreme Court of Michigan in Attorney General v. Joy et al., 55 Michigan, 94. That was an information brought by the Attorney General in the Supreme Court of the State, charging the defendants with сlaiming and usurping the corporate rights and franchises of the Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway Company. The act of 1855 was sustained, notwithstanding'some alleged defects in its passage, and it was decided that it did not create a new corporation but simply authorized the old territorial сorporation, the Detroit and Pontiac Rail Road Company, to change its name and extend its line of road, and, further, that this act in no respect conflicted with sections 1 and 8, article XV, of the state constitution. The court also sustained the act of 1859, under which the foreclosures took place, and held that by them no new company'was chartered, that there was simply a reorganization and continuance of the old company.
The latter act provides that upon certain conditions new stock shall be issued in lieu of the old stock, the old officers of the company superseded, “and the new stockholders and officers shall, in the law, be deemed and taken to be the stockholders and officers of said corporation, the charter and all laws appertaining thereto continuing to.be the charter and laws regulating and governing said corporation, except that it may be known and called, and sue and be sued, and may contract and do all acts which in the law it could have done in its old name, in and by the name set forth in the declaration aforesaid” (p. 253).
The testimony in this case shows compliance with these conditions. Cоmpliance was also shown in Cook v. Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company, 43 Michigan, 349, and in that case the validity of the new organization as a continuance of the old corporation was recognized.
*556
We thus come to the question of the effect of section 9 of the act of -1855. It has been often 'decided by this court, so often that a citation of authorities is unnecessary, that the legislature of a State may, in the absence of special restrictions in its constitution, make a valid contract with a corporation in respect to taxation, and that such contract .pan be enforced against the Stаte at the instance of the corporation. It is said, that we are not concluded by a decisibn of the Supreme Court of a State in reference to the matter of contract; that while the rule is to accept the construction placed by that court upon its statutes, an exсeption is made in case of contracts, and that we'exercise an independent judgment upon the. question whether a contract was made,, what its scope and terms are, and also whether there has been any law passed impairing its obligation.
Douglas
v.
Kentucky,
The particular section which it is claimed creates the contract (section 9 of the act of 1855) provides that the company shall pay an
“
annual tax of one per cent on the capital stock of said company paid in, which tax shall be inlieu of all other taxes, except" for .penalties imposed upon said company by its act of incorporation/ or any other law of this State." It is contended in the first place that this is a mere gratuity,' which can be withdrawn, at any timе, a statute in respect to taxation subject to change like other revenue statutes, and
Wisconsin
*557
& Michigan Railway Company
v.
Powers,
“A
distinction between an exemption from taxation contained in a special charter and general encouragement to all persons to engage in ascertain class'of enterprise, is-pointed-out in
East Saginaw Manufacturing
Company v.
East Saginaw,
That there was ample consideration for a contract in this case, if consideration be necessary, is shown by the opinion of the Supreme Court in Attorney General v. Joy, supra, when it says (p. 101):
"The act of 1855 was not promotеd exclusively in the interest of the railroad companies named in it, but the State itself was largely concerned, and expected to accomplish important public purposes by means of it. Twenty years before that time the State had planned for the construction of Several рarallel lines of railroad across the State from- east to west, one of which- was to be north of the line df the Michigan Central Railroad, and was expected to be of very high value, not only *558 to all that part of the State through which it would run, but to the whole State'. Much disappointment had comé from the road not being constructed; and when the Detroit and Pontiac Rail Road Company, which already had near thirty miles of road in successful operation, and could command means for the construction of 'more, proposed, on certain terms which were expressed in the аct of 1855, to purchase the rights and franchises of the Oakland and Ottawa Company, and.to"extend their own road, to Lake Michigan, there is no reason for doubting that the people of. the State at large looked upon this as a favorable opportunity for accomplishing a dеsire which twenty years before had found expression in the legislation of the State, and which ever since had been kept constantly in view. ”
“It has already been seen that the important public purpose which the State had in view in assenting to the act of 1855 has been accomplished; the rаilroad from Pontiac to Lake Michigan has been'constructed and for many years operated, and the State has reaped'the benefits. But in order to accomplish this public purpose , it seem^ to have become necessary to put the bonds ánd shares of the Detroit and Milwaukee Railway Company upon the market as well in Europe as in this country: the State recognized’ the necessity, and by its legislation provided for facilitating sales. The bonds and shares were sold to the amount of very many millions; and every purchaser of one of them made the purchase in reliаnce upon legislation of this State which appeared to sanction if not to invite it" (p. 104).
See further
Home of the Friendless
v. Rouse,
“It is objected that there is no consideration stated in the. act for the release from taxation, which it is claimed is necessary in order to uphold the contract. But. this is a mistaken view of the law bn this subjeсt.
“There is no necessity of looking for the consideration for a *559 legislative contract outsidé of the objects for which the corporation was created. These objects were deemed by the legislature to be beneficial to the community, and this benefit constitutes the considerаtion for the contract, and no other is required to support it.'”
Surely no clearer case of contract can be presented .than one in which a legislature passes an act in respect to a particular corporation making special provision concеrning taxation, and does so with a view of inducing large expenditures by the corporation and the completion of an unfinished- road, whose completion is deemed of great public importance, and where the special provision is, as required, formally accepted, the expenditures made and the road completed.
It is suggested that this provision is not in terms made perpetual. A sufficient answer to this is found in Home of the Friendless v. Rouse, supra (p. 437):
“Testing the contract in question by these rules, there does not seem to be any rational doubt about its true meaning. ‘All property'of said corporation shall be еxempt from taxation, ’ are the words used in the act of incorporation, and"there .is no need of supplying any words to ascertain the legislative intention. To add.the word ‘ forever ’ after the word ‘ taxation ’ could not make- the meaning any clearer. It was undoubtedly the purpose of the legislature to grant to the corporation a valuable franchise, and it is easy to see that the franchise would be comparatively of little value if the legislature, without taking direct action on the subject, could at its will resume the power of taxation. ” ■ '
It is further contended that the contract provided in ¡section 9 is one relating to the property of the shareholders and not to that of the corporation. The terms “share,” “stock,” “capital,” “capital stock” are of frequent and not uniform use, and we have often to turn to the context to see what is intended by its usе in a particular case. That a distinction exists between that which is the property of the several shareholders and subject to taxation as other property belonging
*560
to them, and that which is the property of the collective incorporated person we call a cоrporation, and subject to taxation as . such, has been repeatedly pointed out. See
Farrington
v.
Tennessee,
In the first of these cases a' bank’s charter provided that the company “shall pay to the State an annual tax of one-half of ^ one per cent on each share of the capital stock subscribed, which shall be in lieu of all other taxes,” and it was held that that was a contract in reference to the property of the-shareholders, and prevented further taxation upon their separate property. In the opinion it was said (pp. 686, 687):
“The capital stock and the shares of the capital stock are distinct things. The capital stock, is the money paid or authorized or required to be paid in as the basis of the business of' the bank, and the means of conducting its operations. . . . The capital stock and the shares may both be taxed, and it is not doublе-taxation. ” .
In the .second is this ruling (p._707):
“In general, an exemption of capital stock, without more, may, with great propriety, be considered, under ordinary circumstances, as exempting that, which-, in the legitimate operations of the corporation, comes to represent the capital. ”
And in Tennessee v. Whitworth, supra, p. 136, this description of separable elements of value was given:
“In Corporations four elements of taxable value are sometimes found: 1, franchises; 2, capital stock in the hands of the corporation.; 3, corporate property; and, 4, shares of the capital stock in the hands оf the individual stockholders. Each *561 of these is, under some circumstances, an appropriate subject of taxation.”
In several of the cases attention is called to the qualifying words which show an intent on the part of the .legislature of something other than that generally embraced within the term “ capital stock. ” But it is unnecessary to review these cases in detail.
By section 9 the tax is “ on the capital Stock of said company -paid in. ” Clearly that refers to the property which the corporation has received and presumably holds. It is not the individúa! property of the shareholders which is contemplated, but that which is in the treasury of the corporation, or included among its assets. This, as we have seen, is the ordinary meaning of the term “capital stock.” Further, we find that this taxis to be “in lieu of all other taxes, except for penalties imposed upon said company.” In other words, the tax upon the company of one per cent may be increased by penalties imposed upon the. company and in no other way. Again, the tSx' is to “be estimated upon the last annual report of said corporation.” While such report might be expected to include not merely the property belonging to the corporation but also the. nuipber and names of the stockholders and the number of shares held b.y each, and possibly also the amount paid in by.each, yet the word “estimated” carries with it the idea of valuation rather than of-mathematical apportionment. It suggests that the property reported by the. corporation. is to be the basis upon which the assessors shall make their valuation, so that the tax is “estimated” upon that property rather than fixed by the mere process of multiplication or division. That thе tax is to be paid by the company is of course not conclusive on the question, but it is in harmony with all the other provisions of the section. Still further, we have the practical construction placed by the authorities lor a long series of years — continued up ■ to the year 1898. Under those cirсumstances we are of opinion that the tax provided for by section 9 is a tax upon the prop *562 erty of the corporation and not- a tax upon the shares of stock held by the shareholders. There was, however, a contract between the State and thé corporation which prevented the-subjection of the property of the corporation to any other than the ..tax prescribed in the statute.
The decree of the Circuit Court is
Affirmed.
