Pyle v. Brenneman

122 F. 787 | 4th Cir. | 1903

BOYD, District Judge

(after stating the facts). It was admitted that this assessment was made by the authorities of Tyler county arbitrarily and without the consent of the complainant, and he has therefore waived no legal right to contest it. There was nothing in the evidence taken in the case to controvert the testimony of Brenneman that he was on the ist of April, 1900, a citizen and resident of the state of Pennsylvania. Upon his examination he stated that prior to that time he had sold out his oil property in West Virginia, had shipped part of his personal effects, and on the 19th of March, 1900, had abandoned his residence in Tyler county, W. Va., and had become a citizen and resident'of Pennsylvania; residing awhile at Titusville, and latterly at Pittsburg. Other testimony and circumstánces were corroboratory of this statement. The judge in circuit was therefore, in our opinion, fully warranted in treating the non-residence of the complainant as a fact established. The principles of law relating to domicile are well settled, that, when one domicile is definitely, abandoned and another selected, the change takes place. The length of time intervening is not material. “A change of domicile is consummated when one leaves the state where he has hitherto resided, avowing his intention not to return, and enters another state, intending to permanently settle there.” Bradley v. Lowry, Speer, Eq. 1, 39 Am. Dec. 142. This is an elementary principle, and-authorities in support of it are so numerous and harmonious that it is not deemed necessary to cite them here. This question being eliminated, it only remains to be considered whether or not Brenneman’s deposits, subject to his check, in the banks at Sistersville, in Tyler county, are liable to personal property tax under the laws of the state of West Virginia, and whether the powers of a court of equity can properly b.e invoked, under the circumstances of the case, for his relief.

In dealing with the first question, it is necessary to determine the character of the property upon which the assessment is based. Is it tangible, personal property, of concrete form, such as to be taxable wherever found, or is it a credit—a debt due by the banks to the depositor'—which has its situs at the domicile of the creditor? A deposit in bank to the credit of the depositor, and subject to his check, is not a bailment. It is a loan. The deoositor does not retain a property in any particular funds, but the money which he *789deposits goes into the- funds of the bank. The bank owes him the amount, and the relation of debtor and creditor is created by the transaction. Morse on Banks & Banking, vol. 1, § 289; Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, vol. 2, p. 93. This is the law as it is declared by both the federal and the state courts in this country, and in obedience to it we hold that the deposits of Brenneman in the banks of Sisters-ville' are debts due him by the banks, and that the situs of the property is the domicile of the creditor. “It is undoubtedly true that the actual situs of personal property which has a visible and tangible existence, and not the domicile of-its owner, will in many cases determine the state in which it may be taxed. * * * But other personal property, consisting of mortgages and debts generally, has no situs independent of the domicile of the owner. * * *” Case of the Taxation of Foreign-Held Bonds, 15 Wall. 300, 21 L. Ed. 179. “The general rule is that debts follow the person of the creditor, and are to be taxed at his domicile.” Am. & Eng. Enc. Law. vol. 25, p. 146. “A nonresident creditor of a state cannot -be said to be, in virtue of a debt which a resident owes him, owner of property within its limits. The credit is not within the state’s jurisdiction, and no value to the debtor, and is not property within the state, but property of the creditor, taxable at his place of residence.” Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co. v. Board of Assessors (La.) 11 South. 91, 16 L. R. A. 56. “For the purposes of taxation a debt has its situs at the residence of the creditor, and may be taxed there.” Kirtland v. Hotchkiss, 100 U. S. 491, 25 L. Ed. 558. “Debts are not property. A nonresident creditor of a city cannot be said to be, by virtue of a debt which it owes him, a holder of property within its limits.” Murray v. Charleston, 96 U. S. 432, 24 L. Ed. 760.

Diverse citizenship and the amount involved in this case give the Circuit Court of the United States jurisdiction. This being so, is it the province of the court, sitting as a court of equity, to entertain complainant’s bill, and grant the relief prayed for? It is true that a court of equity will not interfere to restrain the collection of taxes, ordinarily, on the ground that the tax is erroneous or illegal. This rule is based upon the reasonable ground that the exercise of such powers by the courts of equity may result in stopping the collection of taxes, to the extent of destroying the means of carrying on the government; but there are exceptions where there are special circumstances bringing the case under some recognized head of equity jurisdiction, such as that the enforcement of the tax would lead to a multiplicity of suits or produce irreparable injury, or where there is not a full, complete, and adequate remedy at law. The statute of West Virginia provides that any person claiming to be aggrieved by an assessment on property for taxes may apply for relief to the court of the county in which the assessment is made, and, if the county court refuse to make the correction asked for, the applicant may have the evidence taken thereon certified by the county court, and an appeal may be taken, as in other cases, from the order of refusal, to the circuit court of the county. The Supreme Court of West Virginia, in the case of P., C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. The Board of Public Works, 28 W. Va. 264, has interpreted the meaning of the appeal provided for as above stated, and has said:

*790“Under our Constitution the Supreme Court of Appeals of the state has no power to review, by writ of error or appeal, the decisions or orders of the inferior tribunáls, officers, or parties as to matters which are simply administrative, executive, or legislative, and not strictly judicial, in their nature, except where such power may be especially conferred by the Constitution.”

And further in the same case it is held that:

“These authorities establish beyond the propriety of controversy that the action and decision of a designated officer or board, whether the same be a court or other body, in reviewing and correcting an assessment of corporate or other property for taxation, are no more judicial acts than the acts of the officer or authority making the original assessment. They also show that the decision or finding of such officer or board, even if the same be a court or other judicial tribunal, is not such a judicial act or judgment as can be reviewed-by a supreme or appellate court possessing judicial powers only, although the statute may in express terms authorize such appellate court to review such finding or judgment.”

It will thus be seen that under the law of the state there is no right of appeal to the highest court in a proceeding to impeach a tax assessment for error or illegality, and if the petition of a claimant is denied by the county court, and this action is affirmed by the circuit court, there appears to be no further remedy in the courts of law of the state.

At the time this bill was filed, the sheriff, as tax collector, was proceeding by garnishment to compel the banks in which Brenneman’s deposits were placed to pay the amount of the tax; and, but for the injunction, he would have undoubtedly proceeded to make the collection. In case-the taxes had been actually collected from the funds in the banks, or if, in order to stop the garnishment proceedings, the complainant had paid the same under protest, what would have been his remedy tó right the wrong in collecting from him this illegal tax? He would have had none, except to sue for its recovery. This brings us to the consideration of the question as to how and against whom he could have brought his suit for recovery. By examination, we find that the assessment contains items of taxation as -follows: For state purposes, $625; for state free school purposes, $251; levy for the county of Tyler, $1,250; and, under the head of district levy, for teaching, $1,125; f°r building, $625; for sinking fund, $500; for interest on bonds, $500; and for - the extension of the terms of schools in Sistersville, $750. Now, here are eight different levies, for as many different purposes, two of which go to the state of West Virginia,- one to the county of Tyler, four to the district in which the levy is made, and one to Sistersville. This condition would necessarily have involved a diversity of litigation, and possibly the bringing of a number of different suits to recover back the money which had been collected from him improperly. In an effort to recover back his money, Brenneman, in the outset, would be confronted by the law which forbids a suit against the state; and the taxes collected for state purposes, and which had gone into the state treasury, would have been beyond his reach, and as to this much of his money, at least, he would have been divested of the same by virtue of an -illegal assessment, without a remedy under the law. The exhibition of the taxbooks shows nothing erroneous, and Brenneman is.compelled to resort to other proof to show that the *791assessment is illegal. For this reason, therefore, this is a case coming within equity jurisdiction. “When illegality or vital defect in a tax does not appear on the face of the record, courts of equity regard the case as coming within their jurisdiction.” Ogden City v. Armstrong, 168 U. S. 224, 18 Sup. Ct. 98, 42 L. Ed. 444.

From the facts in this case, and applying the law as we understand it, we hold that the Circuit Court of the United States had equity jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties. We think that the circumstances bring the case under a well-recognized head of equity jurisdiction, and that the injunction restraining the collection of the tax upon the personal property assessment against Brenneman was properly issued.

We observed that there was included in the injunction the tax of $115.32 upon a lot of land located in Sistersville; valued at $5,125. This was, no doubt, an oversight. This property is taxable in Tyler county at its assessed value, and the injunction should be modified in this respect. The case is therefore remanded to the Circuit Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, and, with the modification above indicated, the judgment of the said court is affirmed.

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