after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the courtl
The claim that the action of the state board of equalization . in making the assessment under consideration was the action of the State, and if carried out would violate the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, by taking property of the appellee without due process of law, and by failing to give it the equal protection of the laws, constitutes' a Federal question beyond all controversy. How that question should be decided is another matter which we will proceed at once to discuss. . '
The state board of equalization is one of the instrumentalities provided by. the State’ for the purpose of raising the public revenue by way of taxation. In regard to corporations of the class of which the appellee and the other corporations involved here are members, it is- the duty of that board to make an original assessment upon them. From the decision of the board . in making such assessment no appeal is provided for, and such decision is therefore conclusive, except as proceedings for relief may thereafter be taken in the courts. As to the.-assessments of local assessing bodies, the board is one of review, but its decisions are equally conclusive, as in the case of original assessments. Acting under the constitution and laws of the State, the board therefore represents the State, and its action is the. action of the State. The provisions of the Fourteenth
The same principle has been recognized in
Reagan
v.
Trust
Co.,
The case before us is one which the facts, make exceptional— It is made entirely clear that the board of equalization did not equalize the assessments in the cases of these corporations, the effect of which was that they were levied upon a different' principle or follpwed a different method from that adopted in
We are also of opinion that the case is one over which equity has jurisdiction. In
Cummings
v.
National Bank,
In all these cases, however, where there is jurisdiction to tax at all, equity will not grant an injunction to restrain the collection, even of an illegal tax, without the payment on the part of the taxpayer of the amount of a tax fairly and equitably due.
Bank
v.
Marye,
Finally1 it is objected that the appellee had a complete and adequate remedy at law by paying the amount of the warrant, and then suing the collector to recover the same back- as money paid under duress, although'upon a void warrant. Undoubtedly if there be a complete and adequate remedy at law in such
In the case at bar it is averred that it is thé duty of the collector, having received the money on his warrant, to pay the sum so received in the proportions designated in his tax' books to the city treasurer of the city of Chicago, the county treasurer of the county of Cook, the treasurer of the sanitary district, and other officers and authorities entitled to receive the same, and if the plaintiff -instituted suit to recover back the taxes so paid to the town or county collector he would" be obliged to bring separate suits against each one of the several taxing. bodies receiving its proportionate share of the tax,
Upon the whole, we think it is apparent that, no adequate remedy at law exists in this case, and that the judgment enjoining the collection of the balance of the tax levied against the appellee,’ above that which has been paid under the direction of the Circuit Court, must be Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Holmes, dissenting: Notwithstanding my unfeigned deference to the judgment of my brethren I cannot, but think’that the Circuit Court was wrong in taking jurisdiction of .this case. We all agree, I suppose, that it is only in most exceptional cases that a State can. be said to deprive a person of his property without due’ process of law merely because of the decision of a court without more. The discussion in
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R.
v.
Chicago,
It seems to me that the appellee should not be heard until it has exhausted its local remedies’; that the action of the state board of equalization should nptTb'e héld to be the action of the State until, at least, it has been sanctioned directly, in ‘ a proceeding which the appellee- is entitled to- bring, by the' .final tribunal of the State, the Suprém Court. I.am unable to grasp the principle on which the State is said to deprive the appellee of its property without due process of law because a •'subordinate board, subject to the control of hhe Supreme Court of. the State, is said to have violated the -express requirement of the State in its constitution; because, in other -words, the board has disobeyed the authentic command of the State-by failing to make its valuations in such a way that every-person shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his property. I should-have thought that the action of the State was to be found in its constitution, and that no fault could be found with that until the authorized, interpreter of that constitution, the Supreme Court, had said that it sanctioned the alleged-wrong.
Barney v. New York,
As I think that the Circuit Court ought to be ordered to dismiss this ease, I shall not discuss the merits. Bur I cannot forbear adding that, so far as the appellee is Complaining that it has been compelled to pay the full amount of the tax due from it, and is founding its complaint on the fact that other •parties are escaping their liabilities whether through mistake or still uncorrected fraud,- it-seems to me to show no sufficient ground for relief, unless exceptional reasons exist not adverted to in the judgment of the court.
