delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity to cancel certain assessments for the year 1912, and to restrain the collection of taxes imposed accordingly upon the plaintiffs and others in like case with respect to their memberships in the Chamber of Commerce of the City of Minneapolis. There were three groups alleged to be represented by the respective plaintiffs; One, of members residing in Minneapolis; another, of those residing within the State, but outside that. City; and a third, of citizens and residents of other States. The complaint, among other things; averred in substance that the Chamber of Commerce was incorporated under the laws of Minnesota; that it had no capital stock and transacted no business for profit; that it furnished buildings and. equipment for its members who, under its rules, transacted business with each other (for themselves and their customers) upon the trading floor ■which was in fact a grain exchange; that the property of the corporation had been fully taxed; that the memberships, in case of. winding up, would have actually no value *186 above the assets so.taxed; that i't had been the practical construction of the tax laws of the State that such memberships were not taxable; that the assessments in question had been laid under the head of “Moneys and Credits,” -and that they were excessive; that memberships in other associations were not taxed ‘although standing in a similar position’; that the members of.the Chamber of Commerce were ‘unlawfully and prejudicially’ discriminated against ‘by unequally assessing them’ and that their property was taken-‘without due process of law, contrary to the state and federal constitutions’; that, unless restrained, the attempt to enforce the tax would result in a multi'plicity of-suits;-that in the case of members residing outside of the City of Minneapolis, the certificates of membership were ‘kept at their respective residences’ and such-members did, not ‘operate’ upon the exchange personally except ‘at rare intervals,’ and that their use of such memberships was practically limited to benefits obtained ‘from having other members buy or sell grain for them as commission merchants’ at one-half the ‘regular commission’ by reason of ‘a privilege extended to the members under the rules.’
The defendants demurred to the complaint upon-the ground that it did not state faets sufficient to constitute a 'cause of action. The trial court denied a motion.for temporary injunction and sustained the^demurrer, and thereupon judgment was entered in favor of the defendants. The plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court of the State, assigning as error the holding of the trial court that the assessments ‘ did not deny to the several members in the respective classes the equal protection of the laws’ and did not constitute a taking of property ‘without due process of law and without compensation’ contrary to the Federal Constitution. The latter objection was stated in 'various forms,'specific complaint being made of the assessment of-those members who were said to be outside the *187 jurisdiction of the taxing officers. Another appeal was then pending in the same court in the case of State v. McPhail, relating to the taxation of memberships in the Board of Trade of Duluth and, by stipulation, the appeals were heard together. In the Duluth case, the Supreme Court held that the membership was taxable under the statutes of the State and, further, -sustained the tax there laid as against contentions under the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court said: “We do not sustain the claims that the taxation of memberships in a Board of Trade or Stock Exchange, would violate provisions of the Federal or State constitution. . . .We see no improper classification here, nor any lack of equality or uniformity. Nor would it be double taxation. The members of the Board are not required to pay taxes on the physical and tangible property of the Board, nor does the Board pay taxes upon the intangible rights which constitute the value of a membership. And we hold that proceedings to tax such a membership do not deprive the member of his property without due process of law, take property for public use without just compensation, -or deny such member the equal protection of the laws, in violation of familiar provisions of the Federal Constitution and amendments.” State v. McPhail, 124 Minnesota, 398.
At the same timé, /the decision in the instant case was rendered with an opinion per curiam in which, after a summary statement of the nature of the case, the court ruled as follows: “The case was submitted on briefs in this court with State v. McPhail. The decision in that case, filed herewith, controls this. Judgment affirmed.” Rogers v. Hennepin County, 124 Minnesota, 539. And this writ of error has been sued out.
The defendants in error insist that the decision of the state court involved no Federal question; that the suit was for injunction and that the plaintiffs had an adequate
*188
remedy at law. They invoke the familiar rule that when the decision of the state court rests upon an independent or non-Federal ground, adequate to support it, this court has no jurisdiction.
Hammond
v. Johnston,
It is not to be doubted — giving full effect to all the allegations of the complaint — that the memberships despite the restrictions of the rules were property. See
Hyde
v.
Woods,
There is the further contention with respect to the authority of the State to tax the memberships owned by citizens of other States.- It is urged that the memberships are intangible rights held by the member at his domicile. But it sufficiently appears from the allegations that the memberships represented rights and privileges which were exercised in transactions at the exchange in the City of Minneapolis, and, we are of the opinion, applying a principle which, has had recognition with respect to credits in favor of non-residents arising from business within the State, and in' the case of shares of stock of domestic corporations, that it was competent for the State to fix the
situs
of the memberships for the purpose of taxation, whether they were held by residents or non-residents, at the place within the State where the exchange was located.
Tappan
v.
Merchants Bank,
With respect to' discrimination, there is no tenable objection because of the exemption from taxation (if they were .exempt) of the various organizations to which the plaintiffs in error refer, — rsuch'as the “Associated Press,
*192
lodges, fraternal orders, churches, etc.” The description itself suggests manifest .distinctions which the- State is entitled to observe in its taxing policy, despite the general allegation that these associations stand “in a similar position.” The State has a broad discretion as to tax exemptions
(Bell’s Gap R. R.
v.
Pennsylvania,
Judgment affirmed.
