256 Mo. 98 | Mo. | 1914
— This is an action brought by the State at the relation of the collector of Morgan township in Mercer county, Missouri, for state, county, school and township taxes. The defendants are the administrators of the estate of one William Lewis, deceased. The judgment of the court below was for the
Mercer county, it is agreed, has adopted and was during the time of this suit operating under the statutes governing counties under township organization. William Lewis, whose estate it is here sought to charge with the taxes mentioned, was in his lifetime and for forty years or more prior to his death, a citizen and resident of the city of Little Rock in the State of Arkansas. Said Lewis died on January 19, 1908, the owner and holder of divers promissory notes, aggregating almost the sum of five hundred thousand dollars, secured by mortgages and deeds of trust upon real estate situate in Mercer, Sullivan, Grundy and Putnam counties, Missouri, and in the State of Iowa. Some two-thirds or three-fourths of the amount of property sought here to be charged with taxes is represented by money evidenced by said notes and loaned upon real estate in Mercer county. Shortly after the death of William Lewis, his brother, Francis M. Lewis of Little Rock, was appointed by the probate court of Pulaski county, Arkansas, as his domiciliary administrator. The notes in question and which now represent the property sought to be charged with taxes, were, at the time of said William Lewis’s death, in his possession in Little Rock, Arkansas. The domiciliary administrator, Francis M. Lewis, took charge of these notes and held them until Robert M. Lewis and Joe Mills, defendants herein, were appointed ancillary administrators of said estate by the probate court of Mercer county, which appointment was made on February 10, 1908. It may be here stated, as of possible pertinence hereafter, that defendant Robert M. Lewis resides in Sullivan county, Missouri, and defendant Joe Mills resides in Putnam county, Missouri, though the administration was begun in Mercer county, inferably because a majority of the debtors reside in that county.
Thereafter they filed an inventory in the office of the judge of the probate court, which showed an. invoice of personal property amounting to $491,578.62, all of which (except it may be an indefinite and negligible value) was represented by said notes secured by mortgages and deeds of trust upon real property situate in the counties above mentioned. The Mercer County Board of Equalization,, in a long order containing many findings, divers of which were utterly at variance with the conceded facts, at first fixed the situs of this property for taxation in Ravanna, Ravanna township, in said county, for the reason, as appears in a premise of the order, that one Mastín, deceased, residing while alive in the latter town and township, was engaged therein in lending out and collecting money for William Lewis in the lifetime of the latter. Later, and before this action was begun, the above order was revoked and an order made which recited that the situs of this property for the purposes of taxation is Morgan township. The Morgan township assessor, one Grant Dublé, who is also the city collector of the city of Princeton, which is a city of the fourth-class, finding this inventory and invoice of the property of this estate set down upon the probate records of Mercer county, proceeded to assess the same at fifty-five per cent of its face value, and therefore in the sum of $275,770, for the purposes of taxation. The latter amount was by the order of the Board of Equalization subsequently reduced to two hundred and sixty-six thousand five hundred dollars valuation, upon which latter valuation state, county, school and township taxes were levied and extended, in an amount, includ
Coming to us. with this case is the companion case of State ex rel. Dublé, as collector of the revenue for the City of Princeton, against Robert W. Lewis and Joe Mills, administrators of the Estate of William Lewis, deceased. ■ [Post, p. 121.] The facts in the latter case (except that the suit is for taxes alleged to be collectible for the use and benefit of the city of Princeton and is for the sum of $5383.50, which includes accrued penalty, but which does not include collector’s fees or attorney’s fees) are in all respects like the one before us, and by agreement of counsel the cases were briefed here and are to be considered together. They will be so dealt with in our opinion, except for a slight difference hereafter specifically to be noticed when we come to a consideration of the latter case.
The concrete point before us and the controlling question here is, regardless of certain other issues, in their nature somewhat technical, whether intangible property, that is to say debts, belonging to the estate of a foreign decedent and- in course of ancillary administration for the sole purpose of collection and transmission to the domiciliary administrator, is liable to be taxed for state, county, school and township taxes under the provisions of section 11355. This point is controlling; the others are merely incidental. For a consideration of this point the facts above noted are deemed sufficient. Should they fall short of the requisite clarity other facts will be noticed in the subjoined opinion.
Touching the contention first noted, we find that the abstract of record on file with us contains a sufficient printed index. The explanation is urged by appellant that while the copy of the abstract of the record served on defendants did not contain an index, the abstract filed here did contain a sufficient one. Finding this upon examination to be true, we disallow the point, since the main object sought to be attained by this rule is to have such index to a record as will facilitate our examination of the pleadings, points, motions, rulings and evidence in the case. Till a cause is argued and submitted we rarely ever hear of it, and are utter strangers to the contents of the record thereof. The requirement of an index is largely, if not entirely, for our benefit and not for the benefit of opposing counsel, since they, we are privileged to assume, are familiar with the case and its every detail, without the necessity of a reference to the record, via an index or otherwise. Ought we then, no other attack being made and no other relief being sought, to dismiss this case because the copy of the abstract of the record served on respondents has no index, when those filed with us, in time, wo assume, naught else appearing, are properly indexed? We think not.
Giving heed to the point (b) made by respondents, that since appellant’s abstract shows the filing of a short-form appeal here some year or more after the appeal was granted, we ought to dismiss the appeal for failure of appellant to comply with section
We do not think that we need to reach, or that we will reach, the first point omitted as an element of the question before ns; for the reason that the discussion ought to be broad enough to so comprehend this point as that it will make no difference in the rule announced whether we include it specifically or not. On the point of the right to tax this fund for township taxes and purposes, likewise left out presently from the concrete question as we state it supra, it will suffice to say, that the case ought not to turn on so narrow a view. This view would save less than one-fifteenth of the whole amount of taxes here in controversy and render a victory on this point alone flat and unprofitable. This for the reason that the township collector is here trying to collect state, county, school and township taxes under the statutory scheme provided for a county which has adopted township organization. The collector here stands broadly upon the right to charge this fund with state, county, school and township taxes.
It is patently one argument, and so far as it goes a strong argument, against the right to collect at all, that is as against even the right to collect state, or county, or school taxes, to urge the almost self-evident, proposition that the mere adventitious facts that the county seat of Mercer county is in the city of Princeton, that the city of Princeton is situate in Morgan township and that the records of the probate court are
It is contended by appellants, and on this contention they bottom their whole case, that section 11355, Revised Statutes 1909, fully covers the facts and gives ample authority to tax the property of this estate for all purposes here urged. If this be true, if this section does include as taxable an estate and a fund of the sort in question here, the learned judge nisi was in error and we must reverse this case. . This section is as follows:
“It shall be the duty of every judge of the probate court in each county in this State to certify to the county assessor, on the first Monday of June in every year, a written list of every administrator, executor and guardian, and of every other person legally in charge and control of any estate in the probate court;*110 and thereafter, and upon snch certification, it shall be the duty of the county assessor to take from each administrator, executor, guardian, and every other person legally in charge and control of any estate in snch probate court, or from the papers and records of the court relating to such estate, a list of personal property, and to assess the same according to law — snch property hereby being declared to be subject to taxation in said county for all lawful purposes whatsoever, so long as the probate court thereof retains jurisdiction of such estate; and for public school purposes, the personalty of the estate in charge of any such administrator, executor, guardian or other person aforesaid, shall be taxable by and for the benefit of the school districts of snch county, as follows: The personalty of an estate of a deceased person shall be taxable by and for the school district in such county in which the decedent resided at the date of his death; and the personalty of an estate in charge of a guardian or other person aforesaid shall be taxable by and for the school district in such county, in which the ward or owner resides, on the first day of June of the year in which the assessment is made, if such ward or owner resides in such county, and if not, then by and for the district in such county in which the property was located at the date of the appointment of such guardian or other person.”
In the view we are constrained to take of this case the construction urged by learned counsel for appellants would probably render the above section invalid under that provision of our Constitution which requires taxes to be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority which makes the levy. This provision reads thus:
“Taxes may be levied and collected for public purposes only. They shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax and all taxes shall be levied and col*111 lected by general laws.” [Sec. 3, art. 10, Constitution.]
There was no such provision in the Constitution of 1865, and while the first sentence of the above section has been said to have been the law before the adoption of our Constitution (State ex rel. v. St. Louis, 216 Mo. l. c. 90,) this is not true as to the requirement of uniformity as contained in the last sentence thereof. So much is said because we are cited to the opinion of Judge Bliss in the case of State ex rel. v. St. Louis County Court, 47 Mo. 594, as authority for taxing intangible property, that is a debt, at the temporary physical situs of the evidence of the debt, where the former owner was dead, but had been before death a resident of a foreign state and dying possessed of certain debts, owed in this State, ancillary administration was had here to collect such debts; all as here in the case at bar. However, the reason on which Judge Bliss based his holding in the above ease would inevitably result, if strictly adhered to here, in a finding for respondents. Because, he held that the funds were taxable at the domicile of the ancillary administrator, and on a further ground, at least arguendo, that the funds themselves were physically present at the place where it was sought to tax them. Since neither Lewis nor Mills, the ancillary administrators, resides in Mercer county, and since, at least by strong inference, the notes 'are not physically in Mercer county, or .in either Morgan township, or the city of Princeton, the holding in State ex rel. v. St. Louis County Court, supra, does not help appellants. An adherence to its strict letter would inevitably result in their undoing.
But there is for this view a stronger reason, arising from the Constitution. The case supra was decided in 1871, before the last clause of section 3, supra, of the Constitution was adopted as a part of the organic law. A bare glance at the facts in the instant case will disclose, if appellant’s contentions are ten
But section 11337 specifically provides that “all personal property of whatever nature and character, situate in a county other than the one in which the owner resides, shall be assessed in the county where the owner resides, except as otherwise provided by section 11355.” We are cited to the case of State ex rel. v. McCausland, 151 Mo. 185, but since this case was decided in 1900, both sections 11337 and 11355 were amended in 1903, in such wise as, and inferably with the intention, to change the rule announced by the above decision, and there is therefore little of logical or legal consolation derivable from its holdings. We must have recourse to these sections themselves as they have stood since the amendment of 1903 (Laws 1903, pp. 255 et seq.), and observe whether we are able to square their provisions with the constitutional limitation above set out as also with the facts here. Unless this can be done this fund is not taxable in Mercer county.
It will be kept in mind that the property here sought to be taxed consists wholly — except perhaps an indefinite and negligible part — of choses in action, i. e., debts due the estate of William 'Lewis, evidenced by promissory notes, which notes are secured by mortgages. The situs of these debts, or, at least the domiciles of those who owe them, are scattered over Grundy, Sullivan, Putnam and Mercer counties — some of them are owed in Iowa. One of the administrators resides in Putnam county and the other in Sullivan, county. The ancillary administration was commenced in Mercer county, where some three-fourths of the debtors of this estate resided. The suggestion is made in
But whatever the intention of the Legislature may have been, if they had in mind subjecting to taxation a fund which has its situs in a county transitorily and in a large sense by a mere fiction, we are forced to conclude that by a failure of proper provisions in the section in discussion, they have failed to effectuate that intention and that section 11355, if it mean what appellants contend, would be constitutionally invalid. We concede that the State through the Legislature has the power to tax the property of the estate of a decedent in process of ancillary administration in our courts when represented by tangible property, or by quasi-tangible property as bonds, mortgages and other securities physically present in this State. [Leavell v. Blades, 237 Mo. 695; Judson on Taxation, 394; St. Louis v. Ferry Co., 40 Mo. 580; New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U. S. l. c. 313; Bristol v. Washington County, 177 U. S. 133.] But such taxation must be levied uniformly, so as not to run counter to the above quoted language of our Constitution. Under the provisions of this section, since the decedent never lived in any school district of Mercer county, no taxes could be validly levied for school purposes upon the property of the estate of William Lewis for lack of a place to apply such taxes. But taxes in the supposed case could be levied upon the property of the estates of John Doe or Richard Roe.
It is true that this section provides further that if the owner of an estate in the hands of a guardian or other person does not reside in the county in which the property is sought to be taxed, the taxes levied for school purposes shall go to the school district in which the property was located at the date of the appoint
The lack of power in. a State to tax intangible property as debts owed by a citizen of the State to a nonresident, as compared to the power in such State to tax quasi-tangible property, as bonds, notes, mortgages and other securities which evidence debts due by, or liens upon the property of citizens, due to or held by non-residents, when such evidences are phy^sically present in the taxing State, is well and carefully set out and distinguished in the case of Liverpool, etc., Ins. Co. v. Board of Assessors, 44 La. Ann. 760, where it is said:
“We are dealing exclusively with the question of credits as assessed, and we hold as decided in 41 La.*117 Ann. 645,1015, ‘that debts have their situs at the domicil of the creditor,’ because debts are property and have a value, which is inseparable from the creditor, .and because the State has no greater power or jurisdiction to tax debts due to non-resident creditors than it has to tax any other personal property of such nonresidents which is not situated in the State. ’ ’
And in the case of Railey v. Board of Assessors, 44 La. Ann. l. c. 770, where it was said:
“There is no doubt of the legislative power to modify the rule of comity, mobilia personam sequuntur, in many respects. Movables having an actual situs in the' State may be taxed there, though the owner be domiciled elsewhere. Even debts may assume such concrete form in the evidences thereof that they may be similarly subjected when such evidences are situated in the State, as in the case of bant notes, public securities, and, possibly, of negotiable promissory notes, hills of exchange or bonds.
“But as to mere ordinary debts, reduced to no such concrete forms, they are not capable of acquiring .any situs distinct from the domicile of the creditor, and no legislative power exists to change that situs so far as non-resident creditors are concerned. As said by the Supreme Court of the United States: ‘ To call •debts property of the debtors is simply to misuse terms. All the: property there can be in the nature of things, in debts, belongs to the creditors to whom they .are payable, and follows their domicile wherever that may be. Their debts can have no locality separate from the parties to whom they are due.’ [State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds, 15 Wall. 300.]”
The above language is quoted with approval in the case of New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U. S. l. c. 313, which case apropos of this very point, on pages 319 .and 320, further says:
“With reference to the decisions of this court, it may be said that there has never been any denial of*118 the power of a State to tax securities situated as these are, while there have been frequent recognitions of its power to separate for purposes of taxation the situs of personal property from, the domicile of the owner. In State Tax on Poreign-held Bonds, 15 Wall. 300, it was held that while the taxing power of the State may extend to property -within its territorial limits, it cannot to that which is outside those limits, and therefore that bonds issued by a railroad company, although secured by a mortgage on property within the State, were not subject to taxation while in the possession of their owners who were non-residents, the court saying: ‘We are clear that the tax cannot be sustained; that the bonds, being held by non-residents of the State, are only property in their hands, and that they are thus beyond the jurisdiction of the taxing power of the State.’ But in the same case, on page 323, the court declared: ‘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. The same thing is true of public securities consisting of state bonds and bonds of municipal bodies,, and circulating notes of banking institutions; the former, by general usage, have acquired the character of, and are treated as, property in the place where they are found, though removed from the domicile of the owner; the latter are treated and pass as money wherever they are. But other personal property, consisting of bonds, mortgages and debts generally, has nositus independent of the domicile of the owner, and' certainly can have none where the instruments, as in the present case, constituting the evidence of debt, are not separated from the possession of the owners.’
“This last sentence, properly construed, is not to-be taken as a denial of the power of the Legislature to establish an independent situs for bonds and mortgages when those properties are not in the possession*119 of the owner, but simply that the fiction of law, so often referred to, declares their situs to be that of the domicile of the owner, a declaration which the Legislature has no power to disturb when in fact they are in his possession.”
Since the facts here do not bring’ the property sought to be taxed within the statute, we see no reason why the section should as it stands, be invalid. This section applies as it now reads, to the taxation of the property of a deceased person in the State, county and school district in which such person lived in his lifetime and not elsewhere; to the taxation of the property of a minor or other person under guardianship, in the State, county and school district wherein such minor or other' person resided on the statutory date of assessment, to-wit, June first (subject it may be in case of intangible property, to‘the rule announced in Leavell v. Blades, 237 Mo. 695), and to the taxation of the tangible property of a ward non-resident of the county, in the State, county and school district in which such property was situate on the date of the appointment of a guardian. The first clause of the last sentence alone applies to the taxation of the personal property of deceased persons. The last clause of the last sentence has reference to the taxation of the personal property of living persons under guardianship. Inferably the paramount object of the amendment of 1903 of this section was to abrogate the rule enunciated in State ex rel. v. McCausland, supra. In short, this amendment is an example of an all-too-common axegrinding provision cunningly devised to confer an advantage upon a local community at the expense of its neighbors and to the unsettling of rules of law which liad become fairly stable.
In no view which we have been able to take, is the position of the plaintiff tenable. If it be desirable or intended to tax a mortgage debt or note-evidenced debt due to an estate of a foreign decedent at the dom
III. We are taking this case as we find it and as it comes to us. There are novel contentions urged in it, touching which the law should be announced; so we are regarding it broadly and not narrowly. Learned counsel for respondents in their original answer filed far back in the probate court, urge not insistently, but somewhat carelessly, “that said William H. Hickman . . . has no right or authority to prosecute this suit in the name of the State of Missouri or in any other manner whatever.” But nowhere or in any way do learned counsel ever again refer to this matter or confide to us why this is so, if it is so. This answer was offered by appellants on the trial nisi as evidence against respondents upon the view, apparently, that it was an admission against interest made in an abandoned pleading. No point is made here by respondents in their brief that relator may not sue because by section 11713 óf our statutes the county treasurer of Mercer county is ex-officio the collector thereof, and that he, therefore, and not Hickman, as township collector, should have filed in the probate court the demand upon which this action is bottomed. Since then respondents now neither raise nor urge this question, why should we not deem it to have been abandoned by them1? So we neither raise nor decide this point here.
IV. The appellant contends that regardless of the question as to the correctness of his contentions on the matter of the right to collect these taxes on this property these cases must nevertheless be reversed because of the rendition by the learned court nisi of a