delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the state from a judgment entered in favor of the defendant in a controversy submitted to the dis *582 trict court of Cascade county on an agreed statement of facts under section 9872, Revised Codes 1921.
The facts are that Ebenezer G. Ranney died testate at his domicile in New York in May, 1925, and pursuant to the provisions of his will letters testamentary were issued to the defendant. As the decedent owned land in Cascade and other counties of this state ancillary letters were issued to the defendant by the district court of Cascade county.
Among decedent’s assets were promissory notes payable to his order, executed by residents of Montana and secured by mortgages upon real estate in Montana, duly recorded. Some of the notes were made payable in New York, others in Montana. The notes and mortgages were, at the time of the death of decedent, and ever since their delivery by the makers have been, located at the residence of the decedent in New York. These were not included in the probate proceedings in Cascade county.
The state contends that the notes and mortgages are subject to an inheritance, or succession, tax; the defendant contends that they are not.
The question for determination has not hitherto been presented to this court. Montana has had an inheritance tax law in some form or other for thirty years. The present law was adopted from Wisconsin in 1921.
Section 1 of the 1921 Act, Session Laws 1921, Chapter 14, page 772, being section 10377, Revised Codes 1921, re-enacted Session Laws of 1923, Chapter 65, page 140, re-enacted Session Laws of 1925, Chapter 150, page 265, re-enacted Session Laws of 1927, Chapter 105, page 353, provides in part: “A tax shall be and is hereby imposed upon any transfer of property, real, personal or mixed, or any interest therein, or income therefrom in trust or otherwise, to any person, association or corporation, * * * in the following cases, except as hereinafter provided: * * * (1) When the transfer is by will or by intestate laws of this state from any person dying possessed of the property while a resident of the state. (2) YThen a transfer is by will or intestate law, of property within the state or within its jurisdiction and *583 the decedent was a nonresident of the state at the time of his death.”
Subdivision 3 of section 12 of the 1925 Act (Session Laws 1925, p. 272) applicable to this case, provides that any personal representative, trustee, heir, devisee or legatee of a nonresident decedent leaving no estate requiring administration in this state, desiring to transfer any stocks, bonds, mortgages or other securities, or other personal property in this state, or within the jurisdiction of this state, may make application to the state board of equalization “for the determination whether' there is any tax due upon account of the transfer thereof, and the amount of any such tax,” and shall furnish the board certain information, the character of which is prescribed. “From the information so furnished them and such information as they may be able to obtain with reference thereto” the board shall ascertain and determine the amount of the tax. The next subdivision provides, that if the personal representative, trustee, heir, devisee or legatee of such “nonresident decedent” has not complied with the provisions of subdivision 3, “upon the matter being called to its attention” the board shall proceed to obtain information and assess the tax on its own initiative.
Terms are defined in section 22 of the 1923 Act, Session Laws, page 164, as follows: “The words ‘estate’ and ‘property’ as used in this Act shall be taken to mean the real and personal property or interest therein passing or transferred to individual legatees, devisees, heirs, next of kin, grantees, donees, or vendees, and not as the property or interest therein of the decedent, grantor, donor, or vendor, and shall include all personal property within or without the state. The word ‘transfer’ as used in this Act shall be taken to include the passing of the property-or interest therein, in possession or enjoyment, present or future, by inheritance, descent, devise, succession, bequest, grant, deed, bargain, sale, gift, or appointment in the manner herein prescribed to each individual or corporation. The word ‘decedent’ as used in this Act shall include the testator, intestate, grantor, bargainer, vendor, or *584 donor. ‘Intangible’ or ‘intangible property’ when used in this Act without other qualifications, shall be taken to include all moneys, stocks, bonds, notes, securities and credits of all kinds, secured or unsecured. * * * .”
A study of the foregoing provisions, with others not necessary to be considered in this opinion, leaves no doubt that the legislature intended to exercise the utmost taxing power of the state in the imposition of excise, or succession, taxes.
(Tyler
v.
Dane County,
That the lawrmaking power of this state intended to impose a succession tax upon mortgages owned by a nonresident decedent is put beyond question by the express language of the statute. (Subd. 3, sec. 12, supra.) If the state has the power to impose the tax and has required the imposition thereof, the courts are required to follow the law, regardless of what they may think of the law’s policy.
The learned district judge, considering that as a mortgage is a mere security for a debt and passes with the debt to any lawful holder thereof
(Gallatin County
v.
Beattie,
It is true that the state may not impose a property tax' upon the promissory notes which are evidences of debt secured' by mortgages of record upon real property in Montana. (Const., Art. XII, sec. 2; sec. 1998, Rev. Codes 1921.)
A tax on property must be limited to property actually within the jurisdiction of the taxing power.
(State ex rel. Bankers’ Trust Co.
v.
Walker,
The precise question is, can it be held, for the purpose of imposing a succession or transfer tax thereon, that the property affected by this proceeding is within the jurisdiction of the state!
“According to the fact of power” the question must be answered in the affirmative. The reason is that the state has jurisdiction of the person and property of the debtor and the creditor must come into this state and apply to the jurisdiction of our courts if he is obliged to enforce his demand by process of law. This principle is recognized in
State ex rel. Bankers’ Trust Co.
v.
Walker,
supra, and has been variously
*586
invoked.
(Blackstone
v.
Miller,
What of the character of the debt? The promissory notes are mere evidences of debt secured by mortgages. “The general rule of law is well settled, that for the purpose of founding administration all simple • contract debts are assets at the domicile of the debtor; and that the locality of such a debt for this purpose is not affected by a bill of exchange or promissory note having been given for it, because the bill or note does not alter the nature of the debt, but is merely evidence of it, and therefore the debt is assets where the debtor lives, without regard to the place where the instrument is found or payable
”
(citing cases).
(Wyman
v.
Halstead,
The debtor must pay his debt no matter whether the original creditor, the payee, or another, owns the evidence of the debt. If the debtor refuses to pay, the creditor- — -the holder of the evidence of the debt — must come into the debtor’s state and ask the assistance of its courts to make the debtor pay. In this case the holders of the mortgage debt must come into Montana, if the debtors do not pay, to obtain judgment on the notes and to foreclose the mortgages. This state has jurisdiction of the persons of the debtors and of the property mortgaged.
In the leading ease of
Blackstone
v.
Miller,
supra, it appeared that Blackstone, the testator, died domiciled in Illinois. A New York firm owed him $10,000 and upward, and he had
*587
nearly $5,000,000 on deposit in a New York bank. Mr. Justice Holmes, delivering the opinion, said: “If the transfer of the deposit necessarily depends upon and involves the law of New York for its exercise, or, in other words, if the transfer is subject to the power of the state of New York, then New York may subject the transfer to a tax.
(United States
v.
Perkins,
In Matter of Houdayer, supra, the New York court of appeals said: “Where -the right, whatever it may be, has a money value and can be owned and transferred, but cannot be enforced or converted into money against the will of the person owing the right coming into this state, it is property within this state for the purpose of a succession tax. Thus the right *588 in question is property, because it is capable of being owned and transferred. It is within this state, because the owner must come here to get it. It is subject to taxation, because it is under the control of our laws.”
The
Blackstone Case
was followed by the appellate division of the supreme court of New York in
Matter of Daly,
We do not overlook the fact that in the Blackstone Case it is said that “bonds and negotiable instruments are more than merely evidences of debt. The debt is inseparable from the paper which declares and constitutes it, by a tradition which comes down from more archaic conditions.” Evidently this *589 language was written into the opinion by its distinguished author with the intention of limiting the decision to the precise question before the court. But the courts have not been content thus broadly to couple bonds and promissory notes as a proposition of universal application.
In
Buck
v.
Beach,
The supreme court of Minnesota, in State ex rel. Graff v. Probate Court, supra, having under consideration a case like the present, and statutes practically identical with ours, declared that the devolution of debts owed by residents of that state, whether evidenced by promissory notes or note, is subject to a succession tax in Minnesota although the debts were owing to and were held by nonresident decedents. The court said: “Whether the right of succession to promissory notes *590 held by nonresidents is taxable by the state having jurisdiction over the maker does not appear to have received much attention from the courts. But it is difficult to see why the reasoning which establishes the right to tax the transfer of an ordinary debt does not also establish the right to tax the transfer of a promissory note which is merely an evidence of debt.” And again: “It is said that bonds and commercial paper are something more than mere evidences of indebtedness, and it has been held that they may be subjected to a succession tax by the state within whose jurisdiction they are found, although neither the debtor nor the creditor are residents of such state; and this is perhaps true, but, if so, it does not divest the state having jurisdiction of the debtor of any power possessed by such state to enforce its own tax.”
Gilbertson
v.
Oliver,
Speaking for the court in
Chaffin
v.
Johnson,
In Michigan it is held that mortgages, notes and land contracts representing property situated in that state owned by and in the possession of a nonresident at the time of his death in another state are subject to a succession or inheritance tax imposed by the statutes of Michigan. (In re Rogers’ Estate, supra.)
The legislative assembly of this state has declared that mortgages owned by nonresidents are subject to a succession tax. No other meaning can be given to the statutes quoted above.
If the creditor must come into this state to enforce his demand against the debtor resident here, if the estate of the decedent must come here to foreclose the mortgages, for the purpose of imposing a succession tax the property is within the jurisdiction of this state. What was decided in
State ex rel. Bankers’ Trust Co.
v.
Walker,
supra, does not conflict with what is here decided in any way. The language of that opinion was used, and the observations respecting the statute were made, in considering the question then before us for decision, and had no reference to a different condition than
*592
that then presented. It is a rule of universal application that general expressions used in a court’s opinion are to be taken in connection with the case under consideration.
(Bramwell
v.
United States F. & G. Co.,
The case of
McLaughlin
v.
Cluff,
The question, then, is resolved to this: If the state has the power to impose the tax, there being no constitutional objection, the right to impose it must be upheld.
The power seems clear. All the authorities in point sustain it. There is no direct authority to the contrary which has been called to our attention.
There does not appear to be any constitutional objection.
(Blackstone
v.
Miller,
supra;
Wheeler
v.
Sohmer,
supra;
State ex rel. Graff
v.
Probate Court,
supra.) The fact that two states may exact an inheritance tax from the same property
*593
does not infringe any rule of constitutional law.
(Knowlton
v.
Moore,
It follows that the judgment must be reversed, and it is so ordered.
Reversed.
