96 A. 636 | Md. | 1916
This is a suit by the State of Maryland to require the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company to pay taxes upon its gross receipts in this State for the years from 1896 to 1908, over and above the amounts already paid, or the difference between the amount of such tax as fixed by the Act of 1878, and the rates established by the Acts of 1890, 1896 and 1906. The suit is sought to be maintained by the State by virtue of the Constitutional Amendment of 1891, which *437 provided that "any corporation chartered by this State which shall accept, use, enjoy or in any wise avail itself of any rights, privileges, or advantages that may hereafter be granted or conferred by any general or special Act shall be conclusively presumed to have thereby surrendered any exemption from taxation to which it may be entitled under its Charter, and shall be thereafter subject to taxation as if no such exemption had been granted by its charter."
In defense to the action, the Railroad Company sets up the provisions of Chapter 155 of the Acts of 1878, as constituting a contract between the State and the Railroad Company, irrepealable in its nature, and under the protection of the Federal Constitution, Article
It has been frequently held by this Court that the charter of the B. O.R.R. Co. granted in 1826, constituted a contract between the Railroad Company and the State, and such a contract that the exemption from taxation conferred by section 18 of that Act was not one which it was within the power of the Legislature to repeal or modify without the assent of the Railroad Company.
There are four grounds upon which the present contention is based, three of which are readily disposed of. One of these arises from the insertion in mortgages executed by the Railroad Company of the covenant that the Railroad Company would pay and discharge all taxes, assessments and governmental charges lawfully imposed upon the lines of railroads "and other premises or property hereby mortgaged, or upon any part thereof, or upon the income and profits thereof, the lien of which would be prior to the lien thereof, so that the priority of this indenture shall be fully preserved in respect of such properties, and will also pay and discharge all taxes, assessments and governmental charges lawfully imposed upon the interest of the trustee, or of the holder of any bond or bonds secured hereby in the mortgaged premises; provided, however, that nothing contained in this section shall require the Railroad Company to pay any such tax, *438 assessment or charge, so long as the Railroad Company in good faith shall contest the validity thereof." The contention is that by the insertion of this covenant the Railroad Company accepted, used or availed itself of certain general or special rights or privileges, and therefore, under the Amendment to the Constitution, Article 3, § 48, previously referred to, the Railroad Company surrendered its right to exemption from taxation.
With regard to this it is only necessary to say that the point so advanced is conclusively settled by the decision in Musgrovev. B. O.R.R.,
The second contention upon the part of the State was that by the acceptance and user of rights set forth in sundry Ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, there has been such acceptance of rights or privileges as to bring the B. O.R.R. within the operation of the Amendment to the Constitution of this State. An examination of the Ordinances discloses them to have related for the most part to the laying of switches or spurs which they were expressly authorized to do under the Charter of the Company, when the power was granted to construct lateral lines. The Railroad Company, it is true, was required by the terms of its charter in laying its tracks upon the streets or public ways of Baltimore City, and to do which it was given express authority, to obtain the assent of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore before the laying of such tracks. This was for the manifest reason that for a proper exercise of the police power, full power had been granted by the Legislature to the municipal corporation over the streets, ways and alleys within the corporate limits, and in the grant of the right for the construction of lateral lines, in order not to interfere with the power of the City of Baltimore for the proper regulation of its streets, it was necessary to place that requirement upon *439 the Railroad Company. This was in the exercise of the police power of the municipal corporation. The same may be said of each and all of the other Ordinances referred to; such for example as the Ordinance granting permission to erect a shed on the lot bounded by Parkin, Pratt and Poppleton streets; for establishing the height of the Baltimore Ohio Central Building; for the construction of a single track on South Howard street, between Dover and Camden street, and a similar one for the construction of a single track on Eutaw street between Barre and Stockholm streets. Each and all of these were only the exercise of the police power of the municipal corporation. They conferred no new privilege or right not already possessed under the original charter of the Railroad Company and, therefore, they cannot be regarded as a grant of privileges as that expression is used in the Constitutional Amendment of 1890. If it had been proposed to authorize the Railroad Company to carry on the business of mining coal, to lay an oil pipe line, or to engage for profit in different lines of business from those contemplated by the charter, an entirely different question would have been presented, but where the sole subject-matter was the exercise by the municipal corporation of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, of its police power in regulating the manner of exercise of rights conferred by the original charter of 1826, there can be no question but that the privilege, if indeed it was a privilege, was not such an one as was intended to be embraced, and not within the spirit of the amendment to the Constitution by Chapter 195 of the Acts of 1890.
The third ground upon which the tax exemption privilege contained in the original Act of Incorporation is claimed to have been set aside and nullified, arises out of the fact that in 1896, the State's holding of 5,500 shares of the capital stock of the Washington Branch of the B. O.R.R. was sold to the Maryland Trust Co. and by it in turn sold and transferred to the B. O. Railroad. The claim is that the acquisition of this stock constituted the acquirement or exercise *440 of a privilege by the Railroad Company within the terms of the Constitution. The record in the case fails to bear this out. The State was at this time anxious to dispose of its holdings of this stock. The Railroad Company was desirous of acquiring the same. There was no one to whom the stock had greater value than to the Company itself. With the State the question was, how could it realize the largest amount from the interest which it held, and it not unnaturally sought to ascertain the price which the B. O.R.R. Co. would be willing to pay for it. Legislative action was requisite to effect any sale at all and the session of the Legislature of that year was drawing to a close. The Railroad Company did not make a direct offer to the State, but it did guarantee the State that there should be a bid for the State's holding of the stock, made by a responsible bidder, of at least $2,500,000. If the State had deemed this amount inadequate or that a higher price could be obtained from others, it had full power to take the legislative action which may have been requisite to enable the Board of Public Works to have disposed of this stock to any outside parties. That it was not so considered by those who were the officials of the State at the time, is shown in the action which was taken, but even under the action taken, though the time was short, it was ample for outside parties to have interposed a bid larger than the $2,500,000. What actually did happen was a bid for the stock by the Maryland Trust Co. of the sum named for the stock and it was sold at that figure. It makes no difference, so far as this case is concerned, whether the Maryland Trust Company was purchasing for its own account or whether it was acting for and on behalf of the Railroad Company. The real question is, was it a fair sale, made in a manner sanctioned by law and for an adequate price in the light of all the facts as those facts were then understood? These must be answered in the affirmative and, therefore, the sale by the State of its interest in the Washington Branch of the B. O.R.R. Co. was not the granting of any *441 privilege or right within the contemplation of the constitutional amendment provided by Chapter 195 of the Acts of 1890.
Suppose, for example, instead of the method which was adopted, the State had advertised for bids for the stock to be filed with the Board of Public Works, by a certain date, and on the date named, a number of bids had been filed which when opened disclosed that they were made by responsible bidders, and the State officials had accepted the most advantageous offer, and disposed of the stock; that the stock so acquired had been subsequently offered for sale on the stock boards of New York, Baltimore and other cities and had there been purchased by or on behalf of the Railroad Company, would anyone claim for one moment that thereby the Railroad Company had acquired a peculiar privilege which would destroy important and valuable charter rights? If not, it is impossible to see how any other or different result can flow from what was actually done.
There now remains for consideration the most important question involved in this case, and that is the Act of 1878, Chapter 155. The title of that Act was as follows:
"AN ACT to adjust and settle finally by an agreement all pending controversies between the B. O.R.R. Co. and the State of Maryland, by subjecting the franchises and property of said company within this State to taxation for State purposes to a certain extent and by providing for the payment of certain indebtedness of the said B. O.R.R. Co. to the said State, and for the establishment by contract or certain rates of toll and transportation for coal, lumber, pig iron, ores of all kinds and stone, transported by the said B. O.R.R. Co. to the basins of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, at or near Cumberland and by providing on certain conditions for the release of the right of the State to any proportion of the moneys received by the said Company for the transportation of passengers on its railroad between Baltimore and Washington, otherwise than *442 by way of dividends upon its stock in the Washington Branch Railroad of said company."
Following the title were two preambles, the second of which was in this language:
"Whereas, It is deemed by this General Assembly to be just and proper as an equitable settlement of all controversies now pending between said company and the State, that the said company in consideration of its release from the said contract and in lieu of its obligation of payment thereunder, shall agree to a modification of its contract with the State for exemption from taxation, as provided by the eighteenth section of the Act of 1826, Chapter 123, incorporating said company, by submitting to taxation to the extent of one-half of one per centum of its gross receipts within the State as hereinafter provided."
The Act then begins as follows:
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland, That all the franchises and property of every description and gross receipts of the B. O.R.R. Co. within the State of Maryland, shall be subject to taxation for State purposes to the extent of an annual tax of one-half of one per centum on the gross receipts of its railroad and branches within the State, including its Metropolitan Branch R.R. and from its entire Washington Branch R.R. and from all other sources within this State, but to no further or greater extent nor otherwise; and provided, the said company, in consideration of the release of its obligation to pay to the State the one-fifth of its gross receipts for the transportation of passengers over the Washington Branch of its road, as provided by the eighth section of the Act of 1832, Chapter 175, shall agree on its part in the manner and upon the terms hereinafter provided, to modify its contract for exemption from taxation as contained in the 18th section of the Act of *443 1826, Chapter 123, incorporating said company, by submitting all its franchises and property of every description, and all its gross receipts within the State of Maryland to taxation for State purposes to the extent and in the manner above named, and to no further or greater extent nor otherwise, and shall also accept the provisions of this Act in the manner hereinafter provided, then no other further or greater tax or burden for State purposes shall ever hereinafter be levied or imposed by the authority of this State or by any law thereof, upon any of the franchises or property of any description or receipts whatsoever of said company; provided that nothing in this Act shall be construed as exempting any property or franchises of the said railroad company from taxation for county and municipal purposes, which by existing laws and the decisions of the Court of Appeals of this State, is now held liable to taxation; and the exemption from taxation created and provided for by the 18th section of the Act of 1826, Chapter 123, entitled `An Act to incorporate the B. O.R.R. Co.,' be and the same is hereby declared to be modified to the extent of substituting the tax imposed upon said company by the second section of this Act, in lieu of the tax imposed by the 8th section of the Act of 1832, Chapter 175, but to no further or greater extent, nor otherwise."
At the time of the passage of this Act, there were numerous contentions pending between the State and the B. O.R.R. Co., and from the title it appears that it was the purpose of the Act to bring about an adjustment of all the matters in dispute at that time. The Railroad Company assented to a tax of one-half of 1% upon its gross receipts in the State of Maryland, in consideration, in part, of being relieved from a capitation tax of 25c. per passenger, payable upon persons traveling over the Washington Branch. The rate of the tax on gross receipts as fixed by this Act was identical with the rate of tax at that time imposed by law upon *444 the gross receipts of other similar corporations. When this Act was passed the Constitution of 1867 was in force, which like that of 1851 prohibited the granting of an irrepealable or unamendable charter. Charters granted prior to 1851 and which in their nature amounted to contracts beetween the State and a corporation, under the decision of the Dartmouth College case, remained valid and unamendable except by consent of both parties. This leads directly to the question:
Was or was not the Act of 1878 in effect a modification, tantamount to the new grant of a new charter to the B. O.R.R. Co., accepted as such by the Railroad Company, or did the acceptance of the Act bring the original charter, or the Act of 1878 within the operation of the Constitutions of 1851 and 1867? Was or was not the Act of 1878 ultra vires so far as the Legislature was concerned; and has or has not the tax provision contained in the Act of 1878 been repealed in whole or in part or amended by subsequent Acts of the Legislature?
To effect a modification of the charter there were requisite both the action of the Legislature and the assent of the Railroad Company. In the General Assembly of 1876, an Act was passed, Chapter 229, by which the tax exemption on the property of the Railroad Company or any of its branches was repealed, and it was provided that if the Railroad Company accepted that Act, it should be relieved of the capitation tax on the Washington Branch. This Act, however, was not accepted by the Railroad Company. It preferred to pay the capitation tax and retain the exemption which section 18 of its charter conferred. This was but two years prior to the Act of 1878. The Legislature must have known in passing the Act of 1878 that the Railroad Company had declined to accept the provision which had been proposed to be made by the Act of 1876, and while not so expressed, either in the title or in the body of the Act of 1878, it is perfectly apparent that this Act was intended to cover not merely what was covered *445 in the Act of 1876, but a large number of other matters as well. It was an Act supported by a large and valuable consideration, and the first question of importance is: Is it to be regarded in the light of a statutory enactment and thus subject to the power of repeal, modification or amendment, by a subsequent Legislature; or is it to be considered in the light of a contract between the State and the Railroad Company, and, as such contract, within the protection of the provision of the Federal Constitution, Article 1, section 10?
In New Jersey v. Yard,
"It has become the established law of this Court that a legislative enactment in the ordinary form of a statute may contain provisions which when accepted as the basis of action by individuals or corporations become contracts between them and the State within the protection of the clause of the Federal Constitution * * *. The Legislature may be supposed to exercise its power of regulating the burdens which are to be borne for the public service. In this case it could have modified from time to time as the legislative discretion might determine, or it might be a contract founded on a fair consideration from the party concerned to the State, and which in that case would be beyond the power of the State to impair."
So in the present case there was a well understood subject-matter of contract. There was no grant of any new right by the State to the Railroad Company, though there was a relinquishment of an existing right in return for which the State acquired a valuable right not theretofore possessed.
The Act contemplated a settlement of counter claims between the State and the Railroad Company arising out of a number of different contentions. Can it be believed that it was intended by either party, the Railroad Company or the State, that one was to be bound forever and the other only for a day? Does anyone suppose that the Act of 1878 would have been accepted by the Railroad Company and acted upon *446 and the payment made to the State provided for in it, and that the State had an option at any time thereafter to say that it was bound or not, according as some subsequent Legislature might determine?
The State has relied, to a large extent, upon the decisions of this Court in the cases of Northern Central Ry. Co., in
In the present case the immunity from taxation arose from the Act of 1826, which was beyond the power of the Legislature to alter, amend or repeal, except by the assent of the B. O.R.R. Co. The Act of 1878 granted no additional immunity to the Railroad Company above that contained in its original charter. On the contrary, it, to a considerable degree, abridged that right because, by the assent of the Railroad Company, it subjected the gross receipts of the Company, whether upon the Main Line or upon the Washington or Metropolitan Branches, to taxation, at a specified rate from which the Main Line would certainly have been exempt as also the Washington Branch, as will appear later, while with regard to the Metropolitan Branch, the issue was more debatable. The Constitutions of 1851 (Article 3, section *447 47) and 1867 (Article 3, § 48) cannot be given the construction that the State is without the power to enter into acontract irrepealable in its nature. Such a construction would make it absolutely unsafe to contract with the State upon any matter.
In the case of Stearns v. Minnesota,
In the case of the State v. B. O.R.R. Co.,
The Metropolitan Branch, while it might perhaps have been constructed as a lateral, under the terms of the original charter, has already been held by this Court to have been constructed under a franchise granted in 1865.
Therefore, it follows that the present contention of the State could not be maintained as far as the Washington Branch is concerned, even if sound with respect to the Metropolitan Branch. But can that Branch be segregated so as to make an increased rate of taxation on gross receipts provided by the Acts of 1890, 1896 and 1906 apply, or is the Act of 1878 indivisible and does it constitute a contract in which one part is interdependent upon the others, so that it must be sustained in its entirety, if sustained at all? An *449 examination of the Act of 1878 clearly discloses that its object and purpose was to reach a final adjustment of matters in dispute between the State and the Railroad, not an adjustment of some and a leaving of others open and subject to future unknown modifications. If it be assumed that the gross receipts of the Metropolitan Branch were liable to taxation under the Act of 1872, and any subsequent alterations or modifications thereof, while the gross receipts of the Main Line and the Washington Branch were not so subject to taxation, is it to be supposed that the Railroad Company would have assented to the taxation of the exempt portions of the line, and still leave the Metropolitan Branch liable to any rate of taxation that any subsequent Legislature might impose?
Is it not more compatible with the terms of the Act of 1878 to read it as meaning, that in consideration of a rate of taxation on gross receipts established by that Act for the Metropolitan Branch, which should not thereafter be subject to modification, the assent was given to subject to taxation receipts of the Railroad Company which were then exempt?
The same rule of fair dealing which is enforced between individuals must be applicable where the parties are the State and a corporation having contractual relations with the State. The State can no more retain the benefits derived from its agreement and repudiate the benefits which are derived or to be derived by the other party to the contract, than can the individual.
The Railroad Company submitted tables of figures designed to show that under the agreement the State had received more than it would have done if taxes had been paid upon the gross receipts under the Acts of 1872, 1890, 1896 and 1906, upon such portions of the line as could properly have been subjected to such taxation, and retained its exemption upon so much as was exempted by its charter.
We are not now concerned with the question whether the State has received more or has received less than it would *450
have received if the Act of 1878 had never been passed, but whether that Act was one within the power of the State to pass, and, if so, then what are the legal rights of the parties. And from the considerations set out in this opinion, it follows that the Act of 1878 was not ultra vires, but was within the power of the State to adopt; that when adopted, assented to and acted upon by the Railroad Company in strict accordance with its terms, it became an irrepealable contract, and was therefore unaffected by the Acts of 1890, Chapter 559; 1896, Chapter 120, and 1906, Chapter 712; that the consideration for the contract was a sufficient consideration to support it, and that it contains all the elements requisite to bring it within the protection of the Constitution of the United States, Article
In view of the conclusions reached upon the several issues presented in this case, it is not deemed necessary to discuss the various prayers in detail, since they embody no prejudicial and therefore no reversible error, and the judgment of the Superior Court of Baltimore City will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *451