77 Mo. 202 | Mo. | 1883
Lead Opinion
This suit was instituted in the circuit court of St. Charles county against the defendants for the recovery of taxes levied upon the railroad and other real and personal property of the North Missouri Eailroad Company in 1872, for ten years, from 1862 to 1871, inclusive. The property in question, prior to 1872, had not been assessed for either of those years, and the levy in 1872 was made under an act of the legislature, approved March 10th, 1871. After that act was passed, and before the levy of the taxes sued for, the North Missouri Eailroad and all the other property of that corporation, were sold and conveyed to Morris K. Jessup, who subsequently sold and conveyed the same to the St. Louis, Kansas City & Northern Eailway Company. Defendants had judgment in the circuit court, which, on appeal to the St. Louis court of appeals, was reversed, and they have appealed to this court.
By an act of the legislature approved January 7th, 1853, amendatory of the act incorporating the North Missouri Railroad Company, it was provided that “ the capital stock, together with all machines, wagons, cars, engines or carriages belonging to the company, together with all their works and other property, and all profits which shall arise from the same, shall be vested in the respective shareholders of the company forever in proportion to their respective shares, and the same shall be deemed personal estate and be exempt from any public charge or tax whatsoever, for the period of five years after tbe passage of this act.” Sess. Acts 1853, p. 323, § 6. By this act, the capital stock and all other property of that corporation were exempt from taxation until January 7th, 1858, and after that date as long as section 6 of the act of 1853, supra, remained unrepealed, the property of the company was subject to taxation only as personal property in a manner to be prescribed by the general assembly. Bangor Pisc. R. R. Co. v. Harris, 21 Me. 233. By the express declaration of the statute, all its capital stock and other property was vested in the holders of the stock forever as personal property. By the revenue law in force when the period for which the property was exempt from taxation expired, it was provided that: “Eor the support of the government, etc., a tax shall be levied on the following objects, * * shares of stock in incorporated companies at their cash value, excepting manufacturing companies, tbe property of which alone shall be taxed, * # all property owned by incorporated companies, over and above their capital stock.”
It is clear that by that law the property of the corporation, except such as it owned over and above its capital stock, was not subjected to taxation. The State could
That property is subject or liable to be taxed, and has been subjected to taxation, are not one and the same thing. Prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1865, the legislature frequently exempted property from taxation by express enactment. All the property in the State was subject to taxation, and such as was exempted by statute, like that of the North Missouri Railroad Company, might have been subjected to taxation, or in other words, was liable to be taxed, but was not subjected to taxation, but exempted. From 1858 to 1871 the property in question, as real and personal estate, was not subjected to taxation, and without a repeal of section 6 of the act of 1853, was not subject to taxation, except as personal estate.
In lieu of a tax against the property of the corporation, the State imposed a tax upon the shares of its capital stock owned by individuals, and sections 17, 18 and 19 of the act of 1857, which were retained in every revenue law passed until 1871, provided as follows: Section 17. Persons owning shares of stock in banks and other incorporated companies taxable by law, are not required to deliver to the assessor a list thereof, but the president or other chief officer of such corporation shall deliver to the assessor a list of all shares of stock held therein and the names of the persons who hold the same. Section 18 provides that the taxes on such shares shall be paid by the corporations respectively, and gives the corporation a lien on such shares respectively, for the amount so paid, and section 19 imposes a forfeit of $1,000 upon the president or other chief
But, it is contended, that if this was a tax against the share-holders, the corporation has escaped taxation entirely. This argument overlooks the fact that taxing the shares of individual stockholders is one way of taxing the property of the corporation. Taxing the shares against the stockholders, and also the capital stock, or the property represented by the capital stock is duplicate taxation. State v. Branin, 23 N.J.L. 484; National Bank v. Commonwealth, 9 Wall. 360; Angell & Ames on Corp., (8 Ed.) §§ 460, 461; Smith v. Burley, 9 N. H. 423; Middlesex R. R. Co. v. Charlestown, 8 Allen 330; Gordon v. Baltimore, 5 Gill 231; Baltimore v. B. & O. R. R. Co. 6 Gill 288; Am. Bank v. Mumford, 4 R. I. 478; Providence Institution v. Gardiner, 4 R. 1.488; Burroughs on Taxation, 174.
But even conceding that the tax levied under that, and succeeding revenue laws of the same import, was a tax against the corporation on its capital stock, there was no law prior to 1871 imposing taxes on both the capital stock of corporations and their other property, except such as they may have owned over and above their capital stock. Such taxation would be double taxation, and although many cases may be found which hold that double taxation is not necessarily unconstitutional, all are agreed that no revenue law is to receive such a construction, unless the express words of the statute require it, or it is forced by necessary implication. The 1st section of the revenue law of 1857, requiring the tax to be levied on the shares of the capital stock, and on property owned by corporations over and above their capital stock, as effectually exempted the property from taxation as if it had been expressly so provided, and if the tax levied were against the individual
If the assessment provided by sections 17, 18 and 19 of the act of 1857, was a mode of levying the tax on the capital stock against the corporation, was the tax a lien on the property of the corporation ?
While the capital stock represents the property and the property the capital stock of the corporation, the one is not the other. A tax levied on the railroad and rolling stock, would not be a lien on the capital stock, in the absence of an express provision of law, certainly not under a law declaring a lien on property for the taxes levied thereon. There is no more reason for holding a tax on the capital stock to be a lien on the other property of the corporation. The other property of the corporation is the capital stock, in the same sense that the capital stock is the other property. In one sense, a tax on the capital stock is a tax on the property. The State had the option to levy it on the property directly, or indirectly on the capital stock, or shares of capital stock. It makes no difference to the State which mode she selects, but the mode selected makes a very serious difference with an innocent purchaser of the property: Certainly a tax against the share-holders on their respective shares, would not, in the absence of an express provision of law, be a lien on the capital stock, and yet it is a mode of taxing the capital stock. The shares of the respective share-holders represent the aggregate of the capital stock no less than the capital stock represents the other property of the corporation. We are of the opinion that there was no lien upon the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company, other than that on the shares of the capital stock given to the corporation; that there was no lien, or any way of obtaining a lien for State or county taxes, either on the capital stock, or property of a corporation, for State or county taxes prior to 1871.
Is it within the power of the legislature, as against an
We concede the right of the legislature to change the mode'of taxing any property which has been subjected to taxation. For instance, if the legislature should, as it might, provide for levying taxes on the income from land, instead of the land itself, it might change the mode to a direct tax against the land as between the original owner and the State ; but suppose the tax on the income were not declared a lien on the land, and the original owner should sell the property, would it be competent for the legislature afterwards to change the mode and levy the unpaid income tax upon the property, and declare it a lien thereon against the purchaser ? This would be a retrospective law, impairing the obligation of the contract between the grantor and the grantee of the land, imposing burdens upon the latter which the former should have borne, for which the grantee would have no remedy against his grantor on the covenant against incumbrances, or any of the usual covenants in a deed, because the tax was not an incumbrance on the land when the deed was executed, but a mere personal charge against the grantor. It would be in effect, to charge one with a pecuniary debt or obligation which rested upon another. There is no warrant in the constitution for such legislation.
The case at bar is stronger against the act of 1871, if it receives the construction contended for by respondent’s counsel, than the case supposed, for by that construction, not only the mode but the subject of taxation was changed, so as to impose upon a purchaser a liability, and upon his property a lien, neither of which existed when he made his purchase.
With respect to the taxes in controversy, for the years 1868 to 1871, inclusive, another question is presented. By an act of the legislature, approved March 17th, 1868,
The revenue law for those years, differed in its phraseology from previous revenue laws with respect to the enumeration of property to be. taxed. Eormer laws specifically named the kinds of property to be taxed, while the act of 1865, following the constitution of 1865, declared, in effect, that taxes should be levied on all property, real and personal. That constitution contained an inhibition against the exemption of any person or corporation from taxation. It however did not repeal the 6th section of the act of 1853. That was not effected until the amendatory act of 1868 was passed and accepted by the corporation, if then. While the revenue law of 1865 declared that all property, real and personal, should be taxed, it contained the same provisions with regard to the mode of taxing the capital stock of corporations, as the revenue law of 1857» above quoted. Sections 27, 28 and 29 of the revenue law of 1865, (R. S. 1865, p. 103,) are identical with sections 17, 18 and 19 of the act of 1857. Those sections of the act of 1857 prescribed a mode of assessing the capital stock of corporations, whose other property was exempt by the very terms of the law. The retention of the same sections in the act of 1865, is conclusive that the legislature in
That it was competent for the legislature to choose between the different methods of taxing the property of corporations, we think clear, notwithstanding the constitution and the law of 1865 required all property to be taxed. It could not have been intended by the constitution or the law, that corporations should be taxed on both their capital stock and property represented by that capital stock, or that the legislature should be restricted to the one mode or the other. The option still remained with the legislature to impose the tax on the capital stock or the other-property, and that option it did exercise by imposing the tax, from 1865 to 1871, on the shares of the capital stock.
The act of 1868 did not subject the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company to taxation. It made it subject, liable to be taxed, as real or personal property, according to its actual value. This is all that can be claimed for it. That act had no more the effect to tax the property, than the constitution of 1865 to tax all the railroad property, and property of banking and other corporations in the State. Section 36, article 11 of that constitution, provided that: “No property, real or personal, shall be exempt from taxation,” except public school property, property owned by the United States, this State, or counties or municipal corporations within this State. The effect of that section was to require the legislature to tax all property, except-that erbbraced in the exceptions, and the construction placed by respondent’s counsel on the act of 1868, which, if correct, applies as well to the constitution of 1865, would require the legislature to levy taxes on the property, real and personal, of all corporations, and yet until the act of 1871, the shares in the capital stock only, and .not the property, was subjected to taxation. That section of the constitution applies with as much force to the property of other corporations, as the act of 1868 to the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company,
Whether the capital stock of the North Missouri Railroad Company, or the shares of that capital stock, were in fact taxed for the years 1862 to 1871, is of no importance in the determination of the legal questions involved.
The-shares of the capital stock only, were subjected to taxation ; and under the act of 1871, the board of equalization was not authorized to levy the taxes in question upon the road-bed, rolling stock and other real and personal property of the North Missouri Railroad Company even if it had been within the constitutional power of the general assembly to authorize it. By selecting the shares of the capital stock for taxation, and not including the capital stock of the corporation or its other property as objects of taxation, they were as clearly exempt, under the authorities above cited, as if exempted by express terms. That act provided a method of assessing taxes against railroad corporations different from that which had previously prevailed, requiring, the president or other chief officer to furnish to the State Auditor a statement in detail' of all the property of the company, including road-bed, rolling stock, etc., upon which taxes were thereafter to be levied; and section 3 of the act reads as follows: “In case any such railroad or other property of any such company heretofore specified shall have been subjected to taxation, prior to the passage of this act for any year for which it shall not have been assessed and paid taxes, then
Jessup was an innocent purchaser. True, he purchased after the passage of the act of 1871, prior to the levy of the taxes in question, but that act gave him no notice, actual or constructive, that the North Missouri Railroad Company was in arrears to the State or county of St. Charles for taxes, certainly not for taxes chargeable against the property purchased by him upon which no law had imposed taxes prior to that date. It is immaterial, however, what, if any, notice Jessup or the St. Louis, Kansas City & Northern Railway Company had, that the North Missouri Railroad Company had not paid the taxes for the years named, levied upon the capital stock, or shares thereof, if our views on the other questions considered are correct.
I did not have the advantage of hearing the oral argument in this cause. At present I incline to concur in the above opinion as to the period prior to the act of 1868; as to the time subsequent to that period, I am in more doubt. I will examine the whole matter hereafter and write a separate opinion.
Not being able to reach the conclusion arrived at by a majority of the court, owing to the exceptional importance of the case and the principles involved, I deem it proper to state the ground for my dissent.
It is so clear that no argument is necessary to show» that after the expiration of five years from the passage of the act of 1858, exempting the North Missouri Railroad Company from taxation for that period, that it was liable to be taxed after that time. Under the law in force at the time said corporation became subject to taxation, viz: in 1858, it was made the duty of “ its president or chief officer to deliver to the assessor a list of all shares of stock held therein, and the names of the persons holding the same.” It was also provided, that “the taxes assessed on the shares of stock embraced in such list shall be paid by the corporations respectively, and they may recover from the owners of such shares the amount so paid by them or deduct the same from the dividends accruing on such shares; and the amount so paid shall he a lien on such shares respectively, and shall be paid before a transfer thereof can be made.”
It appears in this case that from the years 1862 to 1871 inclusive, the said North Missouri Railroad was neither assessed according to the above mode of assessment, nor any other mode, and that for the said years it escaped taxation entirely, although subject to it. There was no change made by the general assembly till 1868 in the method of assessing the North Missouri Railroad Company, at which
The North Missouri Railroad was neither assessed under the law of 1868 nor the laws in force prior thereto for the years 1862 to 1871 inclusive, and in 1871 the general assembly passed an act to provide for a uniform system of assessing and collecting taxes on railroads, the 3rd section of which is as follows: “ In case any such railroad or other property of any such company heretofore specified shall have been subjected to taxation prior to the passage of this act for any year for which it shall not have been assessed and paid taxes, then a separate return for each
That it was within the power of the general assembly, when property either real or personal, liable to taxation,had neither been assessed nor taxed for any year or years for which it might and ought to have been assessed and taxed, to provide for the assessment and taxation of the property for such omitted years, is, I think, evident. The principle is so consonant with every sense of justice and right, that it needs no citation of authorities to establish it. All property protected by the government and not expressly exempted from taxation, must, under the constitution and laws of our State, contribute to its support and maintenance, and these contributions are called for through the exercise of the taxing power, with which the legislative department of the government has been fully clothed. Taxes when imposed for general revenue are for protection afforded to person and property, and such taxes will always become odious if they are to be borne by the honest and well-disposed citizens alone, and avoided through fraudulent evasions of the law in not returning their property for assessment, or paying the taxes when levied, by those who are willing to receive the protection of the government without paying any of the cost of conducting it or bearing their due proportion of its burdens. Taxes are imposed annually, and required to be paid annually, to de
The doctrine upon the subject is stated by Mr. Blackwell as follows : “ The State has a lien upon land for taxes actually levied, and also for such as were properly chargeable upon the land, but by reason of the neglect of the officers intrusted with the duty of assessing it the land was omitted in the list of a particular year, ‘Back taxes ’ as they are called may, therefore, be assessed and collected with the taxes of the current year, although the land upon which they are chargeable has passed into the hands of a bona fide purchaser. This power grows out of the necessities of the government, and the nature of a tax lien, which admits no property in the citizen while the tax remains unpaid, and regards the land as a pledge, perpetual in its character, to pay the debts and current expenses of the government. It would be a violation of principle to hold that a public right shall be lost by the mere neglect or delay of the public agent to enforce it, and in the absence of a statute expressly limiting the time in which it may be done, back taxes may be collected at any time. The State is never guilty of laches. In many cases it is expressly provided that assessments and reports of delinquents shall be made not only of taxes for the current but for the preceding year or years. Where such is the language of the law, the right to collect back taxes is clear.” Blackwell on Tax Titles, (4 Ed.) p. 184.
So it was said by this court in the case of Keating v. Craig, 73 Mo 508 that “the lien of a special tax-bill, like
The following principle may be deduced from the authorities above cited, viz: that when property is liable to taxation, and which has neither been assessed, nor taxed for any year or years for which it was liable to be assessed and taxed, but has been entirely omitted for such year or years, that it is within the power of the legislature to provide for the assessment and taxation of such property for the omitted year or years, and when such assessment is made and the tax levied, such assessment and levy relate back to the time when it ought to have been made, and the tax becomes a lien on the property which is enforce
I am unaole to perceive how, under the operation of this principle, the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company which was liable to taxation for the years 1862 to 1871 inclusive, and which the record in this case shows was neither assessed nor taxed for any of those years, cannot be subjected to the payment of the taxes for those years, which the State in this suit is seeking to enforce against it — even conceding (which I however deny) that Jessup and the St. Louis, Kansas City & Northern Railway Company were innocent purchasers. My opinion is, that they were not innocent purchasers for the following reason : The act of 1871 which authorized the assessment and levy of taxes on the property in question, was passed in March, 1871, five months before Jessup bought the property, his purchase having been made in August, 1871, and more than ten months before the St. Louis, Kansas City & Northern Railway Company purchased of Jessup, the said eonipany having purchased of him in Eebruary, 1872, on the first day of which month under the act of 1871, it was made the duty of said company to make separate returns for each year it had neither been assessed nor taxed. Both of the said purchasers were then distinctly notified of the State’s claim, and they are presumed to have known the state of the law concerning the identical property with which they were dealing and the liability of the property to assessment and taxation for the years it had not been either assessed or taxed. Especially so, as the said act of 1868, which notified them that the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company would be taxed on its cash value, constituted the first link in the chain of title to Jessup and the St. Louis, Kansas City & Northern Railway Company to the property of the North Missouri Railroad Company, and without which they had no title.
The case of Seine v. Levee Commissioners, 19 Wall. 655, has been invoked as an authority opposed to the views above expressed. It will be seen, upon an examination of the case, that it has nothing to do with the case in hand. One point of the case in judgment was whether the plaintiffs, who were owners of certain bonds issued by levee commissioners, had an equitable lien on the real and personal property of said parishes for the payment of said bonds, the levee commissioners who issued them having resigned without levying a tax for their payment. It was held that no such lien existed, and in the disposition of the question Justice Miller expressly declined to decide the question whether taxes lawfully levied are until paid a lien on the property against which they are assessed, and observed in that connection “ that it was too clear for argument that taxes not assessed are no liens.” Conceding this to be so, it is nevertheless true, according to the decisions of this court and authorities hereinbefore cited, when real property which has been omitted from assessment and taxation for past years is assessed and taxed for such omitted years, that the tax then becomes a lien superior to all others.
The objection made that the act of 1871, supra, is retrospective, and, therefore, unconstitutional, I think, is without force. 'A law which retrospects and looks back becomes obnoxious to the constitutional inhibition against the passage of retrospective laws, only when it takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws, or creates a new obligation, or imposes a new duty, or attaches a disability in respect to transactions or considerations already past. The said act of 1871, though it looks to the past, does not interfere with any vested right, neither does it create a new obligation nor impose a new duty. It only seeks the performance of a duty theretofore imposed, apd the enforcement of an obligation which theretofore rested on the company. Stripping the case of all redundant and
For the reasons herein given my opinion is that it can, and' that the judgment of the court of appeals reversing that of the circuit court ought to be affirmed.
Rehearing
On Motion for Behearing.
We have carefully examined the cases cited by counsel in their brief on the motion for a rehearing, and shall notice particularly that of the Pacific R. R. Co. v. Cass Co., 58 Mo. 17, which bears a stronger resemblance to the case at bar, than any of the others to which our attention has been called. The distinction between that and this case is palpable. ‘ By the act of December 25th, 1852, the property of the Pacific Railroad Company was not only subject to taxation, but a special mode for its assessment was provided, differing from that provided by the general law. Instead of the shares of the capital stock, the property, as contradistinguished from the stock, was alone taxable, and the president of the company was required, on the 1st of February in each year, to furnish to the State Auditor a sworn statement of the actual value of the property of the road, and on that basis the assessment was made. The section of that act providing that after the Pacific and Southwestern Branch should be completed, opened and in operation, and have declared a dividend, the property of the company should be subject to taxation at the actual cash value, at the same rate assessed by the State on other property of like value, was not self-enforcing while the general law remained in force, under
A similar provision in the act amendatory of the North Missouri Railroad charter, declared, that its property should be subject to taxation, as such, but it was not followed, as in the case of the Pacific Railroad Company, with a section prescribing a mode of assessing the property, but the general law, by which the shares of its capital stock were taxed, was left in force. The only effect of the provision was to take the property out of the operation of a previous act, which had declared all the property of that company pe^onal property, and vested it in the holders of the capital stock, in proportion to their respective shares.'
The principal question in the Pacific R. R. Co. v. Cass Co., was whether the company was exempt from taxation for county purposes, and the court held it was not; that the property being taxable for State purposes, the counties through which the road ran had a right to levy taxes for county purposes on such of the property as lay within the counties respectively. The county, by express provision of the statute, can levy taxes only on such property as is taxable for State purposes, and it would certainly not be contended that Cass county could have levied taxes upon the shares of the capital stock of the Pacific Railroad Company under the act of 1852. And the position is equally untenable, that St. Charles county, while the general statute remained in force and applicable to the North Missouri Railroad Company, could levy taxes upon the property, as contradistinguished from the shares of the capital stock, of the North Missouri Railroad Company; the State having taxed the shares of its capital stock and not the property. "While counties are confined to the same objects of taxation that are taxed by the State, it does not follow that they can levy their taxes in the same manner
By the 6th section of the act of January 7th, 1853, amending the charter of the North Missouri Railroad Company, it was declared that all the property of said company should be deemed to be personal estate. The act of March 17th, 1868, changed the artificial character given to the property of said company by its amended charter to it's natural and real character. After the passage and acceptance by the company of the act of 1868, the legislature had its election either to tax specifically the lands, lots, depots, etc., and other property of the company, or to tax the capital stock of the company in the hands of the share-holders, as representing such property. The law-making power of the State by failing to amend the revenue law, which provided for taxing the shares of stock of all banks and other corporations, elected to continue the taxation of defendant, the North Missouri Railroad Company, by an assessment of its shares of stock. The act of 1868 was not intended to be, and did not operate as, an amendment of the general revenue law, and the assessor would have had no right under the general revenue law to assess for county purposes any other property than that which was assessable for State purposes, and the property so assessable for State purposes was the stock of the company, and not the lands, depots and other