98 S.W. 834 | Tex. | 1907
This action is of the same nature as that of The State v. The Galveston, Harrisburg San Antonio Railroad Companw, recently passed upon by this court. (Ante, page 153.) There is, in this case, one question which was not in the former one.
Besides its other defenses, the defendant in error asserts that it is exempted from the tax imposed by the Statute of 1905, construed in the former case, by the fact that it is a federal agency, incorporated by virtue of an Act of the Congress of the United States, and derives its franchises to be a corporation, and to own and operate its road through the State of Texas from that source, and not from the State, invoking the doctrine that the operations of agencies established by the United States government for the accomplishment of its legitimate purposes are not taxable by the States. The legislation on which the various propositions *281
of the State and the railroad company depend is stated in Texas Pacific Railway Company v. Gay,
We regard this question as entirely settled, and the discussion of all of the propositions involved in it as foreclosed by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, which, in such matters, are binding on this court. That Congress is authorized, for the necessary and proper execution of the powers granted to the federal government, to create corporations, and empower them to carry on their operations in the States; that such corporations are to be regarded as instrumentalities of the United States, and that the rights to conduct their authorized businesses are beyond the power of the States in which they operate, "by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede, burden, or in any manner control," are propositions which were laid down in the case of McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheaton, 316, reaffirmed in Osborne v. United States Bank, 9 Wheaton, 738, and followed and enforced in many later cases. By these later decisions it has also been settled that corporations chartered by Congress, with power to construct, own and operate railroads through the States, as military and post roads, are such agencies, and are protected in the same way as other governmental agencies from interference with their operations by state legislation; and that the transcontinental roads, built under the authority and with the aid of Congress, and known as the several Pacific systems, including the Texas Pacific Railroad, are of that character. And it is the fully established doctrine of the Supreme Court of the United States that the operations of those roads, as distinguished from their property within the States, are exempt from taxation by the States. (Pacific Removal Cases,
In the opinion in the case of The State v. The Galveston, Harrisburg San Antonio Railway Company, this court defined the tax imposed by the statute under consideration as being, not a tax upon property of any description, but an occupation tax, or a tax upon the exercise by railroad companies of their franchises to operate their roads in this State. At pages 172, 173 of the report referred to, Mr. Justice Brown, speaking for this court, says: "Since a corporation can carry on no business except that for which it holds a franchise from the State, it follows that any tax levied upon a corporation in this State for exercising the privilege of carrying on its business must be classed as an occupation tax under our Constitution, and, in all tests of the validity of such a tax, those provisions of the Constitution which apply to occupation taxes must be the standard." That which is taxed, therefore, is the carrying on of the railroad business in the State; in other words, the operations of the railroad companies under their charters. The statement in the quotation, that a corporation can carry on no business except that for which it holds a franchise from the State, is true of those corporations to which alone it had reference, viz.: those which derive their franchises from the State; but this can not, consistently with the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, be affirmed of railroad corporations receiving from Congress franchises to construct, own and operate roads within the States, as agencies to effectuate governmental *282 purposes. These derive their authority to pursue the occupation of railroading from the federal government, and can not, without the consent of Congress, be prevented from or hindered in engaging in that occupation by state legislation of any character. Such is the doctrine laid down by the court, whose decisions upon such questions are conclusive upon us. It is said that the purpose of the law was only to tax the occupation of doing a railroad business wholly within the State, and that is true; but it does not meet the difficulty. The doctrine we are considering does not at all depend upon the distinction between intrastate and interstate commerce. It affirms the paramount authority of the federal government to maintain railroads as its agencies within the States, and to empower them to carry on their operations by the authority of Congress alone. This phase of the doctrine is thoroughly developed in Osborne v. The Bank, supra. It would be useless for us to examine or even to restate the reasoning upon which the doctrine has been built up. It is too firmly established to be questioned in the state courts.
When it is said that the State taxes only the occupation of carrying on the business in the State, the answer is that that occupation is authorized by the laws of the federal government, and can not be taxed by the State. It is said that the defendant in error received franchises from the State, and for that reason should he amenable to taxation by the State. In this respect it is in the same position as some of the other Pacific systems, whose liability to state taxation has been considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in some of the cases cited. In a number of the cases it has been held that the property of these railroads is taxable in the States where it is situated, while neither the operations of the roads nor the federal franchises under which they are operated are subject to such taxation. In California v. Central Pacific Railway,
If, under present conditions, there appears to be little real foundation for the assumption that railroads such as this one are, in practice, governmental agencies; if there is little difference, in fact, between them and other railroads which have not received charters, nor aid, nor protection from the United States government, but which may, and perhaps do, render to the government services of like character and upon like terms with them; if their immunity from state taxation operates as a discrimination between them and the other roads; and, finally, if the protection given to them by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, against discriminatory state legislation, detracts much from the applicability to them of the reasoning upon which Chief Justice Marshall founded the doctrine under consideration, the remedy, if there be one, is not with the Legislatures, or the judiciary of the States, nor now, perhaps, with the federal judiciary, but with the Congress of the United States.
We conclude that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in favor of defendant in error is correct, although based upon reasoning to which we have not agreed, and it will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.