214 F. 180 | 8th Cir. | 1914
These are appeals from decrees which dismissed complaints to enjoin the treasurer of South Dakota from collecting taxes levied against the plaintiffs by the state board of assessment and equalization of the state of South Dakota in the year 1910. The plaintiffs are express companies, and they claim that the assessments of their property made by the board in 1909 and 1910, on which it levied the taxes in those years, were made in violation of the Constitution of the state of South Dakota, in that in making them it took into consideration their earnings in the state while the earnings of the great majority of the taxpayers of the state were not considered in assessing their property for taxation, that these assessments were made in violation of the statutes of that state, in that the board based them on a certain percentage of the respective amounts the plaintiffs paid to the railroad companies for transportation services in South Dakota, instead of' founding them on the values of their personal and real properties, ahd for other reasons. They brought suits on these grounds to enjoin the collection of the taxes in 1909 against them. Those suits were heard and decided in their favor by Judge Willard, and decrees for injunctions were rendered, from which no appeals were ever taken. Before the decision of those cases was made the board had made the
“All taxes to be raised in this state shall be uniform on all real and personal property, according to its value in money, to be ascertained by such rules of appraisement and assessment as may be 'prescribed by the Legislature by general law," so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her or its property and the Legislature shall provide-by general law for the assessing and levying of taxes on all corporation property, as near as may be, by the same methods as are provided for assessing- and levying of taxes on individual property.”
Section 17 of chapter 64 of the Laws of South Dakota 1907, which was in force in 1909 and 1910, provides that the board shall:
“On the first Monday in July .each year assess all the property of every express and sleeping car company doing business in this state and used in the-operation and maintenance of its business, and in doing so shall take into consideration the gross earnings of said company within the state for the year ending on the thirtieth day-of April preceding the statements made by said companies and by the board of railway commissioners and any and all other matters necessary to enable them to make a just and equitable assessment of said property in the same ratio as the property of individuals.”
And that:
“Said board shall levy a tax upon said property, which tax shall be equal to. the average amount of state, county, school, municipal, road, bridge and other local taxes levied upon other property for the preceding year.”
Section 16 of the act provided that every express company doing business within the state must transmit to the state auditor, on or before July in each year, a statement of the gross earnings of the total business of the company transacted in the state for the year ending April 30th preceding, and of the value of its office furniture, fixtures,, and real estate within the state. Wells Fargo & Co. made a statement to the auditor in June, 1910, that its gross earnings'within the state for the year ending April 30, 1910, were $131,096.28, and that the value of its office furniture, fixtures, and real estate was $18,473.98. The board assessed the value of its property $289,877, and assessed a tax of 28 mills on the dollar upon it, which made its tax $8,116.65. The American Express Company made a similar report, and received a similar assessment. It is admitted in the answer, and the testimony for the defendant was, that in making these assessments of the plaintiff's property the board considered, among other things, the earnings of and the business done by the companies in the state of South Dakota, and defendant’s counsel in their brief in this court say:
“As has been said, the board of assessment of South Dakota did consider, among other things, the income of appellant, so far as they could ascertain it, the contracts of appellant with the railway companies, the uses to which its property was put, and the intangible, as well as the tangible, assets in this state, in fixing this valuation. If this was wrong, then the tax must fall: but we contend it was not wrong.”
The first question in this case, therefore, is whether or not taxation at a uniform rate, at the rate of 28 mills on the dollar in'this case, of the real and personal property of one taxpayer on a valuation measured by its selling value in money and of the real and personal property of another taxpayer on a valuation measured by the earnings of the owner of the property, as well as by its selling value, is equal and uniform taxation of the real and personal property of both, so that each “person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her or its property,” as the Constitution requires. This question seems susceptible of but one answer; it seems impossible that such assessments could produce equal and uniform taxation according to the value in money of the property assessed. Counsel for the defendant, however, invoke the familiar rule that the national courts follow the settled construction by the highest judicial tribunal of a state of its Constitution and laws where no question of general or commercial law or of the Constitution or laws of the United States is involved, and insist that the Supreme Court of South Dakota decided, in State ex rel. American Express Co. v. State Board of Assessment and Equalization, 3 S. D. 338, 53 N. W. 192, that a statute which authorized the board to consider the gross earnings of a corporation in making the assessment of its property did not violate the Constitution of that state. The opinion in that case has been carefully and repeatedly read and searched in vain for any presentation, discussion, reference to, or decision of the question whether or not a statute which required the board to take into consideration the gross earnings of one class of taxpayers in assessing their real and personal property for taxation, while the assessors of the property of other classes were not required to and did not take their
“General expressions in every opinion are to be taken in connection witb. the case in winch those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case they may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit when the very point is presented for decision.” Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, 293, 5 L. Ed. 257; King v. Pomeroy, 121 Fed. 287, 294, 58 C. C. A. 209, 216; Traer v. Fowler, 144 Fed. 810, 817, 75 C. C. A. 540, 547; Mason City & Ft. Dodge Ry. Co. v. Wolf, 148 Fed. 961, 968, 78 C. C. A. 589, 596; Evans v. Victor, 204 Fed. 361, 367, 122 C. C. A. 531, 537.
An attempt is also made to sustain the constitutionality of this statute and the validity of the assessments of the plaintiffs’ property under it by the decisions in State v. United States Express Co., 114 Minn. 346, 131 N. W. 489, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1127; United States Express Co. v. Minnesota, 223 U. S. 335, 348, 32 Sup. Ct. 211, 56 L. Ed. 459, and Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Adams, 155 U. S. 688-697, 15 Sup. Ct. 360, 39 L. Ed. 311. But the Constitution of Minnesota expressly authorized the Legislature of that state to impose a tax upon the gross earnings of express companies (article 9, § 17), and it contained no such requirements or restrictions as those that have been cited from the Constitution of South Dakota. The Legislature of Minnesota, under the Constitution of- that state, passed an act providing for a 6 per cent, tax on the gross earnings in Minnesota of express companies in lieu of all other taxes. Revised Laws Minnesota 1905, §§ 1013, 1019. The state sued the express company to recover this 6 per cent, of certain earnings which the express company had derived from business which that company claimed constituted interstate commerce, and hence was exempt from taxation by the state under the commercial clause of the Constitution of the United States. The Supreme Court of Minnesota, in the case first cited above, adjudged this claim, and held that a part of these earnings were, and a part were not, exempt from taxation by the state under the Constitution of the United States. 114 Minn. 346, 131 N. W. 490, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1127. In the discussion of this question the court reaffirmed its previous decisions that
In Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Adams, 155 U. S. 688, 696, 15 Sup. Ct. 268, 360, 39 L. Ed. 311, the only question before the court was whether or not a tax levied by the state of Mississippi was violative of the commercial clause of the Constitution of the United States, and upon that issue alone are the remarks of the court either authoritative or material. Thus it appears from a review and analysis of these decisions upon which defendant’s counsel seem to rely: (1) That the only question at issue or decided in any of them was whether or not certain taxes were levied in violation of the commercial clause of the Constitution of the United States; (2) that the construction in the Minnesota case that a tax on the gross earnings in a state of a corporation is a tax on its property therein, measured by the gross earnings, was based on express authority in the Constitution of that state to-tax the gross earnings, and on the fact that such tax was levied in lieu of all other taxes on its property; and (3) that there is nothing in the adjudications or opinions in these cases to the effect that, in the absence of express authority in the Constitution of a state to levy taxes on the gross earnings of a corporation, and in the face of positive declarations therein that all taxes “shall be equal and uniform,” that “all taxes raised in this state shall be uniform on all real and personal property according to its value in money * * * so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her, or its property,” and that “the Legislature shall provide by general law for the assessing and levying of taxes on all corporation property, as near as may be, by the same methods as are provided for assessing^ and levying taxes on individual property,” a statute which requires the taxation of the property of a corporation on an assessment of its property by the consideration of the gross earnings of the corporation in the state and the value of its property, while the property of the vast majority of the taxpayers of the state is taxed upon assessments measured by the actual value of their property without any consideration of the earnings of its owners, is not violative of these constitutional restrictions, or that an assessment made in accordance with such a statute is not void. And so the question recurs and demands its answer.
It is conceded that the people of a state may, by express provisions in its Constitution, authorize their legislative and executive officers to
“The Legislature shall provide by general law for the assessing and levying of taxes on all corporation property, as near as may be, by tbe same methods as are provided for assessing and levying taxes on individual property.”
Section 17 of chapter 64 of the Laws, of South Dakota requires the assessment of the property of express companies to be, and in this case it has been, measured by its actual value in money with a consideration of the earnings of the company in that state, and no logical or lawful way of escape is perceived from the conclusion that this is not “as near as may be” the same method provided for the assessment of the property of individuals because an assessment of the property of these corporations at their actual value in money, without a consideration of their gross earnings, might have been prescribed and followed.
The Constitution requires taxation to be uniform “so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to his, her, or its property.” The assessment of the property of individuals is required to be and is measured by its actual value in money without consideration of the gross earnings of its respective owners. Section 17 of chapter 64 requires the assessment of the property of express com-
There are other considerations that confirm our minds in this con-clusión. The Constitution of South Dakota has been amended since 1910 so that it no longer requires that all taxes shall be “uniform on all real and personal property according to its true value in money” and so that it provides that “gross earnings and net income shall be considered in taxing corporations,” amendments clearly not made without just reason.
There were five express companies doing business in South Dakota in 1909 and 1910 under contracts with railroad companies to pay to the latter from 45 per cent, to 55 per cent, of their gross earnings from the transportation of express business over their lines. As the amounts paid to the railroad companies by the respective express companies were approximately one-half of the amounts of their gross earnings from the transportation of the express business over these railroads in South Dakota, the amounts so paid furnished a ready measure of the gross earnings of the respective companies from their transportation business over these railroads. The amount paid to the railroad companies by Wells Fargo & Co. was $181,193.72, and its -assessment was 1.59 of that amount or $289,877. The amount paid to the railroad companies by the American Express Company was $120,689.56, and its assessment was 1.60 of that amount or $193,260, and this although the value of the office furniture, fixtures and real estate of the former was reported to be $18,473.98 and the number of miles it operated in South Dakota 1,621, while the reported value of the office furniture, fixtures, and real estate of the latter was $9,151.73 and the number of miles operated by it in South Dakota 1,363. The amount paid the railroad, companies by the United States Express Company was $6,-812.22, and it$ assessment was 1.59 of that amount, or $10,899. The amount paid the railroad companies by the Western Express Company was $1,507.28, and its assessment was 1.51 of that amount or $2,262, and the amount paid the railroad companies by the Great Northern Express Company was $6,626.47, and its assessment was 1.71 of that amount, or $11,278. How comes it that the assessments of three of these companies who were doing the larger part of the express business in the state were the same percentage within l’per cent, of the respective amounts they paid to the railroad companies? There is but one rational explanation of this fact, and that is that the board measured the assessments of these companies by the amounts these companies paid to the railroad companies, respectively, that is to say, by
The decrees below must be reversed, and the cases must be remanded to the court below, with instructions to render decrees for the plaintiffs in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.