In this case the plaintiff, a resident of this state, asks that the defendant commissioners and their agents be restrained from collecting taxes upon his stock held in the bank of Abingdon, a corporation formed under an act of the legislature of the state of Virginia, and doing business in that state. The plaintiff alleges that the stock of the bank is taxed in Virginia for state and county purposes there, and that the same has been placed on the tax list here, and the sheriff threatens to collect the tax. The defendants demurred to the complaint, the court sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiff appealed.
The case presented by the demurrer to the plaintiff's complaint differs in no essential particular from that before us on the defendants' appeal between the same parties and upon the same subject matter, and decided at January term, 1880 (Worth v. Commissioners of Ashe,
Since that decision, our attention has been called to the case of Dyer
v. Osborne,
The court declared that in the light of the cases cited and reviewed, the state of Rhode Island has jurisdiction to tax the defendant's stock, "by having jurisdiction over the owner, the tax being in fact a tax upon the owner on account of ownership, rather than upon the shares themselves."
In reference to the tax imposed in Massachusetts the Chief-Justice proceeds: "The laws of Rhode Island are paramount in Rhode Island and all the inhabitants of the state are subject to them without regard to the laws of any other State. * * * It would certainly be going too far to hold that a man of wealth living in Rhode Island cannot be taxed at all, if his property is invested in the stocks of a manufacturing corporation of another state and there subject to taxation."
There is nothing repugnant to this in the ruling in Redmond v.Commissioners,
There is no error, and the judgment must be affirmed.
No error. Affirmed. *Page 412