Appeal of Fox

4 A. 149, 112 Pa. 337, 1886 Pa. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 10, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 4 A. 149 (Appeal of Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Fox, 4 A. 149, 112 Pa. 337, 1886 Pa. LEXIS 283 (Pa. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Paxson

delivered the opinion of the court May 10th, 1886.

This bill was filed by the complainants in the court below against Edward Lerch, Reuben Fehnel, and Tilghman Wolfe, Commissioners of Northampton county, and Hiram Edelman, [348]*348assessor of the sixth ward in the borough of Easton, to restrain defendants from requiring plaintiffs to make a return of their personal property for taxation under Act of June 30th, 1885.

The bill avers that the complainants are residents of Easton, and that Hiram Edelman is the assessor of the sixth ward, in which the plaintiffs reside. That he served a notice upon them requiring them to make a return of their personal property, viz., mortgages, notes, &e., for taxation, in accordance with the Act of June 30th, 1885. That upon the refusal of the plaintiffs to make such a return, the assessor would estimate the amount of their property, and return the same to the county commissioners, who would add fifty per centum thereto, and make the aggregate amount the basis of taxation of the personal property of the plaintiffs. That the Act of June 30th, 1885, is in conflict with sections 1 and 2 of Article IX. of the Constitution, and also with section 3 of Article III. The bill then prays for an injunction to restrain the assessor from requiring the plaintiffs to make a return, and from estimating their said property and returning such estimate to the commissioners, and restraining the commissioners from adding fifty per centum to any estimate made by the assessor.

The answer of the defendants admits the statement of facts contained in the bill, but denies that the Act of June 30th, 1885, is unconstitutional.

The case appears to have been set down for argument in the court below upon bill and answer. The court denied the injunction, and dismissed the bill. It was, therefore, a final decree.

The Act in question is entitled “ A further supplement to an Act entitled ‘ An Act to provide revenue by taxation,’ approved the seventh day of June one thousand eight hundred and seventy-nine.”

The first section of said Act provides “ That all mortgages, money owing by solvent debtors, whether by promissory note or penal or single bill, bond or judgment; also all articles of agreement and accounts.bearing interest, owned or possessed by any person or persons whatsoever (except notes or bills for work or labor done, and all obligations given to banks for money loaned and bank notes), and all public loan or stocks whatsoever (except those issued by this Commonwealth or the United States), and all moneys loaned or invested in any other state, and all other moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens of the state, shall be and are hereby taxable for state purposes, at the rate of three mills on the dollar of the value thereof annually: Provided, That' the same shall, after the passage of this Act, be exempt from all taxation ex[349]*349cept for state purposes : Provided, The provisions of this Act ' shall not apply to building and loan associations.”

The seventh section enacts that “ It shall ’ be the duty of every .taxable person to make the return prescribed in the preceding section (sixth) of this Act, within ten da]^ after being required to do so, with his or her affidavit thereto attached, made and subscribed before the proper assessor, that the return is true and correct to the best of his or her knowledge and belief. Any person who shall wilfully and corruptly make a false and fraudulent return shall be guilty of wilful and corrupt perjury.”

And by section ninth it is provided that “ Upon the refusal or failure of any taxable person to make a return, as required bj'- this Act, it shall be the duty of the assessor to make a return for such taxable person, estimating the amount from the best information at his command, to which estimated return the proper county commissioners or boards of revision shall add fifty per centum, and the aggregate amount so obtained shall be the basis for taxation: Provided, That if such taxable person, on or before the day fixed for appeals from assessments, shall present reasons under oath, satisfactory to the proper county commissioners or boards of revision, excusing the failure to make a! return, and shall then make such return as should have been made to the assessor, the proper county commissioners or boards of revision, shall substitute the taxable person’s return for that returned by the assessor, to have the like effect as if no failure had occurred.”

The twentieth section repeals or abolishes all taxes laid upon manufacturing corporations by the revenue laws of the Commonwealth, with a proviso that said repeal shall not apply to corporations engaged in the manufacture of malt, spiritous, or vinous liquors, or in the manufacture of. gas.

These are all the sections of the Act which I think it necessary to give at length or to epitomise. The remaining sections, if discussed at all, will only be referred to incidentally.

It was contended that the Act is in conflict with sections 1 and 2 of Article IX. of the constitution. Said sections are as follows:

Sec. 1. All taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects, within the -territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws; but the General Assembly may, by general laws, exempt from taxation publi<£ property used for public purposes, actual places of religious worship, places of burial not used or held for private or corporate profit, and institutions of purely public charity.

[350]*350Sec. 2. All laws exempting property from taxation, other, than the property above enumerated, shall be void.

It was urge'd upon the argument that the Act of 1885 conflicts with these provisions because,

1. It exempts building and loan associations from taxation under its provisions.

2. It exempts all manufacturing corporations from taxation under the revenue laws of the Commonwealth, except companies engaged in the manufacture of gas and liquors.

3. It provides only for the taxation of mortgages and other personal property of individual citizens,- thereby exempting corporations of all kinds.

To which may be added the further objection, not made upon the argument, that the Act expressly excepts from its operation “ notes or bills for work or labor done.”

It is clear, from the language of the Act, that it does "exempt building and loan associations from taxation under its provisions; that it does repeal all taxes upon manufacturing corporations with the exceptions therein named; and that it does exempt from taxation “notes or bills for work and labor done.” We are also of opinion that mortgages and other moneyed securities held and owned by corporations are not, and were not intended to be taxed by the Act in question.

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Bluebook (online)
4 A. 149, 112 Pa. 337, 1886 Pa. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-fox-pa-1886.