Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright

164 U.S. 327, 17 S. Ct. 80, 41 L. Ed. 454, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 1867
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1896
Docket300
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 164 U.S. 327 (Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright, 164 U.S. 327, 17 S. Ct. 80, 41 L. Ed. 454, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 1867 (1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

’after stating the cáse as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

*329 This case raises the question, frequently presented to this court, of the power of a State to impose upon a corporation a tax not provided for or contemplated, nor yet expressly forbidden, in its original charter.

The defendant corporation was chartered in 1833,. Laws of Georgia of 1833, 216, under the name of the Central Railroad and Canal Company, for the purpose of opening a canal or railroad communication from the city of Savannah to the interior of the State.” The seventh section declared that “ the said canal or railway, and the appurtenances of the same, shall not be subjected to be taxed higher than an half per cent upon its annual net income.” On December 11, 1835, the General Assembly passed an amendatory act, Laws of 1835, 217, under which the road was constructed, changing the name to the Central Railroad and Banking Company, and giving it certain banking powers and privileges. The eighteenth section of this act provided that “the said railroad, and the appurtenances of the same shall not be subjected to be taxed higher than one half of one per centum upon its annual net income, and no municipal or other corporation shall have power to tax the stock of said company, but may tax any property, real or personal, of the said company, within the jurisdiction of said corporation in the ratio of taxation of like property.”

No other act affecting the question at issue was passed until 1889, when the General Assembly provided a general system of taxation of railroad ■ property in each of the counties of the State through which the railroads ran, and required the various companies to make annual returns to the Comptroller General, under the oath of the president or chief executive officer, and enacted that they should be subjected to taxation in every county through which their roads might pass. Other sections of the act provided how the amounts should be assessed and paid, and the manner of issuing execution in the event they were not paid.

By another act, approved Decémber 21, 1890, railroad companies were subjected to taxation upon their property located in the different towns and cities of the State.

By reason of the fact that all of the property and effects of *330 the Central Railroad and Banking Company were in the hands of receivers, appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States, under certain bills filed to foreclose a mortgage to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, the Comptroller General was unable to collect such taxes by the ordinary process of levy and sale, and therefore filed his petition against such receivers, praying that they might be required to pay him the taxes. Under the acts of 1889 and 1890 the corporation made the returns required, and paid such taxes as were assessed upon those parts of its property which were admitted to be subject to taxation, but contended that, as to • its original line- between Savannah and Macon, it could not be' taxed, either by the State or by its municipalities, at a greater rate than one half of one per cent upon its net annual income.

In section eighteen of the act of 1835, above cited, there is an express prohibition against the municipal taxation of the “stock” of the company, and an express permission to tax any “property” of the company within the jurisdiction of the corporation. The real question is whether these two clauses can be reconciled, and each given its proper effect. The position of the railway company in this connection is that the railroad and its appurtenances may not be taxed either by the State or by municipalities or counties, at a greater jate than one half of one per cent upon its net annual income; that this amount having been paid, the power to tax the railroad and its appurtenances has been exhausted; that the permission given the municipalities to tax the property of the company applies only to such property as is not included in the term “railroad and appurtenances,” and must have been intended to include such property as the corporation, by virtue of its banking powers, could purchase or might receive in satisfaction of debts. It is further contended that the prohibition of the taxation of the stock applies equally to the property represented by the stock.

In support of this contention we are cited to certain decisions holding that a tax upon the “property” of a.railway' company is within the prohibition of a tax upon the “ stock ” of the company; in other words, that a tax upon the property *331 is a tax upon the stock. In examining these cases, however, it will be found that the words “ stock ” or “ capital stock ”■ were used in the sense of the capital, the plant, or- the property of the company, and not, as in this statute, in the sense of stock or shares of stock, as distinguished from the property of the company. Thus in Rome Railroad v. The Mayor &c., 14 Georgia, 275, there was an attempt 'made to lev}r a tax upon the property of the Rome Railroad Company within the corporate limits of the city of Rome. There was a provision in the charter that the “stock” of the company should “not be liable to any tax, duty or imposition whatever, unless such, and no more, as is now in the' banks of this State.” The tax was held to be invalid. ' As it appeared in this case that a certain part of the stock of the company, which was on deposit in the bank, was expressly permitted to be taxed, it was apparent that the word “ stock ” was used in the sense of property, and that the money of the company on deposit in the banks was intended to be distinguished from its other property.

So, also in State v. Hood, 15 Rich. (Law) 177, a charter of a railroad company exempting the “ stock ” of a railroad company from taxation was held also to exempt its “ gross income,” as the income was only an accessory of the stock, which was an aggregate of the property and effects of the corporation.

Indeed, the general tenor of the authorities is to the effect that where there is a general exemption of the stock or capital stock of a corporation, without other explanatory words, the exemption applies equally to the property of the corporation represented by its shares of stock. Gordon v. Baltimore, 5 Gill, 231; Baltimore v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 6 Gill, 288; State v. Cumberland &c. Railroad, 40 Maryland, 22; Connersville v. Bank of Indiana, 16. Indiana, 105 ; New Haven v. City Bank, 31 Connecticut, 106; Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad v. Shacklett, 30 Missouri, 550. And, in the Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Georgia, 92 U. S. 665, it was held by this court that, in view of the eighteenth section of the act of 1835, the State itself could not tax the property of the Central Railroad and Banking Company between *332

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Bluebook (online)
164 U.S. 327, 17 S. Ct. 80, 41 L. Ed. 454, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 1867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-railroad-banking-co-v-wright-scotus-1896.