Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad v. State

2 Ohio App. 228, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 133
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 Ohio App. 228 (Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad v. State, 2 Ohio App. 228, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 133 (Ohio Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

This is an action to reverse a judgment for $85,203.40 recovered by the state against the- railroad company for delinquent excise taxes found to be due under the Willis law, so called, for the years 1902 to 1908, inclusive, being an assessment amounting to one-tenth of one per cent, upon the issued and outstanding capital stock of the railroad company for said years. The railroad company claims the judgment is not authorized by law.-

There is no dispute as to the facts -of the case, and though the literature of the case is voluminous, it will not be greatly extended by this opinion, for all that is really involved in the case is the true intent and meaning of a statute which seems plain enough upon its face for him who runs to read and understand. >

Previous to 1871 The Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad Company was a steam railroad corporation duly incorporated under the laws of Ohio and [229]*229owning and operating a railroad within the state. It was also incorporated under the laws of Pennsylvania and owned and operated a railroad in that state connected with its Ohio line.

October 25, 1871, The Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad Company leased all its property to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and surrendered possession of all its railroad and all property and equipment connected therewith to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the former company retaining 'its corporate existence, however, for the purpose of collecting its rent under the lease and distributing the same as dividends to its stockholders, with an agreement to pay for extensions, renewals, betterments and increased facilities for its railroad properties, the latter company to operate the road and pay all taxes lawfully assessed' against it. '

April 14, 1873, all rights under this lease were assigned to the Pennsylvania Company, which has ever since been in possession of the property, operating the same and paying all taxes assessed on the real 'and personal property of the lessor company.

April 11, 190.2, the original Willis act (95 O. L., 124) was passed, and sections 1, 2 and 7 thereof require consideration in this case, as well as section 7 of the act as amended April 25, 1904 (97 O. L., 381).

These two acts cover the period for which taxes were claimed by the state; there have been amend - ments to these statutes passed since 1908.

By the first section of the act of 1902 every corporation organized.under the laws of this state, for profit, is required to make a report in writing to the secretary of state, annually, setting forth cer[230]*230tain facts, including the nature and kind of business in which the company is engaged and its place or places of business, and to pay a fee of one-tenth of one per cent, upon the subscribed or issued and outstanding capital stock of the corporation.

By the second section of this act every foreign corporation for profit doing business in this state, and owning or using a part or all of its capital or plant in this state, and subject to certain requirements of other laws, is required to make a report of certain facts to the secretary of state, annually, and to pay an annual fee, for the purpose of exercising its franchises in Ohio, of One-tenth of one per cent, upon the proportion of the authorized capital stock of the corporation represented by the property owned and used and business transacted in Ohio.

Ever since the passage of this act the Pennsylvania Company has made reports to the auditor of state and has paid an excise tax upon the gross earnings from the operation of The Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad within the state of Ohio, as required by the second and fifth sections of the act of March 19, 1896 (92 O. L., 79), sometimes called the Cole act, and the amendments thereto. The Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad Company has never filed the annual reports nor paid the taxes required by either the Willis law or the Cole law, claiming that it was not required to do so because it was not “engaged in business” within the intendment of said laws, and in the claim that it was not required to file annual reports with the auditor of state the state has acquiesced and still acquiesces. With the merits of this claim.we are not now con[231]*231cerned, as will develop from further consideration of the case, but an assumption that this claim is correct is necessary to an understanding of the state’s contention regarding the meaning of section 7 of the act of 1902, to which we now come.

The legislature having provided by other laws for the payment of excise taxes by certain corporations, section 7 of the Willis act exempts them from the payment of a franchise tax or fee under its own provisions in the following language (quoting-only so much as is applicable to this case) :

“Provided that electric light, gas, natural gas, water works, pipe line, street railroad, electric interurban railroad, steam railroad, messenger, union depot, express, freight line, sleeping car, telegraph, telephone and other corporations, required by law to file annual reports with the auditor of state, * * * shall not be subject to the provisions of the preceding sections of this act.”

The amendment of 1904 (97 O. L., 3.81) makes no change in this language, except to insert the words “public service” between the words “other” and “corporations” so as to read “other public service corporations” instead of “other corporations.”

We apprehend this amendment is not important in a discussion of this case and confine our attention to a consideration of the meaning of the section as originally enacted.

The contention of the state, to quote from the brief of the attorney general and his associate counsel, is:

“That section 7 does not except the plaintiff in error company because, though it is chartered as a [232]*232railroad company corporation, it is not an operating company, and was not required during the years in question to file a report with the auditor of state and pay a tax under the Cole law, so called; and that the mention of steam railroad in section 7 means a steam railroad corporation which in addition to owning its property is also the operator thereof.”

It would seem that the legislature, if it had intended what the law officer of the state now contends for, would have said so. It could have said so by using the following simple language:

“Provided that all corporations (or all public service corporations) required by law to file annual' reports with the auditor of state, shall not be subject to the provisions of the preceding sections of this act.”

Instead of using this simple language it enumerated some fifteen kinds of corporations, and then said “and other corporations, required by law to file annual reports with the auditor of state,” shall not be required to comply with the act.

Clearly the intention was to exempt steam railroad corporations and the fourteen other corporations mentioned from the operation of the act, and also to exempt therefrom such other corporations, if any. then existing, or which might thereafter be authorized by law, and which might be required by law to file annual reports with the auditor of state.

The use of the words “other corporations required,” etc., was to complete the enumeration of exempt corporations and not, as claimed by the state, to limit and qualify the enumeration already made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio App. 228, 1913 Ohio App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-pittsburgh-railroad-v-state-ohioctapp-1913.