Columbus Southern Railway Co. v. Wright

15 S.E. 293, 89 Ga. 574
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 19, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 293 (Columbus Southern Railway Co. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus Southern Railway Co. v. Wright, 15 S.E. 293, 89 Ga. 574 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

On October 16th, 1889, the legislature passed an act entitled : “ An act to provide a system of taxation of railroad property in each of the counties of this State through which said railroads run, and to provide a mode of assessing and collecting the saíne, and for other pur[576]*576poses.” Acts 1889, p. 29. The Columbus Southern Railway Company made its returns for the year 1890, as the act required, to the comptroller-general, who was proceeding regularly, in the manner prescribed by the act, to enforce the collection from said company of the taxes thereby imposed, when the company filed in the superior court of Fulton county an equitable petition to restrain him from so doing, on the ground that this act, in the several specified particulars below mentioned, was violative of the constitution of this State and of the United States. On demurrer, the petition was dismissed by the court below, and this judgment is assigned as error.

The petition alleges, in the first place, that the act is contrary to article 7, section 2, par. 1, of the constitution of Georgia, which declares : “ All taxation shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects, and ad valorem on all property subject to be taxed within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws.” It is contended that this paragraph is violated for the following reasons:

First, because section 8 of the act provides for assessing upon some railroads county taxes, based upon property valuation, and these “ railroads are assessed for taxation upon their personal property, wherever located, in the proportion as the value of the property located in each particular county bears to the whole property real and personal of said company,” while section’ 4 of the act provides as to certain other railroads a method of assessment based upon their net income, “and in the proportion as the number of miles of road in the several counties through which said railroad runs bears to the whole length of such railroad.”

Second, because the act prescribes a mode of assessing railroad propei’ty for taxation different from that pre[577]*577scribed by the general law for taxing other.corporations and individuals, in this, that the latter are taxed for the benefit of counties, only on their property within the limits of such counties, whereas with respect to a railroad company “its rolling-stock and other personal property, wherever located, is by the .aforesaid act distributed for taxing purposes and is assessed for taxation for the benefit of the several counties through which it runs whether or not such personal property be within the territorial limits of such particular county, in proportion as the value of the property located in that particular county is to the value-of the whole property, real and personal, of said company.”

Third, because the State is the authority levying the tax under this act, and the rate of -taxation is different in each of the several counties through which the road runs! ■

Fourth, because the act is a-special law, and repugnant to the clause of the above quoted paragraph of the constitution requiring “that all taxes shall be levied and collected under general laws.”

The petition further alleges that this act also violates the following provisions of our constitution, viz.: article 7, section 1, which enumerates the different purposes for which the legislature may impose taxes, among which is not included any provision authorizing the legislature to tax property for the benefit of counties; art. 3, section 7, par. 8, which declares that no law shall pass referring to more than one subject-matter, or containing matter different from what is expressed in the title; art. 6, section 9, par. 1, providing for uniformity in the jurisdiction, powers, proceedings and practice of courts of the same grade, it being alleged that under this paragraph the act could not confer upon the superior .court of Fulton county jurisdiction of the case.

The petition still further alleges that this act also [578]*578violates that clause of the 14th amendment of the constitution of the United States, which declares that no State shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

We will endeavor to discuss in the order above set forth the questions raised by the petition.

1. It will be seen that four objections are made to the act as infringing the uniformity requirement of the constitutional paragraph above referred to. The only distinct point made by the first of these is that the act provides one system of county taxtion for certain railroads based upon their net incomes, and another system for other railroads based upon an ad valorem valuation of their property. Long prior to the adoption of our code, the legislature, in the charters of certain railroad com•panies, limited the taxation to be imposed on their property to a certain per cent, of their net incomes,'and in the case of at least one railroad, the Augusta & Savannah, to a certain per cent, of its gross income. In effect, these charters gave the companies indicated partiál exemptions from taxation, and, under decisions made by the Supreme Court of the United States, are inviolable contracts between the State and the railroads. The legislature, in passing the act now before us, evidently took into consideration the facts just stated, and in view of the contingency that the general scheme of taxation contemplated might not be applicable to these companies, undertook to inaugurate a system of county taxation of railroad property, which would operate upon every railroad in the State, and thus meet all the requirements of our constitution. Accordingly the third section seeks to impose upon the property of all railroads in the State a uniform ad valorem taxation for the benefit of the counties through which théy run, measured in each particular county by the rate of taxation there prevailing, and the purpose of the fourth section is to impose upon the [579]*579property of railroads having charter exemptions a system of taxation for the benefit of counties, to the full extent authorized by the charters of such railroads, in the event the third section could not be applied to them. It was undoubtedly intended to include in the terms of the act all railroads in the State, but by mere inadvertence no distinct or express provision is made for a railroad whose property is taxable only upon the basis of its gross income, or for railroads a portion of whose property is taxable at a limited charter rate, and the remainder at the general rate applicable to all other kinds of property. It is as to the railroads in the condition last mentioned that we experience the greatest difficulty in giving the act a practical enforcement, but we will endeavor to show, before concluding, that the difficulty is by no means insuperable. The omission to provide expressly for a railroad like the Augusta & Savannah, in view of what will follow, is of slight consequence. We have now reached the point where it will be proper to discuss and dispose of the fourth section of the act. The result of our deliberations is that this section is not a vital portion of the law, but is really inoperative and needless. In the first place, we will observe, as already intimated, that the section itself does not affirmatively assert there is any railroad, or class of railroads, in the State, the property of which is taxable, for county purposes, on the income basis.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 293, 89 Ga. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-southern-railway-co-v-wright-ga-1892.