Diamond Match Co. v. Ontonagon

188 U.S. 82, 23 S. Ct. 266, 47 L. Ed. 394, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1269
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 19, 1903
Docket96
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 188 U.S. 82 (Diamond Match Co. v. Ontonagon) 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
Diamond Match Co. v. Ontonagon, 188 U.S. 82, 23 S. Ct. 266, 47 L. Ed. 394, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1269 (1903).

Opinion

Mk. Justice McKeNNa,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The contention of appellant is presented in three propositions. (1) That the village of Ontonagon had no power to assess the property under its charter. (2) That the legislature could not confer such power. (3) That the property was in the course of transportation within the meaning of the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States.

1. This proposition is unimportant. If the charter did not, the statute of 1899 did, authorize the assessment.

2. To sustain this proposition would embarrass the power of the State — indeed, make it impotent to deal with the conditions there existing. .The statute, no doubt, was enacted as a means to subject property to taxation which had no definite or enduring locality, and because of the clash or confusion of jurisdictions. In such circumstances experience, probably, demonstrated that property escaped taxation or wTas difficult to tax, or that controversies arose. It was competent for the legislature to defeat either result by giving moving property a definite situs as of some day. Nor is that power impugned by the principle that protection is the consideration of taxation. There is protection during the transit through the municipalities of the State and at its termination in the State — protection accommodated to the kind of property and as efficient as links are to the continuity of a chain.

There is nothing in the cases cited by appellant which sustains the opposite view. Trigg v. Glasgow, 2 Bush, 594, séems to have turned upon the interpretation of a state statute. Under a statute of the State the town of Glasgow was authorized to subscribe to the stock of a railroad, and by the charter of *91 the town it was the duty of the trustees to “ levy an ad valorem tax on the property, both real and personal, within said town, that is listed for state purposes, including the amount given in under the equalization law, sufficient,” etc.

■ By an amendatory act it was provided that “ all the taxable property in-said town on the 10th of April shall be subject to taxation for the payment of said subscription; ” and it also provided that the taxable property in said town which may have been removed without its limits between the 1st of January and the 10th of April, for the purpose of evading the tax, should be listed for taxation.

The court held, as we understand its opinion, that property to be subject to taxation under the statute must be in the town. If it had been taken out to avoid taxation, it was subject to taxation when brought back.

St. Louis v. The Ferry Co., 11 Wall. 423, was also an interpretation of the state statute. The city of St. Louis had power to tax all property zoithin the city. It was held under the circumstances of the case that the ferry boats of the ferry company had their situs in the State of Illinois. It was said:

“ Their relation to the city was merely that of contact there, as one of the termini of their transit across the river in the prosecution of their business. The time of such contact was limited by the city ordinance. Ten minutes was the maximum of the stay they were permitted to make at any one time. The owner was, in the eye of the law, a citizen of that State, and from the inherent law of its nature could not emigrate or become a citizen elsewhere. As the boats were laid up on the Illinois shore when not in use, and the pilots and engineers who ran them lived there, that locality, under the circumstances, must be taken to be their home port. They did not so abide within the city as to become incorporated with and form a part of its personal property.”

In Wells v. Weston, 22 Missouri, 384, and In Assessment of Lands in the Town of Flatbush, &c., 60 N. Y. 398, the property taxed wras real estate.

The purpose of the statute of Michigan is to assess the forest products'of the State — things which are a part of the general *92 property of the State. Those “ in transit ” are assessable according to their destination. If that be “ some place within the State,” the property is to be “ assessed in such place; ” if that be “ some place without the State,” the property is to be assessed at the place in the State nearest to the last boom or sorting gap of the same in or bordering on this State in which said property will naturally be the last floated during the transit thereof.”

But it is also provided that “in case the transit of any such property is to he other than through any watercourse in or. hor-dering on this State, then such assessment shall he made at the point where such property icill naturally leave the State in the ordinary course of its transit.”

We may assume for the present that the property was in transit and to some place without the State. Was the transit to be other than through any watercourse in or bordering on ” the State ? The appellant contends that it was because it was to be by water and by rail; in other words, the transit was not to be exclusively “ through any watercourse.” ' But to give that meaning to the statute words must be added to it. It must be made to read other than exclusively or wholly or entirely “ through any watercourse.” One of these words must be added to make the sense contended for. The word other” is used to express a difference — the difference being between a transit which is and one which is not through any (the word is significant) watercourse.

The transit in controversy was to be through (by means of) the Ontonagon Iiiver, certainly a watercourse, and by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, and, therefore, the property was properly assessed by the village of Ontonagon, that being the place in the State nearest to the last boom or sorting gap of the stream in or bordering on the State in which said property naturally would be and was intended to be last floated during the transit thereof.

3. Was the transit interstate commerce? We agree with counsel that it is unimportant in determining an answer whether the transit “ was by water or by railroad, or both water and railroad.” But no purpose to burden interstate commerce is *93 evident in the statute, and the power of the State to tax everything which is part of what has been called “ the general property ” or “ the general mass of property ” of the State, is undoubted. But things which have been brought to a State may not have reached that condition. Things intended to be sent out of a State, but which have not left it, may not have ceased to be in that condition. The exact moment in either case may not be easy to point out — may be confused by circumstances, and the confident assignment of the property as subject or not subject to taxation is not easily made. Fortunately we are not without illustrations in prior cases, and in Kelley v. Rhoads, p. 1, ante,

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Bluebook (online)
188 U.S. 82, 23 S. Ct. 266, 47 L. Ed. 394, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-match-co-v-ontonagon-scotus-1903.