Forbes v. Gracey

94 U.S. 762, 24 L. Ed. 313, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1939
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1877
Docket1042
StatusPublished
Cited by135 cases

This text of 94 U.S. 762 (Forbes v. Gracey) 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
Forbes v. Gracey, 94 U.S. 762, 24 L. Ed. 313, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1939 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

Tbis was a suit brought by appellant to enjoin tbe collector of taxes for Story County, Nevada, from collecting a tax imposed by tbe law of that State upon tbe property of tbe Consolidated Virginia Mining Company, tbe appellant being a stockholder in the company and an alien subject of tbe Queen of Great Britain. The tax is, by the State statute, imposed upon tbe proceeds of tbe mine worked by the corporation, and is resisted on tbe ground that the title to the land from which *763 the mineral is taken is in the United States, and- is not for that reason liable to State taxation.

The case is prepared and submitted to us on printed arguments in the very last days of the term, and we are urged to decide it on the ground that it involves a question of vast interest to all the mining operations in the Pacific States, and is of vital importance to the State of Nevada, as it affects her largest source of revenue. In view of its importance we should postpone the decision until next term, if the questions presented were either doubtful or difficult of solution. We think a very few words — all we can give to the subject at this late day — will show that it is neither.

It is very true that Congress has, by statutes and by tacit' consent, permitted individuals and corporations to dig out-and convert to their own use the ores containing the precious metals which are found in the lands belonging to the government, without exacting or receiving any compensation for those ores, and without requiring the miner to buy or pay for the land. It has gone further, and recognized the possessory rights of these miners, as ascertained among themselves by the rules which have become the laws of the mining districts as regards mining claims. See Revised Statutes, title xxxii. chap. 6, sects. 2318-2352. But in doing this it has not parted with the title to the land, except in cases where the land has been sold .in accordance with the provisions of the law on that subject. If the tax of the State of Nevada is, in point of fact, levied on this property-right of the United States, we are bound by our previous decisions and by sound principle to hold that it is void. If, .on the other hand, it is levied on property of the miner, and may be collected without affecting or embarrassing the title of the United States to property which belongs to that government, then there is no ground for interference with the processes of the State in its collection. A few extracts from the statute of Nevada, showing the nature and character of the property on which the contested tax is imposed, and the manner of its enforcement and collection, will enable us .to decide whether it belongs to the one or th¿ other of these classes. We copy here the important sections of the act of Feb. 28,1871, imposing this tax: —

*764 “ Section 1. All ores, tailings, and mineral-bearing material of whatever character shall be assessed for purposes of taxation for State and county purposes in the following manner: From the gross yield, return, or value of all ores, tailings, or mineral-bearing material of whatever character, there shall be deducted the actual cost of extracting said ores as minerals from the mine, the actual cost of saving said tailings, the actual cost of transportation of said ores, mineral-bearing material, or tailings to the place of reduction or sale, and the actual cost of such reduction or sale, and the remainder shall be deemed the net proceeds, and shall be assessed and taxed as provided for in this act: Provided, that in no case whatsoever shall the whole amount of deductions allowed to be made in this section from the gross yield, return, or value of said ore, mineral-bearing material, or tailings exceed the percentage of gross yield, value, or return of such ore, mineral, or tailings, as hereinafter specified ; on all ores, tailings, or mineral-bearing material the gross yield or value of which is $12 per ton or less, the whole amount of deductions shall not exceed ninety per cent of such gross yield, return, or value; on all ores, tailings, or mineral-bearing material, ,the gross yield, value, or returns of which is over $12 and under $30 per ton, the whole amount of deductions shall not exceed eighty per cent of such gross yield, value, or return; on all ores, tailings, or mineral-bearing material, the gross yield, return, or value of which is over $30 and less than $100 per ton, the whole amount of deductions shall not exceed sixty per cent of such gross yield, value, or return; on all ores, tailings, or mineral-bearing material, the gross yield, return, or value of which is $100 per ton or over, the whole amonnt of deductions shall not exceed fifty per cent of such gross yield, return, or value: Provided, that an additional exemption of $15 per ton may be allowed on all ores, tailings, or minerals worked by the Freiburg process.
“ Sect. 2. It shall be the duty of the several county assessors within this State to compare and complete quarterly, on or before the second Monday in February, May, August, and November, in each year, a tax list or assessment roll of the proceeds of the mines, alphabetically arranged, in a book furnished them by the board of county commissioners for that purpose, in which book shall be listed \or assessed the proceeds of all mines in their respective counties, as provided in this act.”
“ Sect. 6. Every tax levied under the authority or provision of this act on the proceeds of the mines is hereby made a lien on the mines or mining claims from which ores or minerals bearing gold *765 or silver, or either or any other valuable metal, is extracted for reduction, •which lien shall attach on the first days of January, April, July, and October of each year, for the quarter year commencing on those days respectively; and shall not be satisfied or removed until the taxes, as provided in this act, on the proceeds of the mines, are all paid, or the title to said mines or mining claim is absolutely vested in a purchaser, under a sale for the taxes levied on the' proceeds of such mines or mining claims.”
“Sect. 10.- The collection of the tax authorized to be levied under this act shall be enforced in the same manner in which the tax on any other kind of personal property is enforced and collected.”

What is this manner of enforcement is to be found in sect. 110 of a previous statute, which reads as follows: —

“ At any time while the assessment roll of any quarter is in the hands of the assessor for collection, the assessor may seize upon the personal property, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the taxes and costs, of any. person, firm, corporation, association, or company who shall neglect or refuse to pay such taxes for one week after such demand of the assessor or his deputy, and shall post a notice of«such seizure, with a description of the property, and the time and place whereon it will be sold, in three public places in the township or precinct where it is seized, and shall, at the expiration of five days, proceed to sell at public auction, at the time and place mentioned in the notice, to the highest bidder for cash, a sufficient quantity of such property to pay the taxes and costs incurred.”

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Bluebook (online)
94 U.S. 762, 24 L. Ed. 313, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forbes-v-gracey-scotus-1877.