Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright

53 S.E. 251, 124 Ga. 596, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 251 (Georgia Railroad & Banking 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
Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright, 53 S.E. 251, 124 Ga. 596, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 565 (Ga. 1906).

Opinion

CaNDLee, J.

(After making the foregoing statement.)

1. Shortly after the lease by the Georgia Eailroad to Wadley was ■made, it was assigned to the Lonisville & Nashville Eailroad Company, which subsequently became the sole lessee of the Western Eailway of Alabama; and in 1899 the Atlantic Coast Line Company acquired a half interest in the lease. Under the terms of "the lease, the lessee companies were bound to pay all taxes that might be collectible from the lessors. In August, 1901, the- Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company and the Atlantic Coast Line •Company, citizens respectively of Kentucky and Virginia, filed in "the United States circuit court for the northern district of Georgia a bill in equity against Wright, comptroller-general, and the Georgia Eailroad and Banking Company, reciting that the comptroller-general had demanded of the Georgia Eailroad taxes upon its fifteen thousand shares of stock in the Western Eailway of Alabama for the year 1900, that under the lease to them the lessee companies, and not the Georgia Eailroad, would have to pay the tax if it were collected; that under the laws of Georgia the shares in question were not subject to taxation; and praying that the comptroller-general be enjoined from collecting, and the Georgia Eailroad from paying, the tax demanded, On the hearing before the judge of the circuit court an injunction was granted. The comptroller-general, desiring to appeal the case, served on his .codefendant, the Georgia Eailroad, the following written notice: “A decree having been entered in the above-stated case against the defendants, and William A. Wright, comptroller-general, one of the defendants, desiring to appeal to the circuit court of appeals, you as a codefendant therein are hereby respectfully notified to appear and join in the appeal.” Service of this" notice was acknowledged, and .the reply made thereto that “Defendant hereby refuses to join in said appeal, being content with the decree rendered in said cause.” An order was then taken by the comptroller-general, permitting him to make the appeal alone, and this was accordingly done. The circuit court of appeals affirmed the decision of the circuit court, and the case was then taken by certiorari to the Supreme Court of the [602]*602United States, where the decisions of the courts below were reversed, and the cause "remanded to the circuit court of the United States for the northern district of Georgia, with directions to dismiss the bill of complaint.” The mandate of the' Supreme Court was duly made the judgment of the circuit court. In their answer to the petition filed by the Georgia Eailroad in the present case, the defendants pleaded res ad judicata, or, to be more accurate, estoppel by- judgment, claiming that the Georgia Eailroad is concluded by the judgment against it entered in accordance with the mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States, whereby the original bill of complaint was dismissed; and this plea raises one of the most difficult and important questions in a case abounding in questions of that character.

In the suit in the Federal court the Georgia Eailroad was nominally a codefendant of the comptroller-general, but in reality an adverse party at interest. The judgment enjoining it from paying the tax was exactly what it desired, and its interest lay in affirming, rather than in disturbing that judgment. Consequently, when its codefendant, the comptroller-general, took the case to the higher court, if it desired, in its own name, to be represented in the appellate proceedings as to its real and substantial, rather than its fictitious interests, it had every opportunity by appropriate adversary pleadings to place itself nominally as well as really at arm’s length with its codefendant. It preferred, however, to leave its lessors to defend its substantial rights, and to allow the judgment, nominally against it but really in its favor, to remain undisturbed by any act of its own. The judgment- of the Supreme Court of the United States was rendered in a case-to which, nominally, it was not a party, but which involved questions very vital to it and to which it had every opportunity to be made a party in its own name, The judgment against the Louisville & Nashville and Atlantic Coast Line companies necessarily and in terms carried with it an adjudication that the Georgia Eailroad was liable for the tax on this stock for the year 1900; and when, in accordance with -the mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States, the original bill in equity filed by the two plaintiff companies was dismissed, the Georgia Eail-road was concluded as to all questions growing out of that cause of action which were or might have been raised by it to protect its interests in that suit. “The mere circumstance of any persons hav[603]*603ing been formally arrayed on the same side in a suit is immaterial, . . and it is agreed upon now, that they will be estopped by a decision on a matter which was actually in issue between them, and as to which they had an active controversy against each other.” Hukm Chand, Res Adj. §78; Van Fleet, Former Adj. §256, p. 576; 24 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 733; 1 Dan. Ch. Pl. & Pr. (6th Am. ed.) *659; Foster’s Fed. Pr. §300; Case v. Beauregard,, 101 U. S. 688; Corcoran v. Chesapeake Canal Co., 94 U. S. 741; Riley v. Bank, 81 Md. 14, s. c. 31 Atl. 585; Louis v. Brown Township, 109 U. S. 163; Scotland County v. Hill, 112 U. S. 183; Waldo v. Waldo, 52 Mich. 91, s. c. 17 N. W. 709.

2. Counsel for the Georgia Eailroad, however, contend that even, if it is concluded by the judgment of the Supreme Court of the. United States as to its liability for the tax sought to be enjoined, in the proceeding before that court, the estoppel of the judgment, extends only to the question of the railroad’s liability for the tax-for the year 1900, and that it is not cut off from contesting the validity of the tax for all the other years involved in the present, suit, from 1883 to 1904 inclusive. The question turns, of course,, 'largely if not entirety upon whether suits for different taxes, or for taxes for different years, constitute different causes of action;, for suits to enjoin the collection of taxes would necessarily be governed by-the same principles. In 2 Cooley on Taxation, 845, it is. said: “Upon the question whether a judgment establishing a liability to pay- taxes for certain years is, in a subsequent action between the same parties, res adjudicata as to the liability for taxes of a succeeding year when the facts affecting the liability are the-same in the two cases, the authorities do not agree. It is held in. Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, and Tennessee, that the judgment for a tax is conclusive as to that tax merely, and in suits, for taxes of other years is important only as a precedent. [Citing Davenport v. Chicago R. Co., 38 Ia. 633, 640; Newport v. Commonwealth (Ky.), 50 S. W. 845, s. c. 51 S. W. 433; Louisville Bridge Co. v. Louisville (Ky.), 58 S. W. 598, s. c. 65 S. W. 814; Michigan R. Co. v. Auditor-General, 9 Mich. 448; Lake Shore R. Co. v. People, 46 Mich. 193; Adams v. Yazoo R. Co., 77 Miss. 194; State v. Bank, 95 Tenn. 222; State v. Bank, 95 Tenn. 231; Union Bank v. Memphis, 101 Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 251, 124 Ga. 596, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-railroad-banking-co-v-wright-ga-1906.