Great Northern Railway Co. v. Minnesota

216 U.S. 206, 30 S. Ct. 344, 54 L. Ed. 446, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1886
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1910
Docket359
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 216 U.S. 206 (Great Northern Railway Co. v. Minnesota) 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
Great Northern Railway Co. v. Minnesota, 216 U.S. 206, 30 S. Ct. 344, 54 L. Ed. 446, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1886 (1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit by thh State of Minnesota against the Great North *212 ern'Railway Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of that State, has for its object to recover the balance alleged to be due the State on account of taxes from the railway company, under a statute known as Chapter 253 of the General Laws of Minnesota of 1903.

The controlling question in the-case relates to the constitutionality of certain sections of that statute, as follows: “ § 1. Every railroad company owning or operating any line of railway situated within or partly within this State shall, during the year 1905, and annually thereafter,, pay into the treasury of this State in lieu of all taxes and assessments upon all property within this State owned and operated.for railway purposes by such company, including the Equipment, appurtenances, appendages and franchises thereof, a sum of money equal to four per cent of the gross earnings derived from the operation of such line of railway within this State; and the annual payment of such sum shall be in full and in lieu of all other taxes and assessments upon the property and franchises so taxed. The lands acquired by public grants shall be and remain exempt from taxation until sold or contracted to be sold or conveyed, as provided in the respective acts whereby such grants were made or recognized. §2. The term ‘gross earnings derived from the operation of such line of railway within this State' as used in section one of this act is hereby declared and shall be construed to mean all earnings on business beginning and ending within the State and a proportion based upon the proportion of the mileage within the State to the entire mileage over which such business is done of earnings t. all interstate business passing through, into or- out of the State.” Gen. Laws, Minn., 1903, c. 253, p. 375.

. The effect of the statute, Minnesota asserts, was to place the Great Northern Railway Company, as to rates, on the same, basis of taxation as other railroads in the State. But, the .company contended in the- courts below, and contends here, that the requirement to pay for 1905 and annually thereafter four per cent of the gross earnings derived from the operation *213 of its railroad within the State was in violation of a statute enacted May 22d, 1857, by the Territory of Minnesota, incorporating the Minnesota and Pacific Railroad Company, ’ and which fixed three per centum of the gross earnings of that company’s railroad property as a tax in lieu of all taxes and assessments whatever. Sess. Laws, Minn., 1857, Extra Sess., §§ 1, 4,18. The provisions in the latter statute, it is alleged, constituted a contract with that company, (the remote predecessor of the defendant company), which was protected, in favor of the latter, by the contract clause of the Constitution of the United States, as well as by the clause of the Fourteenth Amendment forbidding the deprivation of property without due process of law. All this was disputed by the State.

The gross earnings of the company during 1905 were, it is conceded, $18,540,396.27, four per cent of which, $741,615.85, the State demanded under the act of 1903. The company paid $620,878.47 on account of gross earnings for 1905, and refused to pay more. For the difference, $120,737.38, with interest, the State claimed judgment. The railway company admitted its liability .to pay four. per cent on the gross earnings derived from certain lines operated by it in 1905, but denied liability in excess of three per cent on the gross earnings derived, during the same period, from certain other lines. It insisted that the sum paid by it before being sued herein was all that could be legally demanded by the State for the year 1905,

The trial court made certain findings of fact and announced certain conclusions of law that were not satisfactory to' either party. But it was stipulated that, on the baáis of those findings and conclusions, the State would be entitled to a judgment for $32,285.94, with interest from July 11th, 1898, and costs; and for that sum judgment was given by the trial court ágainst the railway company. Each party prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court of Minnesota. That court sustained the State’s appeal and reversed the judgment with directions to enter judgment in favor of the State for the entire amount it had *214 sued for — $120,737.88, with interest. 106 Minnesota, 303. Hence this writ of error by the railway company.

It is necessary to a clear understanding of the question of contract, as' well as the objections raised against the act of 1903, that we state certain facts in the history of the taxation of railroad property in Minnesota.

By an act approved February 26th, 1857, Congress authorized the people of the Territory of Minnesota to form a constitution preparatory to its admission into the Union as a State on an equal footing with the. original States. 11 Stat. 166, c. 60. And by an act passed March 3d, 1857, it made a grant of lands to the Territory to aid in the, construction of railroads between certain points with branches between certain other points, and provided that, the lands so granted should be subject to the future disposal by the Legislature of the Territory or future State for the purposes expressed by Congress, and no other. 11 Stat. 195, 190, c. 99, §§ 1, 3.

In execution of the trust created by that act of Congress, the Legislative Assembly of the Territory, by the above act of May 22d, 1857, incorporated the Minnesota and Pacific Railroad Company, investing it with all the powers, privileges, franchises and immunities incident to a corporation, and empowering it to survey, locate, construct, maintain and operate a railroad with one or more tracks or lines between certain named places; to which end it was authorized to enter upon and appropriate lands belonging to the Territory or future State, not exceeding a prescribed width throughout the entire length of its railroad. Sess. Laws Minn., 1857, Extra Sess., p. 1, §§ 1, 4, 18.

The 18th section of the latter act constitutes an important feature in this case. So much of that section as is material in determining this case is as follows: “In consideration of the grants, privileges and franchises herein conferred on the said Minnesota and Pacific Railroad Company, the said company shall and will, on or before the first day of March in each year. *215 pay into the treasury of the Territory or future State, three per centum of the gross earnings of the said railroad, for the year ending on the last day of the preceding December, in lieu of all taxes and assessment whatever, . . . and for securing to the Territory or State the payment of the aforesaid per centum it is hereby declared that the State shall have alien upon’ the railroads of the said company, and upon all other property, estate and effects of the said company, whether real, personal or mixed, and the lien hereby secured shall take and have precedence of all demands, decrees and judgments against the said company.

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Bluebook (online)
216 U.S. 206, 30 S. Ct. 344, 54 L. Ed. 446, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-northern-railway-co-v-minnesota-scotus-1910.