Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. State

192 S.W. 1054, 108 Tex. 314, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 79
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1917
DocketNo. 2802.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 1054 (Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. State, 192 S.W. 1054, 108 Tex. 314, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 79 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

Mu. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit was by the State to recover of the Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Company taxes measured by its gross receipts from April 1, *318 1908, to April 1, 1913, under section 16 of the Act of 1907 (General Laws of 1907, chapter 8, pages 479-89), article 7384, Revised Statutes of 1911. The receipts of the defendant were in substantial measure derived from the carriage of interstate and foreign commerce. It had paid for the same period all of the State, county and city ad valorem taxes assessed against its property, and also its franchise tax.

In the District Court it was held that the tax levied by the Act of 1907 and so sought to be recovered was unconstitutional and void as a burden upon interstate and foreign commerce. Judgment was there rendered for the defendant. In the Court of Civil Appeals this judgment was reversed, and judgment was rendered for the State [166 S. W., 83],

Whether the tax in question is one upon interstate and foreign commerce and hence beyond the power of the State to impose, or is a tax which the State may lawfully exact, is a question controlled by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. The present inquiry resolves itself, therefore, simply into the ascertainment of that court’s rule of decision upon the subject.

The Act of 1905, levying a tax upon the gross receipts of railroad corporations, which this court had occasion to review in State v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Ry. Co., 100 Texas, 153, and was later passed upon by the United States Supreme Court (210 U. S., 217, 28 Sup. Ct., 638, 52 L. Ed., 1031), levied the same per centum upon the gross receipts of such corporations, and in substantially the identical terms, as does the Act of 1907. It is provided in the Act of 1907, as it was in the Act of 1905, that the tax shall be in addition to all other taxes levied by law. It is also declared in the Act of 1907, as it was, in effect, in the Act of 1905, that those to whom the tax applies shall be exempted from the payment of the intangible assets tax imposed by other laws. As to the subject of the tax, its measurement, and the operation of the law in respect to relieving against the payment of other taxes, there is no difference between the two acts. The only dissimilarity whatever between • them is that the Act of 1905 did not designate the character of the tax, whereas the Act of 1907 defines it as an occupation tax.

While the nature of the tax levied by the Act of 1905 was thus undefined in terms, this court held it to be an occupation tax; and, relying upon the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 142 U. S., 217 [12 Sup. Ct., 121, 35 L. Ed., 994]—wherein it was affirmed that a State could lawfully lay in excise tax upon railroad corporations exercising their franchises within its borders, consisting of a stated per centum upon their gross receipts derived in part from interstate commerce,—sustained the Act. Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. is apparently the authority upon which the Court of Civil Appeals rested its decision in the present case.

The Supreme Court of the United States, however, in its determination of State v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. *319 refused to apply the doctrine broadly announced in Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. It there held, that the tax levied by the Act of 1905, whatever its name or form, amounted to a tax upon the interstate business of the corporations subject to it, and declared the Act invalid.

The holding in the Maine ease that a State could adopt a given per centum of the gross receipts of the corporation arising in part from interstate commerce as the measure of a State excise tax, was without qualification, and without regard, therefore, to whether the property of the corporation was, under other laws of the State, fully taxed. The opinion does not intimate that the ruling was to any extent influenced by the possibility that the property of the corporation was not so taxed. In- refusing to apply the ruling made in the Maine case, the court, therefore, necessarily held that a State can not, unqualifiedly, levy an occupation tax measured by a given per centum of gross receipts derived in part from interstate commerce. This is conclusively shown by the manner in which the holding in the Maine case was explained and distinguished in the opinion delivered in the Galveston case, which was as follows: Affirming the full power of a State to tax the property of a corporation situated within its borders, though used in interstate commerce, and to tax it at its full value as a going concern, it was stated that the buildings of the railroad company before the court in the Maine case, and its lands and fixtures outside of its right-of-way, were, by the laws of Maine, taxed locally. But, it was added, "the local tcox was not expected to include the additional value gained by the property being a going concern It was then explained that the excise tax imposed by the Maine statute "was an attempt to reach that additional value ” and for this reason it was in that case sustained. In other words, the explanation -given by the court for its previous decision affirming that a State excise tax, measured by a given per centum of gross receipts derived in part from interstate commerce, could be lawfully imposed, was that the particular tax applied to a value of the property Avhich was not otherwise taxed under the laws of the State, namely, its value as a going concern.

Emphasizing this distinction the court then announced that the tax levied by the Act of 1905, though held by this court to be an occupation tax,.not differing in character from an excise tax, and though measured in the same manner as was the excise tax under the Maine statute, could not he sustained upon the ground which, according to the court’s explanation, supported the holding in the Maine case, that is, as reaching a value possessed by the railroad company’s property not by the State otherwise taxed, since it appeared that the property, under other laws of the State, was fully taxed as of a going concern.

This is equally true of the taxation of the property of the pla.i-nt.i-ff in error. It had paid all ad valorem taxes assessed against its property for the period for which it was sought to recover the tax upon its gross receipts, and its franchise taxes, in addition. The assessment of *320 its property for ad valorem taxation under the general laws included the value which it had as property of a going concern. Art. 7504, Rev. Stats.; State v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co., 100 Texas, 153, 97 S. W., 71. This being the condition in respect to other taxation of the plaintiff in error’s property, the decision of the United States Supreme Court in. State v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co., which is still adhered to by that court, is conclusive of the case.

The correctness of our interpretation of that decision is established ' by the application made of it in Oklahoma v. Wells-Fargo & Co., 223 U. S., 298 [32 Sup. Ct., 218, 56 L. Ed., 445], and its restatement in United States Express Co. v. Minnesota, 223 U. S., 335 [32 Sup. Ct., 211, 56 L. Ed., 459].

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192 S.W. 1054, 108 Tex. 314, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-belt-terminal-railway-co-v-state-tex-1917.