Macon & Augusta Railroad v. Goldsmith
This text of 62 Ga. 463 (Macon & Augusta Railroad v. Goldsmith) 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.
Opinion
This case came before the court below on an affidavit of illegality to four tax fi. fas., issued by the comptroller-general of the state against the defendant for its taxes alleged to be due for the years 1874, 1875, 1876 and 1877. The said fi. fas. were dated 20th November 1877, each for the sum of $10,000 for tax due, and for the further sum of $30,000 for penalty — the said tax being assessed by the comptroller-general for each year, from the best information he could procure as to the value of the defendant’s taxable- property — -thesaidyi./as. were levied on the defendant’s depot buildings, and ten acres of land, and about five miles of its track in the county of Bibb, the levy having been made by the deputv-sherifl; of that county. There are several grounds of illegality to the fi. fas. insisted on in the defendant’s affidavit, but the main and principal grounds are, that by its charter of 1837, it was only to be taxed thirty-one and one-fourth cents on every hundred dollars’ worth of its stock, and thtrefore the act of 1874 taxing its stock or property, as other property of the people of the state is taxed, impairs- the obligation of its contract with the state, and is unconstitutional and void, and that the assessment made, was not in conformity to the state constitution of 1868 and' the act of 1874, but is on the capital stock of two millions at par, instead of upon the value of the property of defendant’s company.
It was agreed that the Macon & Augusta Railroad was not commenced to be built until after the passage of the act of 18th of February, 1854. On the 2d of March, 1878, the de[466]*466fendantmade returns of the capital stock of its company for the years 1874,1875,1876 and 1877 to the com ptroller-general without deducting its indebtedness, which were submitted to the court by the defendant, it being agreed that the court should decide the questions without the intervention of a jury. The counsel for the state demurred to the defendant’s affidavit of illegality in connection with the evidence in the record. The court sustained the demurrer so far as the unpaid tax specified in the fi.fas. was concerned : whereupon the defendant excepted. The court sustained the affidavit of illegality as to the penalty specified in the fi.fas., whereupon the counsel for the state excepted.
The result therefore is, on the facts of .the case as disclosed in the record, that if the proper remedy of the defendant had been by an affidavit of illegality the same should have been overruled. > Inasmuch, however, as the de fendant made no return of its.property as required by the act of 1874, prior to the issuing of the executions against it, it was not entitled to the statutory remedy as provided by that act, and therefore the'judgment of the court below [468]*468is reversed with directions that the defendant’s affidavit of illegality be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. In my individual judgment, this caséis distinguishable from that of the State vs. The Southwestern Railroad Company; in that case the defendant had made a return of its taxable property as required by the act of 1874:, and so had the Central Railroad and Banking Company. Let the judgment of the con t below be reversed with directions as hereinbefore indicated.
Judgment reversed with directions.
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