Minot v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad

85 U.S. 206, 21 L. Ed. 888, 18 Wall. 206, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1302
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by215 cases

This text of 85 U.S. 206 (Minot v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad) 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
Minot v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad, 85 U.S. 206, 21 L. Ed. 888, 18 Wall. 206, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1302 (1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice FIELD,

after stating the facts of the case, delivered the opinion of the court, as follows:

It is contended by the appellant that the act of Delaware of .April 8th, 1869, so far as.it imposes taxes upon the corporation defendant, violates the contract between the State a.nd the corporation contained in the charter of the latter. His position is that the provision, in the act of Delaware of 1885, by which the "Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company was united with the Delaware and Maryland Railroad Company, that the new company .should pay annually into the treasury of the State a tax of one-quarter of one per cent, upon its capital stock of four hundred thousand dollars, being accepted by the stockholders of the two companies by their union into one company, constituted a contract between the new company and the State of Delaware, which precluded that State from imposing any greater or different tax upon the capital stock of the new company; and that the provision in the same act of Delaware, that the new company .should possess all the rights and privileges vested in the original companies, or either of them, by that law, or any other law of thafState or of Maryland, extended to the new company the sapie exemption from taxation on it3 shares of capital stock, which ivas possessed by the Maryland corporation under its charter; and that the same limitation upon the taxation of the capital stock, and the same immunity of the shares from any taxation, were extended to the corporation defendant by the provisions of the act of Delaware under which this latter company was formed.

*225 That the charter of a private corporation is a contract between the State and the corporators, and within the provision of the Constitution prohibiting- legislation impairing the obligation of contracts, has been the settled, law of this court since the decision in the Dartmouth College case. * Nor does it make any difference that the uses- of the corporation are public, if the corporation itself be private. The contract is equally protected from legislative interference, whether the public be interested in the exercise of i'ts franchise or the charter be granted for the sole benefit of its corporators. This doctrine is not controverted by any one; it is the established law; and the question in all cases, when it becomes necessary to apply it, is whether the particular legislative interference alleged does in fact impair the obligation of the contract; for it is not every kind of legislative interference with the powers, action, and property of the corporation which will have that result.

It has also been repeatedly held by this 'court that the legislature of a State may exempt particular parcels of property or the property of particular persons or corporations from taxation, either for a specified period or perpetually, or may limit the amount or rate of taxation, to which such property shall be subjected. And when such immunity is conferred, or such limitation is prescribed by the charter of a corporation, it becomes a part of the contract, and is equally inviolate with its other stipulations. But before any such exemption or limitation can be admitted, the intent of the legislature to confer the immunity or prescribe the limitation must be clear beyond a reasonable doubt. All public grants are strictly construed. Nothing can be taken against the State by presumption or inference. The established rule of construction in such cases is that rights, privileges, and immunities not expressly granted are reserved. There is no safety to the public interests in any other rule. And with special force does the principle, upon which the rule rests, apply when the right, privilege, or im *226 munity claimed calls for any abridgment of the powers of the government, or any restraint upon their exercise. The power of taxation is an attribute of sovereignty, and is essential to every independent government. As this court has said, the whole community is interested in retaining it undiminished, and has “a right to insist,that its abandonment ought not to be presumed in a case in which the deliberate purpose of the State to abandon it does not appear.” * If the point Were not already adjudged it would admit of grave consideration, whether the legislature of a . State can surrender this power, and make its action in this respect binding^ upon its successors any more than it can surrender its police power or its right of eminent domain. But the point being adjudged, the surrender when claimed must be shovyu by clear, unambiguous language, which will admit of no reasonable construction consistent with the reservation of the power. If a doubt arise as to the intent of the legislature, that doubt must be solved in favor of'the State.

If, now, we apply this rule of construction to the provision of the act of Delaware, under which the original Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company was united with the. Delaware and Maryland Railroad Company, requiring the new company to pay annually iuto the treasury of the State a tax of one-quarter of one per dent, upon its capital stock of four hundred thousand dollars, the position of the appellant falls to the ground. That provision, is not accompanied with any words indicating the intent of the legislature that no further or different tax should not be subsequently levied. Had the provision in question been embodied in an independent act, no one would pretend that the designation of the amount and character of the tax carried with it any implication, that the tax should remain unchanged in these particulars for all future time during the existence of the corporation. And it is not perceived how a different conclusion is warranted because the tax is designated in an independent section of the act, under which the *227 new company was formed, instead of being designated in an independent act. As already observed, nothing can be taken from the power of the State in this respect by presumption or inference.

In the case of The Commonwealth v. The Easton Bank, * we have an adjudication of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania .upon the precise question here presented. The Easton Bank had been chartered under a general law which prescribed the payment of taxes on its dividends at a fixed rate. A subsequent statute increased that rate, and it was argued, as here, that the designation in the original act created a contract on the part of the State that no additional tax should be laid, and that the latter act, therefore, impaired the obligation’of the contract. But the court held that the designation in the original act was nothing more than a simple declaration of the tax then to be paid by the bank, and did-not give the slightest intimation of an agreement or understanding, that the tax'should not be increased during the existence of the charter. “To deduce,” said .the court, “from premises so insufficient, a consequence of such magnitude, would, indeed, be a gross violation of the wholesome principle that an abandonment of the power of taxation is only to be established by clearly showing this to have been the deliberate purpose of the State.”

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Bluebook (online)
85 U.S. 206, 21 L. Ed. 888, 18 Wall. 206, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minot-v-philadelphia-wilmington-baltimore-railroad-scotus-1874.