Morrison v. Manchester

58 N.H. 538
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 58 N.H. 538 (Morrison v. Manchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Manchester, 58 N.H. 538 (N.H. 1879).

Opinion

Doe, O. J.

The supreme legislative power, vested in the senate and house of representatives by the second article of the constitution, includes the power of taxation, which is the power of causing a constitutional division to be made, among the members of the community, of the public expense, of which each one is, by the twelfth article of the bill of rights, bound to contribute his share. Each one is bound to contribute his share of the expense incurred by all in protecting the life, liberty, and property of each, and promoting the common welfare. What each is bound to contribute being a debt of constitutional origin and obligation, no part of the share of one can be constitutionally exacted of another. And as any one’s payment of less than his share leaves more than their shares to be paid by his neighbors, his non-payment of his full share is a violation of their constitutional right.

*550 Such non-payment is, in effect, a compulsory payment of money, by those who bear their shares of the common burden, to the privileged person who does not bear his share.. It is, in law and in fact, as much a subsidy, paid by the former to the latter, as if it were a subsidy in form and in name. The result is the same whether (1) a man pays his just tax of $10, and receives it back again, and his neighbors pay $10 more than their shares, or (2) they pay $10 more than their shares, and the ceremony of his paying $10 and receiving it back again is omitted, or (3) he and they pay their several shares, and they pay him $10. The first may be called a donation of a subsidy or bounty; the second may be called an exemption; the third may be called something else. They are three methods of doing one thing. Of the common burden that belongs to the subsidized individual and his neighbors, his share is borne by his neighbors, and he does not help them bear their shares. When a town hires money, with an agreement that the promise of payment shall not be taxed (Gen. Laws, c. 53, s. 11), there is no exemption. The town dispenses with the circuity of taking money from the lender as a tax and returning it to him as interest, and avoids the expense and risk of collecting and repaying it. When a part of a class of taxed property is exempt, the public dispenses with the circuity of taking money from the owner as liis just tax, and returning it to him as a gratuity. The whole or a part of his tax-debt is collected from his neighbors. This cannot be done by New Hampshire taxation, which is an equal sharing of the public expense, and not a donation of subsidies to a part of a class of property owners out of the property of others. The direct or circuitous grant of bounties, when constitutional, is an exercise of the power of protection, the expense of which is equally divided by the tax power.

The relief to which the plaintiff is entitled is a release from so much of the tax assessed to him as is in excess of his share. Such order is to be made as justice requires. Gen. St., c. 53, s. 11. While he is not to be compelled to bear any part of his neighbors’ shares, he is not to receive, for any part of his share, a discharge that would infringe their right by extorting from them what he ought to pay. An excessive abatement of his tax would put upon them a part of his duty. Such an abatement would not be less unconstitutional than his excessive assessment.

There is no general provision of the constitution or statutes exempting from taxation the property of insolvent persons, or exempting all property except what the owners would have if their debts were paid, or exempting all property that is liable to be applied to the payment of debts, on execution, or foreclosure of mortgage, or pledge. The constitution, declaring that every member of the community is bound to contribute his share of the public expense, does not exempt any property. The statutes declaring property taxable do not lay down a general rule, that from taxable property the amount of the owners’ debts shall be deducted, and that their taxes shall be assessed upon the bal *551 anee, as if their estates had been settled in a court of probate or bankruptcy. It is specific property that is taxable. This has been the rule of the province and state. The assessment of railroads is an instance of the application of the rule. Railroad v. Prescott, 47 N. H. 62, 67, 69. “ No state has ventured to establish the principle of permitting its visible, tangible property to escape taxation, relying solely on a tax imposed on the individual on the basis of his estimated wealth in excess of his debts.” Taylor v. Secor, 92 U. S. 575, 605. What exceptions there have been, or now are, in this state, and what constitutional ground they stand on, are questions not raised by this case.

The rule may have been adopted upon various considerations. Governments are organized for the protection of persons and property, and the expenses of the protection may properly be apportioned among the persons protected, according to the value of their protected property. Tappan v. M. N. Bank, 19 Wall. 490, 501. Seeing the debtor and his property receive the benefits of government as if he were not a debtor, the legislature may have thought it equitable that he and his property should bear their share of the cost of these benefits at if ho were not a debtor. They may have thought that his share would not be ascertained if an amount of his property equal to his debts were exempted from its proportion of the expense incurred for the protection and benefit of that property as well as similar property of others who are not debtors, and that such an exemption would be an unconstitutional transfer of his burden, or a part of it, from him to his neighbors. They may have deemed it unwise, in that manner, to compel the non-speculating class to pay bounties to those who venture beyond their means, as an encouragement of speculation. The ascertainment of what property all persons, partnerships, and corporations would have if their debts were paid, as a basis of taxation, may have been considered impracticable and demoralizing. It would require assessors to investigate matters often too intricate and obscure to be speedily or accurately unravelled, and would offer a reward for the fabrication of fictitious debts and fraudulent evidence, by which taxation could easily be made extremely unequal. The exemption of an amount of property equal to the owners’ debts, if they had so much, might sometimes, in some towns, make the public expense a crushing burden for some or all of those upon whom it would fall. Half of the property in a town might be exempt, although benefited by the expenditure of taxes as much as the other half that paid the taxes. Upon whatever reasons the legislature have acted, and however sound or unsound their reasons, the general rule adopted by them for taxing specific property, instead of taxing such balance as would be left after payment of the owners’ debts, is not a violation of the constitution: and the legislature did not intend to submit the question of its justice to the court in tax appeals.

In this state, the taxability of money at interest is not an open judicial question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.H. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-manchester-nh-1879.