Musgrove v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

75 A. 245, 111 Md. 629, 1909 Md. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 A. 245 (Musgrove v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musgrove v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 75 A. 245, 111 Md. 629, 1909 Md. LEXIS 140 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

*630 Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of assumpsit brought hy the appellant, Samuel O. Musgrove, Treasurer of Howard County, to recover from the appellee, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, the sum of $1,736,000. The narr. contains but one count, for money payable hy the defendant to the plaintiff, but sets out at much length the circumstances under which it is claimed the plaintiff became entitled to this large amount. The hill of particulars filed in the case is as follows :

“The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company to Samuel C. Musgrove, Treasurer of Howard County. Mortgage. Eate. Income. Tax. Amount Due
1904. $75,000,000 3y2% $2,625,000 8% $210,000
$70,000,000 4% $2,800,000 “ 224.000
1905. (C 210,000
a cc 224.000
1906. “ “ “ “ 210.000
“ “ “ “ “ 224.000
1907. “ “ “210.000
“ “ “ “ “224,000
$1,736,000.”

The averments of the narr. may he summarized as follows:

That the amount claimed is for taxes due on two mortgages recorded in Howard County, and executed hy the defendant in pursuance of the Act of Assembly, Chapter 140 of 1896, paragraph 200.

That under the provisions of Chapter 120 of 1896, paragraph 146a, all mortgagees or assignees holding mortgages of record in the State of Maryland are required to pay annually a tax of eight per centum upon the gross amount of interest covenanted to be paid each year to the mortgagee or his assigns by the mortgagors, to be collected by the proper authorities as other taxes are.

*631 That by Chapter 140 of 1896, paragraph 200, any railroad company was authorized in executing a mortgage on property located in this State to secure bonds issued by such company, to covenant in such mortgage to pay the taxes levied on such mortgage, or the bonds secured thereby, or on the interest payable thereon.

That the defendant is incorporated by Chapter 123 of 1826, as a resident corporation of this State, with its main ‘office in this State, in which it owns and operates various track rights, terminals, and rolling stock, and is a large holder of stocks and bonds of other railroads outside of this State, but which stocks and bonds are held in this State bj the defendant.

That the two mortgages mentioned in the bill of particulars, are, 1st, one from the defendant dated July 1st, 1898, to the Mercantile Trust Company of New York, Trustee, for $75,000,000, bearing interest at 3% per cent, per annum, duly record in Howard County, and upon property located in this State, to secure the payment of bonds named in said mortgage, issued and outstanding prior to Sept. 1st, 1903, and still outstanding; 2nd, another mortgage of same daté, from the defendant to the United States Trust Company of New York, and John A. Steward, Trustee, for $175,000,000 with interest at 4 per cent, per annum, also duly recorded in Howard County, and upon property located in this State, to secure payment of bonds mentioned in said mortgage, and issued to the amount of $70,000,000, outstanding prior to Sept. 1st, 1903, and still outstanding.

That in each of said mortgages, the defendant, as authorized by Chapter 140 of 1896, paragraph 200, covenanted with the mortgagee and its assigns to pay all taxes levied' on said mortgages, or the bonds secured thereby or the income thereon, and by virtue of said covenants became liable for such tax.

That it was provided by Chapter 120 of 1896, paragraph 146a, that where such mortgage is recorded in two or more counties in this State, the tax so levied shall be due and pay *632 able in that one of the two counties where the greater part of the mortgaged' property is located.

That by Chapter 405 of 1904 certain counties of this State were exempted from the operation of Chapter 120 of 1896 providing for the. taxation of mortgages, and that after the passage of the above Act of 1904, a greater part of the property covered by-said two mortgages was located in Howard County than in any other county wherein the said tax on mortgages is in force and collectible.

That the passage of Chapter 794 of 1906, and Chapters 283 and 564 of 1908, did not affect the right of Howard County to collect the tax claimed.

That the defendant in pursuance of the several Acts mentioned in the narr., was assessed upon the books of Howard County upon the gross amount of interest covenanted in said two mortgages to be paid, according to the amount of the outstanding bonds for the years ending, Sept. 1st, 1904, 1905, 1906 and 1907. That by Chapter 317 of 1896, the Treasurer of Howard County was constituted the collector of all State and county taxes for said county and authorized to receive all moneys due said county from any source.

That -the County Commissioners of Howard County duly levied upon said assessment of income due to said two mortgagees or their assigns, the said tax of eight per cent, and plhced said levy in the hands of the plaintiff, by means of all .which the defendant became indebted, and still is indebted to the plaintiff for county taxes as aforesaid, and being so indebted afterwards undertook and promised to pay the plaintiff the same on demand.

That the plaintiff has duly demanded the taxes mentioned in the bill of particulars, but the defendant has refused and still refuses to pay the same, and the plaintiff claims $2,-000,000.

To this narr., the defendant demurred, and its demurrer was sustained, and judgment being entered thereon in favor of defendant, the plaintiff has appealed.

Since the decisions in Faust v. The Building Assn., 84 *633 Md. 186, and Allen v. Nat. State Bank, 92 Md. 509, there can be no question that mortgages of land in this State, owned and held by citizens of other States, as well as of this State, may rightfully be taxed in the counties of this State where the land is situated, and' that though the tax be levied upon the interest, and not directly upon the mortgage debt, “this is only another method of taxing the latter, and the rate of taxation is determined by the percentage of interest.” The only question-therefore which it will be either necessary of useful to consider, is whether the Legislature has intended by the passage of the various Acts relating to this subject, to exercise the power to impose the tax in question here; or, changing the form of expression, without altering its substance, whether the Legislature intended to impose this tax upon railroad mortgages given to trustees to secure bonds issued by it and sold to investors as other marketable securities are sold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 A. 245, 111 Md. 629, 1909 Md. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musgrove-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1909.