Northern Pacific Railroad v. McGinnis

61 N.W. 1032, 4 N.D. 494, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 54
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 1032 (Northern Pacific Railroad v. McGinnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Pacific Railroad v. McGinnis, 61 N.W. 1032, 4 N.D. 494, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 54 (N.D. 1894).

Opinion

Corliss, J.

The complaint in this action is the same as that in the case of Railroad Co. v. Barnes, 2 N. D. 310, 51 N. W. 386, [499]*499The judgment appealed from was rendered on motion for judgment on the pleadings; but the answer failed to deny any of the material averments of the complaint, and therefore, for the purposes of this decision, all of its allegations must be regarded as true. The action was brought for the same purpose as the case of Railroad Co. v. Barnes, supra. Some of the questions of law presented are the same as those discussed in that case. On these points further discussion is unnecessary. We will merely state our conclusions.

We hold that the gross earnings law of 1883 was unconstitutional, as being repugnant to section 1925 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, regulating taxation in the Territory of Dakota. We regard this question as not open to debate in this court, for the reason that it is a federal question, and has been passed upon by the United States circuit court for this district, both the circuit judge (Judge Caldwell) and the District Judge (Judge Thomas) being agreed on the point. Railroad Co. v. Walker, 47 Fed. 681. Judge McConnell, who sits in this case, desires to have it appear that he yields his former view, as expressed in Railroad Co. v. Barnes, 2 N. D. 310, 51 N. W. 386, to the binding force of this decision of the Federal Court, while still adhering to his previous opinion. The gross earnings act being void, it follows that no exemption of plaintiff’s land grant could be claimed under it.

It is urged, however, with great earnestness, that, in view of the fact that the plaintiff has paid its gross earnings tax for the year in which the taxes in question were levied on its land grant, the territory and the counties were estopped from collecting such land taxes. But if, as was held in Railroad Co. v. Walker, 47 Fed. 681, there was no power in the legislature to exempt this land, it is difficult to see how an estoppel can be built up. If the power of the legislature is restricted, that restriction cannot be removed by the act of state officials in receiving moneys which they have no right to receive, and which the party paying it is under no obligation to pay. The plaintiff, being bound to know the law, was [500]*500chargeable with knowledge at the time it made this payment to the state that the legislature was powerless to exempt its land grant in consideration of such payment or for any consideration whatever. It would be a novel doctrine that, after the people had tied the hands of their representatives by inhibitions in the fundamental law, these very representatives could ignore these prohibitions by procuring the co-operation of state officials vested with no such power, but as much subject to the restrictions of the organic law as the representatives themselves. Such officials cannot, by the receipt of money, or by express agreement, or in any other way, infuse life into a void exemption statute. The assessor charged with the duty of assessing the land attempted to be exempted, and taxpayers in the taxing district, have a right to insist that the land shall be taxed, for a law higher than statute law has so decreed. The duty of the assessor to assess, the right of the taxpayer to insist that it shall be assessed, rest upon an authority which transcends legislative authority, and cannot be affected by legislative action, although state officials may lend to this attempted violation of the rights of other taxpayers their unlawful co-operation. If this exemption feature were void only because of the invalidity of that portion of the law which assumes to tax the local earnings on interstate traffic, then there would be much force in this contention of plaintiff; not, however, on the theory of estoppel, but on another theory, — i. e. that of an executed agreement. If the territorial legislature had had power to exempt the plaintiff’s land grant,— and we are of the opinion that the only ground on which the exemption could be held void was that a portion of the consideration for the exemption must fail, because the state could not tax the local earnings of interstate traffic, — then it might possibly be urged that, in so far as the plaintiff had in any year voluntarily paid such unenforceable tax on gross earnings, the state, by receiving the same, had acted upon its standing offer to receive the gross earnings tax, and in lieu thereof, exempt the plaintiff’s land grant and other property, and therefore had executed for [501]*501that year its proposal to exempt for a specific consideration by allowing plaintiff to accept and act upon the same. But, where there is no power to exempt at all, no matter what the consideration is, the receipt of consideration under an offer to receive it in full for all taxes cannot confer such power. That there was no power to exempt the land grant at all was held in the Walker Case, which we follow. The spirit of provisions like that found in section 1925 of the Revised Statutes of the United States is to prevent unfair discrimination in taxation. The right to the protection of such provisions is the right of the taxpayers; and the object of such provisions is to secure such right from invasion, although the combined power of the state essays to override and destroy it. If, in defiance of constitutional restriction, land can be exempted by a statute, followed by the receipt of money under it, then, for the consideration of a dollar, millions of dollars’ worth of property may be exempted, and this enormous burden of taxation unjustly thrown upon the other taxpayers in the taxing district. Half the land in the district might thus escape taxation, and the other half be inequitably loaded with a double burden. Protection against unjust discrimination in taxation under such a doctrine would not rest upon the sure foundation of fundamental law, but be granted or withheld at the good pleasure of the law-making power, and of public functionaries.

It is next urged that plaintiff had no such title to that portion of its land grant against which the taxes in question were levied as would render it taxable, for the reason that it has never been determined whether such land is mineral in character. The contention thus made leads inevitably to the conclusion that no portion of plaintiff’s vast land grant is taxable until after patent has issued, as the question whether the land has passed under the grant because of its non-mineral character is never definitely settled until the land department has lost jurisdiction by the issue of patent. Barden v. Railroad Co., 14 Sup. Ct. 1030. As a result of this doctrine, millions of acres of land to which the plaintiff unquestionably has title might remain untaxable for a quarter of [502]*502a century. When once it is determined that a given section is non-mineral, the title to it is not then for the first time vested in the plaintiff. It is elementary that the title relates back to the date of the granting act so far as place lands are concerned (Wis. Cent. R. Co. v. Price Co., 133 U. S. 496-509, 10 Sup. Ct. 341;) and it is such lands, and not indemnity lands, that we have to deal with in this case. The title is as much in the plaintiff before this question is settled as after. Barden v. Railroad Co., 14 Sup. Ct. 1030; Salt Co. v. Tarply, 142 U. S. 241, 12 Sup. Ct. 158.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 1032, 4 N.D. 494, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railroad-v-mcginnis-nd-1894.