Oliver v. Mills

93 Mass. 268
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 Mass. 268 (Oliver v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Mills, 93 Mass. 268 (Mass. 1865).

Opinion

Bigelow, C. J.

No question has been made in these cases as to the form of the actions or as to the right of the plaintiff to recover the sums of money demanded of the several defendants, if it shall be held that the tax or excise established by St. 1863, c, 236) is legal and valid. By that statute it was provided that every corporation organized under a charter or under general statutes should reserve from each dividend one fifteenth part of that portion thereof which was due and payable to its stockholders residing out of the Commonwealth, and should pay the same as a tax or excise on such estate or commodity to the treasurer of the Commonwealth. The right of the legislature to impose this tax or excise is the real and only subject of controversy in these actions.

It is by no means certain, on the phraseology of the statute, whether the legislature intended by its provisions to impose a tax or to lay an excise. In the title of the act it is called “ a tax on the stock ” ; in the body of the statute it is denominated “ a tax or excise on such estate or commodity.” Probably the real purpose was to frame an act to raise a revenue out of certain specified property, by putting it in such shape that it might be held valid either as a tax or an excise, whichever it might be properly called, on a due consideration of the nature of the imposition, the kind or species of property on which it was laid, and the mode in which its payment was to be made and enforced. We shall therefore be more certain of arriving at a result which will cover the whole ground of controversy, and ai [273]*273the same time leave no room to suppose that the intentions of the framers of the statute have been either overlooked or disregarded, if we consider its provisions in both the aspects which may be taken of their interpretation and meaning.

Before proceeding, however, to determine the question whether the imposition of the tax or excise is valid and within the limit of legislative authority, it is necessary to understand whether it was intended to be laid on the corporations designated in the statute, or upon certain of their stockholders. On this point we cannot entertain any doubt. The purpose of the act in this respect is made manifest from the title. It is declared to be designed “ to levy a tax on the stock of corporations held by persons whose residence is out of the Commonwealth.” This is equivalent to a declaration that the tax or excise is to be imposed on the property of non-resident stockholders, because the shares in a corporation belong to its stockholders, and not to the corporation. The same intent is clearly shown in the body of the act. The subject of the tax or excise is not the real or personal property of the corporation, nor yet its franchise or corporate power and capacity. The “ estate or commodity ” which is to be liable to the assessment provided for by the act is that portion of the dividends which may become due and payable to stockholders residing out of the Commonwealth. Such dividends cannot in any just sense be regarded as belonging to the corporation, or as fit subjects of an assessment which is to constitute a corporate charge or burden. It is not until a dividend has been ascertained and declared and made payable to a certain class of stockholders that the subject of taxation or excise contemplated by the statute has any existence. Such dividend is not corporate property. On the contrary, the very act which calls it into being separates it from the property of the corporation, and it thenceforward belongs to the several stockholders, in the proportion in which they own shares in the capital stock. It is from the fund thus created that the tax or excise is to be reserved and paid. It is clearly, therefore, a tax or excise on the income or dividends of stockholders only, and is not intended to be a corporate charge. In order that its payment may be made certain [274]*274and convenient, the duty of withholding it from the non-resident stockholders and passing it into the public treasury is imposed on the corporation ; but this is directory and incidental only, and in no way affects the nature or substance of the assessment which it was the design of the legislature to establish. The real purpose of the act was to make the property of non-resident stockholders, invested in shares of incorporated companies within this state, subject to taxation or assessment in the mode prescribed; it being found difficult if not impracticable to reach such property under the general laws regulating the assessment of taxes. This is made entirely clear by the terms of the proviso which exempts from the excise or tax prescribed by the act stock standing in the name of executors, administrators and trustees, the dividends on which are payable to non-residents, such shares being subject to taxation in the ordinary mode to those persons in whose names the title to the shares stands.

Regarding, then, the tax or excise as imposed on non-resident stockholders, and not on corporations, the main question recurs, whether the statute can be maintained as a valid exercise of legislative power. As has already been intimated, the words “ tax ” and “ excise,” although often used as synonymous, are to be considered as having entirely distinct and separate significations, under the provisions of the cbnstitution of Massachusetts, c. 1, § 1, art. 4. The former is a charge apportioned either among the whole people of the state, or those residing within certain districts, municipalities or sections. It is required to be imposed, as we shall more fully explain hereafter, so that, if levied for the public charges of government, it shall be shared according to the estate, real and personal, which each person may possess , or, if raised to defray the cost of some local improvement of a public nature, it shall be borne by those who will receive some special and peculiar benefit or advantage which an expenditure of money for a public object may cause to those on whom the tax is assessed. An excise, on the other hand, is of a different character. It is based on no rule of apportionment or equality whatever. It is a fixed, absolute and direct charge laid on mer chandise, products or commodities, without any regard to the [275]*275amount of property belonging to those on whom it may fall, or to any supposed relation between money expended for a public object and a special benefit occasioned to those by whom the charge is to be paid. Portland Bank v. Apthorp, 12 Mass. 252, 255. Commonwealth v People’s Savings Bank, 5 Allen, 431.

Bearing in mind this distinction between a tax and an excise under our constitution, it would seem to be very clear that the statute in question cannot be supported as a valid exercise by the legislature of the power of taxation. The requirement of the constitution is that all taxes shall be “ proportional.” If any force or effect is to be given to this word, it must be regarded as a restriction on the power of the legislative department of the government, and to have been intended to prevent the exercise of an unlimited right to impose taxes. Construed with reference to the context, the meaning of the word is clear and definite.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Mass. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-mills-mass-1865.