Opinion of the Justices

93 A. 311, 77 N.H. 611, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 93 A. 311 (Opinion of the Justices) 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
Opinion of the Justices, 93 A. 311, 77 N.H. 611, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 43 (N.H. 1915).

Opinion

To Hon. Edwin C. Bean, Speaker of the House of Representatives:

The undersigned, justices of the supreme court, in reply to your request of February 5, made by direction of the house for our opinion as to the constitutional validity of certain proposed legislation, respectfully answer as follows:

In the application for our opinions, no particular ground of objection to the validity of the proposed enactment is pointed out. We have therefore considered all such objections as have occurred to us as possible grounds for constitutional invalidity and submit our conclusions thereon.

1. So far as the inquiry relates to the power of the legislature to exempt certain classes of property from taxation by omitting them from the list of taxable estate or specially exempting them, it is answered by our response to the same inquiry presented to us by direction of the house of representatives, January 20, 1913, in which we stated our opinion to be that the legislature had such power. House Jour. 1913, p. 180; Opinion of the Justices, 76 N. H. 609, 611, 612. The repeal of subdivisions i, ii, iii, iv, and v, of section 7, chapter 55, of the Public Statutes, would result in the omission of the classes of property therein described from the list of taxable estate and their consequent exemption from appraisal and assessment for taxation. The power of the legislature to make such exemption cannot now be regarded as open to investigation.

2. The particular question submitted is “whether any constitutional provision would be violated by imposing a tax at the uniform rate upon money received as interest or dividends upon the classes of securities mentioned in section 1” of the proposed act “and exempting from taxation the securities themselves.” We understand that by the expression “the uniform rate” is intended the same rate *613 in proportion to value as is imposed upon other property in the taxing district. So understood, the tax apparently would be both proportional and reasonable, and consequently within the power of the legislature “to impose proportional and reasonable taxes.” Opinion of the Court, 4 N. H. 565, 567, 568. As the tax is not limited to a particular class of persons, if it is not to be imposed at a fixed arbitrary rate or upon a valuation different from that of other property, it would not appear to be within any of the objections found fatal to the five-mill tax proposed in 1911 (Opinion of the Justices, 76 N. H. 588), or to the two per cent tax upon the gross receipts of railroad expressmen, imposed by chapter 63 of the General Laws. State v. Express Co., 60 N. H. 219.

3. As the securities themselves are exempted from taxation, there can be no question of direct double taxation to the same individual; and so far as money at interest is concerned, the element of double taxation involved in the taxation of the debt to the creditor, and the property in which the loan is invested by the debtor to him, does not render the taxation of either illegal. Glidden v. Newport, 74 N. H. 207; Morrison v. Manchester, 58 N. H. 538, 551, 552. If the taxation to the creditor of the principal in the hands of the debtor is not illegal, it is very clear taxation of the interest paid over to and in the hands of the creditor cannot be. ■

Section 1 of the proposed act would include for taxation dividends paid by corporations in which the property represented by the stock is taxed to the corporation; and the question arises whether the tax is objectionable as double taxation. Taxation of the shares in a corporation to the stockholder and of the corporate property to the corporation has always been regarded in this jurisdiction as double taxation (R. S., c. 42, s. 1; P. S., c. 58, s. 1; Smith v. Burley, 9 N. H. 423; Smith v. Exeter, 37 N. H. 556; Kimball v. Milford, 54 N. H. 406; Chesire County Tel. Co. v. State, 63 N. H. 167), although taxation of the loan to the creditor, and of the property purchased with the money loaned and mortgaged to secure it, to the debtor, has not been so construed. In sustaining this distinction, it has been said: “For the purpose of taxation under existing law, somebody is the owner of the land and somebody is the owner of the money at interest.” Morrison v. Manchester, 58 N. H. 538, 553, 554. Whether, or not, this is sound ground upon which to justify the taxation of credits, its assertion rests upon the underlying principle that double taxation does not exist if the property taxed in each instance is not the same. “It is a fundamental principle in taxation that the same *614 property shall not be subject to a double tax, payable by the same party, either directly or indirectly.” Opinion of the Justices, 76 N. H. 588, 590; Cheshire County Tel. Co. v. State, 63 N. H. 167; Nashua Savings Bank v. Nashua, 46 N. H. 389; Smith v. Burley, 9 N. H. 423, 427; Cool. Tax. 165.

The taxation of personal property may sometimes necessarily involve duplicate taxation to a certain extent. Cool. Tax. 28,158,161. The materials of a newly erected building, taxed as real estate April 1, may and probably did go to swell the average stock in trade of the dealer therein for the preceding year; the taxation of live-stock indirectly affects the value of the farm already taxed as real estate upon which the stock was grown; the taxation of the products of a manufacturing establishment affects the business of manufacturing otherwise taxed. But such indirect influence is not the double taxation which is unreasonable within the meaning of the constitution. To be of such a character that it can be declared unreasonable as matter of law, it must appear that the same property has been necessarily made “subject to a double tax, payable by the same party, either directly or indirectly.” Authorities above cited.

If the corporation has made a profit and has paid no dividend, the profit forms part of its taxable estate for appraisal and assessment. The capital invested in a business, and the income or profit derived from carrying on the business, are entirely different things. Wilcox v. Commissioners, 103 Mass. 544. If the corporation has paid out the profit to its shareholders as dividends, the corporation pays no tax thereon because such sums already paid away are not present for appraisal and assessment. Not being taxed to the corporation, the taxation of the sums received by the stockholders involves no element of double taxation. The dividends which it is proposed to tax to their recipients, not being taxed to the corporation, are open to taxation to the owners.

In principle, such has always been the law and the practice in the taxation of money on hand. No distinction has ever been made as to its source, whether from the products of the farm, corporate enterprise, or interest on money loaned. The necessity for such a distinction has never been suggested. Money on hand has been taxed as property in the hands of the owner separate from the property producing it.

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93 A. 311, 77 N.H. 611, 1915 N.H. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-of-the-justices-nh-1915.