Paine v. Wright

18 F. Cas. 1010, 6 McLean 395
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedMay 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 1010 (Paine v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paine v. Wright, 18 F. Cas. 1010, 6 McLean 395 (circtdin 1855).

Opinion

OPINION OF

THE COURT.

This bill is filed by a great number of persons represented to be citizens of other states than Indiana, and stockholders in the Indianapolis and Bellefontaine Railroad Company, to an amount exceeding sixteen thousand dollars, against the president and directors of said company, whose place of business is in the state of Indiana, and William Wright treasurer of Marion county, in Indiana.

The controversy arises on the amount of taxes assessed on the stock or property of the railroad company. The secretary of the company returned, under oath the stock of the company, amounting to $335,367 90 in value,- on which the legal tax was assessed by the auditor, and a duplicate made out for the taxes of 1853, which was handed to the treasurer of the proper county, and which tax the complainants allege was fully paid to the collector. The county auditor was directed, subsequently, by the auditor of state, to institute an inquiry whether a full return of stock, under the tax law of the state, had been made; and, on inquiry, the county auditor reported that instead of the value of the stock returned by the secretary of the company, which omitted the land owned by the company by a misapprehension of the law, he should have returned $799,000 in stock,’ &c., for taxation; and that the auditor decided there should be added to the sum returned $383,733, and that an- additional tax on the sum omitted should be assessed, which added to the tax at first assessed, the sum of $2,533 19. The bill prayed that the treasurer might be enjoined from the collection of the above sum of $2,533 19, as an illegal assessment.

An objection to the jurisdiction of the court is made in the answer. The complainants are citizens of different states, none of them being citizens of Indiana, so that on that ground there would seem to be no just exception to the jurisdiction. The complainants sue as stockholders of the railroad; and they make the treasurer of Marion county, who collects the tax, defendant, and also the president and directors of the railroad company. No substantial objection is perceived to this form of suit. The stockholders own a large amount of stock, and they allege that an illegal tax has been imposed on the stock of the company, injurious to the stockholders, and on this ground they ask relief against the collector of the tax, and that he' may be enjoined from collecting-the same. It is true the railroad could not, in its corporate name, bring a suit in this court against the collector, because the business of the company is transacted in the state of which the defendant is a citizen. But the complainants, being - citizens of other states, may claim the protection of their stock against an illegal taxation, and make the corporation a defendant, and enjoin it from paying over the tax; and the corporation being made a defendant, being a party on the record, the same relief may be given to it as if it had been made a complainant. This principle is exemplified in a case where a plaintitff, being a citizen of another state, sues in the federal court, making the person against whom the relief is prayed, and others, citizens of the same state, who are jointly interested in the relief prayed. The rule is, that, the court having jurisdiction, relief may be given to the parties on the record, whether plaintiffs or defendants, as the principles of equity shall require. The corporation, however, should have answered, admitting the facts stated in the bill, and praying that equity-may be done. This, however, under the view taken by the court, is not material.

This case is brought under the original jurisdiction of this court, on the ground that the controversy arises between citizens of different states. It does not come before us in the exercise of an appellate power, but as a court having concurrent jurisdiction with the state court, in giving effect to the laws of the state. And the question is, whether the tax law for 1853 requires the tax to be assessed upon the entire property of the railroad company, or upon what, in common language, constitutes the stock upon-which dividends are paid. The 32d section of the tax law, 1 Rev. Stat. 113, makes it “the duty of the president, secretary, agent, or other proper accounting officer of every railroad, to furnish to the auditor of the county, where their principal office is situated, a list of all the stock in said company, and its value, attested by the oath of the officer making the same; and shall furnish a statement dividing the aggregate amount of all the stock of such company amongst the several counties in proportion to the value of the superstructure, buildings, and real estate of such company in each county; and if any such company shall not have in this state its principal office for the transaction of its financial business, it shall be the duty of the president, cashier, secretary, treasurer, engineer, or constructing agent of such company to furnish the auditor of the county, where the [1012]*1012■work firsit enters the state, a statement, under tlie oath or affirmation of the officer making it, specifying the amount and value of all real estate owned by such company within this state, the amount expended in the construction of said work within the lines of the state, and the amount invested in machinery and rolling stock of every kind; which said machinery and rolling stock shall be assessed for taxation in the same proportion to its total amount, that the length of line of the work in this state completed, bears to the entire length of the line of said' work completed.” From the language of this section, there would seem to be no doubt' that the legislature intended to tax the entire property of the railroad company; and that a list, to be furnished to the auditor of the county, “of all the stock in said company, and its value, attested by the oath of the officer making the same,” was intended to include the whole property of the company. And this is the construction given to this section by the supreme court of Indiana, in Dunn v. Hamilton, Auditor of Marion County, in 1854. That decision of the supreme court of the state constitutes a rule of decision for this court. It has long been so settled in the federal courts. By the 37th section of the tax act, if the company shall fail to make a return of its property for taxation as required, “the proper county auditor shall proceed to make out such list from the best information he can obtain,” &c. Now, if an imperfect list shall be made, the power here given will enable the auditor to act, by making out a new return, or correcting the errors of the one returned. This is within the purview of the above section.

Railroads have contributed more to the facilities of intercourse, the interest of agriculture, to build up towns and extend our internal commerce, than all other improvements. But, in the construction of these works, heavy expenditures have been incurred, and large debts contracted by way of loans of money and otherwise, so that the companies are ill able to bear the pressure of a heavy taxation. The expense of running the cars, making repairs, and meeting contingencies is very great; and when to this shall be added the interest on debts incurred, little or no profit can be realized to the stockholders for some years after the road is in operation. Lands, of necessity, are often received in payment of stock. These lands are taxed, the same as lands held by an individual, on the plausible ground that the lands of a corporation should be taxed the same as the lands of an individual. But these lands are never held by the corporation for the purposes of culture, but to be converted into money, or for the occupancy of the road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 1010, 6 McLean 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-wright-circtdin-1855.