People ex rel. Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes

9 N.Y. 224
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.Y. 224 (People ex rel. Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes, 9 N.Y. 224 (N.Y. 1861).

Opinion

Comstock, Ch. J.

The legislature, in defining property which is liable to taxation, have used the following language: “ All lands and all personal estate within this State, whether owned by individuals or corporations, shall be liable to taxation subject to the exemptions hereinafter specified.” (1 R. S., 387, § 1.) The title of the act in which this provision is contained, is, of the property liable to taxation,” and it is in this title that we ought to look for controlling definitions on the Subject. Other enactments relate to the details of the system of taxation, to the mode of imposing and collecting the public burdens, and not to the property or subject upon which it is imposed. In order, therefore, to determine the question now before us, the primary requisite is to interpret justly and fairly the language above quoted.

“All lands and all personal estate within this State shall be liable to taxation.” H we are willing to take this language, [226]*226without attempting to obscure it by introducing a legal fiction as to the situs of personal estate, its meaning would seem to be plain. Lands and personal property having an actual'situation within the State are taxable, and by a necessary implication no other property can be taxed. I know not in what language more appropriate or exact, the idea could have been expressed. Eeal and personal estate are included in precisely the same form of expression. Both are mentioned as being within the State. It is conceded that lands lying in another State or country, cannot be taxed against the owner resident here, and no one ever supposed the contrary. Yet it is claimed that goods and chattels situated in Louisiana, or in France, can be so taxed. The legislature I suppose could make this distinction, but that they have not made it, in the language of the statute is perfectly clear. Nor is the reason apparent why such a distinction should be made. Lands have an actual situs, .which of course is immovable. Chattels also have an actual situs, although they can be moved from one place to another. Both are equally protected by the laws of the State or sovereignty in which they are situated, and both are chargeable there with public burdens, according to all just principles of taxation. A purely poll tax has no respect to property. We have no such tax. With us taxation is upon property, and so it is in all the States of the Union. So also in general, it is in all countries. The logical result is, that the tax is incurred within the jurisdiction and under the laws of the country where it is situated. If we say that taxation is on the person in respect to the property, we are still without a reason for assessing the owner resident here, in respect to one part of his estate situated elsewhere, and not in respect to another part. Both, I repeat, / are the subjects of taxation in the foreign jurisdiction. If then the owner ought to be subjected to a double burden as to one, why not as to the other also ?

I find then no room for interpretation, if we take the words ^ of the statute in their plain ordinary sense. The legislative definition of taxable property, refers in that sense to the actual situs of personal not less than real estate, If the intention [227]*227had been different, it cannot be doubted that different language would have been used. It would have been so easy and so natural to have declared that all lands within this State, and all personal property wherever situated, owned by residents of this State, shall be liable to taxation, that we should have expected just such a declaration, if such had been the meaning of the law-making power. To me, it is evident that the legislature were not enunciating a legal fiction which, as we shall presently see, expresses a rule of law in some circumstances and relations, but which in others • is not the law. They were speaking in plain words, and to the plain understanding of men in general. When they said all real and all personal estate within this State, I see no room for a serious doubt that they intended property actually within the State wherever the owner might reside.

It is said, however, that personal estate by a fiction of law has no situs away from the person or residence of the owner, and is always deemed to be present with him at the place of his domicil. The right to tax the relator’s property situated in Hew Orleans and Hew Jersey, rests upon the universal application of this legal fiction; and it is accordingly insisted upon as an absolute rule or principle of law which, to all intents and purposes, transfers the property from the foreign to the domestic jurisdiction, and thus subjects it to taxation under our laws. Let us observe to what results such a theory will lead us. The necessary consequence is, that goods and chattels actually within this State are not here in any legal sense, or for any legal purpose, if the owner resides abroad. They cannot be taxed here, because they are with the owner who is a citizen or subject of some foreign State. On the same ground, if we are to have harmonious rules of law, we ought to relinquish the administration of the effects of a person resident and dying abroad, although the claims of domestic creditors may require such administration. So, in the case of the bankruptcy of such a person, we should at once send abroad his effects, and cannot consistently retain them to satisfy the claims of our own citizens. Again, we ought not to have laws for attaching the personal [228]*228estate of non-residents, because such laws necessarily assume that it has a situs entirely distinct from the owner’s domicil. Tet we do in certain cases, administer upon goods and chattels of a foreign decedent; we refuse to give up the effects of a bankrupt until creditors here are paid; and we have laws of attachment against the effects of non-resident debtors. These, and other illustrations which might be mentioned, demonstrate that the fiction or maxim mobilia personam sequuntwr is by no means of universal application. Like other fictions, it has its special uses.. It may be resorted to when convenience and justice so require. In other circumstances the truth and not the ■ fiction affords, as it plainly ought to afford, the rule of action. The proper use of legal fictions is to prevent injustice, according to the maxim, in fictione juris semper esquitas existat. “No fiction,” says Blackstone, “ shall .extend to work an injury; its proper operation being to prevent a mischief or remedy an inconvenience, which might result from the general rule of law.” So Judge Story, referring to the situs of goods and chattels, observes: “ The general doctrine is not controverted, that although movables are for many purposes to be deemed to have no situs, except that of the domicil of the owner, yet this being but a legal fiction it yields whenever it is necessary, for the purpose of justice, that the actual situs of the thing should be examined.” He adds quite pertinently, I think, to the present question, “a nation within whose territory any personal property is actually situated, has an entire dominion over it while therein, in point of sovereignty and jurisdiction, as it has over immovable property situated there.”- (Confl. of Laws, § 550.) I can think of no more just and appropriate , exercise of the sovereignty of a State or nation over property, situated within it and protected by its laws, than to compel it to contribute toward the maintenance of government and law. ^ Accordingly there seems to be no place for the fiction of which we are speaking, in a well adjusted system of taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hoyt-v-commissioners-of-taxes-ny-1861.