People ex rel. St. Mary's Falls Ship Canal Co. v. Auditor General

7 Mich. 84, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 46
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 7 Mich. 84 (People ex rel. St. Mary's Falls Ship Canal Co. v. Auditor General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. St. Mary's Falls Ship Canal Co. v. Auditor General, 7 Mich. 84, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 46 (Mich. 1859).

Opinion

Martin Ch. J.:

' Two questions are presented for our consideration. 1st, whether the provisions ’of the act of the Legislature supplementary to an act to provide for the construction of a ship canal around the falls of St. Mary’s, providing for the remission of taxes to the contractors is constitutional; and 2d, if such be the case, whether the contract of the contractors with John Kerswell for the sale of a portion of their lands, is a sale within the purview of such act.

Upon the first question we are agreed that the provision of the act referred to, so far as it authorizes the contract for the remission of the taxes, is constitutional. The Congress of the United States by an act approved August 26th, 1852, (10 U. S. Stats., at Large, 35) entitled “An act granting to the state of Michigan the right of way, and a donation of public lands, for the construction of a Ship Canal around the Falls of St. Mary’s, in saidj State,” granted to the state the right to construct said canal upon its lands, and also 750,000 acres of land for the purpose of aiding the state in constructing! and completing the same. The act provided that the land so granted should be applied to no other use, and that if the canal should not be commenced within three and completed within ten years, the proceeds of the sales of such lands should be paid by this state to the United States, and that accounts should be kept and rendered annually of costs, expense, &c., and until the state is fully reimbursed it may charge a toll for the use of [89]*89said-canal, and afterward, only enough to keep it in repair, &a. By an act of the Legislature of this state, approved February 5th, 1853, the necessary provisions wore made for securing the grant, and for -the construction of the canal, and the Governor was authorized, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint commissioners and an engineer, who were to have the entire and absolute control and supervision of the construction of the canal; and the commissioners were authorized and empowered to make all necessary contracts for the construction of the same, &c. This act contemplated that the contractors for such construction should receive the lands donated in payment (sec. 6), and this was evidently the basis upon which the act was framed. By a supplementary act approved February 12th, 1853, the commissioners were authorized, in case they should find it impracticable to let the contract for the construction of said canal on terms which would secure its completion according to the provisions of the original act, in their discretion to contract that any taxes to be assessed on the lands donated for that purpose, should be remitted for a period not exceeding five years, &e., to the person or persons taking such contract: “ Provided that whenever any such lands shall be sold by the contractors to any other persons, the same shall thereafter be subject to taxation as in other cases.’’

It is evident from a consideration of these acts that the land was never a part of the public domain of Michigan, either by grant from Congress, or by sale to a purchaser, before the passage of the act in question, so that the right of taxation had accrued to the state. It was granted to the state for the specific purpose of being applied, either by sale or appropriation, to the purposes of the construction of the canal. As such, it assumed the character of a fund, to be expended under the direction of the state; and so the Legislature evidently regarded it, and that the state held such land only as trustee for the accomplishment of that purpose.

[90]*90Instead of selling the lands, and appropriating the avails towards the construction of the canal, the Legislature found it desirable, if not necessary, to appropriate the lands themselves. From the course of legislation we may presume that this appropriation of the lands, was found to be insufficient of itself to induce any one to undertake the work, and that in order to render it sufficient, the state authorized the contract for the remission of the taxes thereon. This authority was given, and the contract executed, while the lands were in a condition in which they could not be taxed, and until such right of taxation had accrued to the state, it was not within the scope of either its constitutional or legislative provisions. The state had power to contract with the company to convey the lands after five years, and thus relieve them during that period from taxes, and if it might do this, it is difficult to find a reason why it might not so convey them as to secure the same exemption from taxation. In making this contract the state acted as the trustee of the General Government; in the law authorizing the contract, it was dealing with the subject of the trust, over which no right of taxation then existed. But were this otherwise, I do not regard this remission of the taxes as a violation of that provision of Article XIV of the Constitution which requires the Legislature to provide an uniform rule of taxation, except on property paying specific taxes. This provision of the Constitution has no reference to the power to . exempt, or to remit taxes; which is, and necessarily must be, to a great extent, left to the discretion of the Legislature. Its design was to secure, to every portion of the state, and to every class of property taxed, a uniform rate — to secure equality, so that property in one quarter should not be taxed at a higher rate than in another, or the same kind taxed unequally. The Legislature has the power of prescribing the subjects of taxation, and of exemption, but it can not arbitrarily tax property according to locality, kind, or quality, without regard to value (Sedg. on Stat. 551), but [91]*91in this respect it must act by uniform rules. But to exempt property, as is clone in the case of church, school, or library property, or to remit taxes for any cause, has nothing to do with the uniformity of the rule of taxation.

But the objection that the act violates this provision of the Constitution, has reference more especially, if not altogether, -to the portion of the act directing the disposition and appropriation of the remitted taxes by the Auditor General, and not to that authorizing the contract of remission. Now the ■one may be constitutional and the* other not, and if the right to make the contract with the company be established, the subsequent provisions of the act by which the amount of such remitted taxes are to be charged to the general 'fund, whether constitutional or unconstitutional, can have no influence or effect in determining the constitutionality of the law authorizing the remission of the taxes, or the validity of the contract made under it. The company has no concern with the legislation of the state with respect to such taxes after they are remitted — -nor can the state refuse to execute its legal contracts because of unconstitutional legislation respecting the subject of the contract, when the contract itself is not involved. Now the contract between the state and the canal company had no reference to the disposition of the remitted taxes. That subject concerns the state alone, and does, not affect the contract, nor its validity, in any degree; and whether the second section be or be not unconstitutional we are not required to determine, except so far as it was thought to involve the contract.

But, secondly: Was the land contracted1 to Kerswell ■sold within the purview of the act?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Mich. 84, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-st-marys-falls-ship-canal-co-v-auditor-general-mich-1859.