Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. City of Richmond

37 S.E. 789, 99 Va. 102, 86 Am. St. Rep. 877, 1901 Va. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 S.E. 789 (Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. City of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. City of Richmond, 37 S.E. 789, 99 Va. 102, 86 Am. St. Rep. 877, 1901 Va. LEXIS 15 (Va. 1901).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Hustings Oourt of the city of Richmond imposing a fine of $270 upon the Postal Telegraph Cable Company for prosecuting its business as a telegraph company in the city of Richmond without first having paid a specific license tax of $20 assessed against it in accordance with an ordinance of the said city.

Upon the trial of the cause in the Hustings Court the facts were agreed as follows:

“ 1. That the defendant, Postal Telegraph Cable Company, is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Hew York, and prior to the assessment of the license taxes, for the non-payment of which it is being prosecuted by the city of Richmond, by these proceedings, it had duly accepted of the provisions of the act of Congress approved July 24, 1866, entitled “An act to aid in the construction of telegraph lines, and to secure to the government the use of the same for military purposes,” as required by section 5268 of the Revised Statutes of the United States-
“ 2. That the defendant company, under and by virtue of an act approved March 6, 1890, as amended by the act of March 3, 1898 (Acts 1897-’8, p. 752), was required, on or before the first day of June of each year, to make report, verified by oath, to the Auditor of Public Accounts, of all real and personal property owned by said company, as of the first of February, showing what part of said property is located in each county or corporation, and classifying the same, etc.
“ That such report was duly made to the Auditor of Public Accounts for the year 1898, showing the aggregate value of the defendant’s property in the State of Virginia to be $49,334.49, and the aggregate value of its property located in the city of [104]*104Richmond to be .$2,708.45, and on this report, so required to be made, an ad valorem tax of forty cents on every hundred dollars’ worth of property owned by said company in the State was assessed for State taxes, and by the said company paid. The defendant company was also, assessed with a privilege tax to the State of one thousand dollars, and an additional charge of one per centum of the gross earnings the company received, or due, though not received, from their business in this State during the year preceding; provided that the gross receipts of such company were less than one thousand dollars, -but which said privilege tax the defendant company has never paid; and each county and municipality in the State in which such company has property may impose an ad valorem tax upon the assessed value of the same as assessed by the State; and that the city of Richmond, by virtue of section 10 of chapter 88 of the City Oode (1899), imposes a fee of two dollars upon each telegraph pole as rental for each pole owned by the defendant, located in any of the parks, streets, lanes, or alleys of the city of Richmond, and also a license tax of two hundred dollars per annum, for the nonpayment of which license tax this prosecution is maintained, which the ordinance required to be paid before the defendant can do business in the city of Richmond, .which license tax of two hundred dollars is intended to be in lieu of a property tax upon the property of the defendant company, located in the city of Richmond, which property tax the city might have assessed on the property of the defendant company, so located in the city of Richmond, but which said property tax the city has never assessed on the property of the defendant company, so located in the city of Richmond.
“ 3. That the wires of the defendant telegraph company in the State of Virginia connect with other -wires in other States, and telegraph messages are transmitted thereon into and through every State, and all of the principal towns and cities therein; [105]*105also connect with cables under and across the Atlantic ocean, •and that said company is engaged in interstate commerce.
4. That the gross receipts of the defendant telegraph company, for all business done within the city of Richmond, as well interstate as extrastate, are at least five thousand dollars per annum, less than the amount paid out per annum to its employees in said city, and for the maintenance of its lines.
5. That the population of the city of Richmond, according to the census of 1890, was 81,388.
“ 6. The charter of the city of Richmond and the ordinances thereof may be read in evidence on the trial of the case, or in any court to which the case may be appealed, as if the same were here set out in full.”

In addition to the agreed facts, it was shown by the testimony of witnesses that the Postal Telegraph Company was so classified under the provisions of the city ordinances as to require the payment by it of a license tax of $200; that the value of its property within the limits of the city was about $2,708.00;- and that an ad valorem tax upon that sum under the city’s ordinances would be somewhat less than $40.00 per year; that the ad valorem tax for 1898 was tendered to the Collector of Revenue, who refused to receive it, saying that there was no assessment of such a tax against the company.

This being all the evidence,' the following instruction was asked by the city, and given to the jury by the court:

If the jury believe from the evidence that the Postal Telegraph Cable Company had a place of business in the city of Richmond at the time of the assessment of the tax against it for the year 1898, and that the Committee on Finance classified and assessed it for said year, 1898, with a tax of $200; and that said tax was in lieu of taxes which might have been levied directly upon its property located in the city of Richmond, and if they further believe that said company prosecuted its business after [106]*106the 1st day of May of that year to the end of the fiscal year, without having paid said tax, then they should find the said company guilty, and assess a fine against it of not less than $1.00’ nor more than $5.00 for each day’s default thereafter from the 1st day of May, 1898, to.the 1st day of Pebruary, 1899.”

The following instructions were asked by the Postal Telegraph Company, and refused by the court:

“ The court instructs the jury that the prosecution of this case is against the defendant by the city of Pichmond for the failure to pay a privilege tax imposed by said city, and that the defendant is a foreign corporation engaged in interstate commerce,, and in transmitting messages for the government of the United States, with the right to exercise its franchise within the State of Virginia, and that such tax is unconstitutional and void, unless the jury believe from the evidence that the license tax so imposed is in lieu of all other taxes imposed by the city of Pichmond upon the said defendant, and not more than the sum which the defendant company would have had to pay if its property had been subjected to the ordinary ad valorem property tax provided for in the statutes of one dollar and forty cents on the $100.

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Related

Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Umstadter
50 S.E. 259 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1905)
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. City of Norfolk
43 S.E. 207 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1903)
Commonwealth v. Adcock
8 Va. 661 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1851)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 789, 99 Va. 102, 86 Am. St. Rep. 877, 1901 Va. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/postal-telegraph-cable-co-v-city-of-richmond-va-1901.