Pullman's Palace Car Co. v. Twombly

29 F. 658, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2382
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 14, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. 658 (Pullman's Palace Car Co. v. Twombly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman's Palace Car Co. v. Twombly, 29 F. 658, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2382 (circtsdia 1887).

Opinion

Brewer., J.

This is, in substance, a bill brought by the complainant to restrain the state of Iowa from collecting from certain railroad companies doing business in that state a portion of the taxes levied upon them, on the ground that the basis of the assessment upon which such portion of tiie taxes was levied was a number of sleeping, drawing-room, and parlor ears, belonging to complainant, and used only in interstate commerce. Tt appears that the complainant is a foreign corporation, created under the laws of tlio state of Illinois, and domiciled in Cook county, in that state. It is engaged in the business of manufacturing, using, and hiring to be used, sleeping, drawing-room, and parlor cars. It has certain contracts with the various railroads running through the state of Iowa, by which it furnishes to them such cars under contracts providing for their use and operation. In a general way, it may be said that the interior management of these cars remains with the complainant, the exterior with the railroad companies, who receive also the full pay for the mere transportation of passengers. These oars are all used in interstate commerce; that is, all of them run from points outside of the state of Iowa into or into and through the state of Iowa, or from points in the state of Iowa to points outside the state.

Complainant, therefore, insists that, being instrumentalities used exclusively for interstate commerce, and the domicile of the owner being outside of the state, they are exempt from taxation by the state; and, further, that, as the complainant itself cannot bo taxed upon such cars, the state cannot do indirectly what it cannot do directly, and cannot, therefore, subject thorn to taxation by assessing them to the several railroad companies by whom they are in fact used and operated. Obviously, it becomes important to see exactly what the state of Iowa is attempting to do.

The following are the statutes under which the assessment and levy complained of were made:

[660]*660See. 1317. On the first Monday of March in each year the executive council shall assess all the property of each railway corporation in this state, excepting the lands, lots, and other real estate belonging thereto not used in the operation of any railway.

Sec. 1318. The president, vice-president, or general superintendent, and such other officers as such council may designate, of any corporation operating any railway in this state, shall furnish said council, on or before the fifteenth day of February in each year, a statement, signed and sworn to by one of such officers, showing in detail, for the year ending on January the 1st preceding, (1) the whole number of miles owned, operated, or leased in the state by sucli corporation making the return, and the value thereof per mile, with a detailed statement of all property of every kind, and the value, located in each county in the state; (2) also a detailed statement of the number, and the value thereof, of engines, passenger, mail, express, baggage, freight, and other cars, or property used in operating or repairing such railway, in this state; and, on railways which are part of lines extending beyond the limits of this state, the returns shall show the actual amount of roiling stock in use on the corporation’s line in the state during the year for which return is made. The return shall show the amount of rolling stock, the gross earnings of the entire railway, and the gross earnings of the same in this state, and all property designated in the next section, and such other facts as such council may, in writing, require. If such officers fail to make such statement, said council shall proceed to assess the property of the corporation so failing, adding 30 per cent, to the assessable value thereof.

Sec. 1319. The said property shall be valued at its true cash value, and such assessment shall be made upon the entire railway within the state, and shall include the right of way, road-bed, bridges, culverts, rolling stock, depots, station grounds, shops, buildings, gravel beds, and all other property, real and personal, exclusively used in the operation of such railway. In assessing said railway, and its equipments, said council shall take into consideration the gross earnings per mile for the year ending January the 1st preceding, and any and all other matters necessary to enable said council to make a just and equitable assessment of said railway property. If a part of any railway is without this state, then, in estimating the value of its rolling stock and movable property, they shall take into consideration the proportion which the business of that part of the railway lying within the state bears to the business of the railway without the state. Such valuation shall be in the same ratio as that of the property of individuals.

Sec. 1320. On or before the twenty-fifth day of March, in each year, said council shall transmit to the county auditor of each county through which any railway may run a statement showing the length of the main track of such railway within the county, and the assessed value per mile of the same, as fixed by a pro rata distribution per mile of the assessed value of the whole property named in the preceding section. Said statement shall be entered on the proper record of the county.

Sec. 1321. At the first meeting of the board of supervisors held after said statement is received by the county auditor they shall make, and cause the same to be entered in the proper record, an order stating and declaring the length of the main track, and the assessed value of such railway lying in each city, town, township, or lesser taxing district in their county through which said railway runs, as fixed by the executive council, which shall constitute the taxable value of said property for taxable purposes; and the taxes on said property, when collected by the county treasurer, shall be paid over to the persons or corporations entitled thereto as other taxes, and the county auditor shall transmit a copy of said order to the city council, or trustees of such city, incorporated town, or township.

[661]*661Sec. 1322. All such railway property shall be taxable upon said assessment at the same rates, by the same officers, and for the same purposes, as the property of individuals within such counties, cities, towns, townships, and lessor taxing districts.

Sec. 1323. The provisions of this chapter in relation to transporting of passengers shall not apply to any railway in this state until the gross earnings of the preceding year, reckoning from the first day of .January.of each year, shall equal or exceed the sum of §1,000 per mile average, for all the 'miles of road operated during the whole of that preceding year.

{Chapter 111/-, Laws 1878.)

An act to tax sleeping and dining cars, amending section 1318, a. 5, tit. 10, of the Code:

Section 1. He it enacted by the general assembly of the state of Iowa, that, in addition to the matters required to be contained in the statement provided for in section 1318 of the Code, such statement shall show the number of sleeping and dining cars not owned by such corporation, but used by it in operating its railway in this state during each month of the year for which the return is made, and also the number of miles each month that said cars have been run or operated on such railway within the state, and the total number of miles that said cars have been ran or operated each month within and without the state.

Sec. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. 658, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullmans-palace-car-co-v-twombly-circtsdia-1887.