State ex rel. Price v. Frillman

96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 545
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1917
DocketNo. 15684
StatusPublished

This text of 96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 545 (State ex rel. Price v. Frillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Price v. Frillman, 96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 545 (Ohio 1917).

Opinion

Nichols, C. J.

The general assembly of Ohio, on March 21, 1917 (107 O. L., 695), amended Section 5372, General Code, by providing, in effect, that mortgages thereafter executed on real estate located and taxed within the state should not be required to be listed for taxation. In lieu of any [546]*546form of taxation the mortgagee is .required to pay to the recorder at time of filing instrument a special registration fee of one-half of one per centum on the amount secured by such mortgage, to be placed to the credit of the undivided tax fund.

The constitutionality of this new law, as soon as the statute became effective, was challenged by action filed in this court against the recorder of Franklin county, it being therein asserted that the newly amended statute is in conflict with -Section 2, Article XII of the Constitution of Ohio, providing that “Laws shall be passed, taxing by a uniform rule, all moneys, credits, * * * and also all real and personal property according to its true value in money * *

The specific attack on the law is based on the admitted fact that by its provisions mortgages and the debt secured thereby are placed in a peculiar class differing from all -other property and are' substantially exempted from taxation, the only requirement being the payment of one-half of one per centum of the face of the debt, and this payment to be made but once, no matter if the mortgage should -continue as a live asset in the hands of the owner for any number of years. The privilege thus created does not operate in favor of holders of chattel mortgages, nor holders of bills and notes unsecured by any kind of mortgage, but is entirely limited to mortgages on Ohio real estate, the holder of the real estate mortgage escaping taxation by the payment of the arbitrary registration fee; while all other instruments calling for the unconditional [547]*547payment of money must continue to be taxed annually at their true value in money.

There is no difficulty of construction to be encountered in the consideration of this statute, as it specifically exempts in effect all credits in form of real estate mortgage-notes.

The conceded effect of the law is to at once and forever withdraw from the field of taxable property all mortgages hereafter executed covering Ohio real estate.

It is admitted, necessarily, that, sometime prior to the passage of this law, it was the universal opinion that such a vital change in our tax laws could not be worked out without resort to the still cumbersome method of amending our constitution.

If it now develops that this change can be wrought by mere legislative action, then a tremendous amount of wasted effort has been expended in Ohio during the past few years by a large and sincere body of thinkers who are proponents of the classification theory in taxation. This theory has been repeatedly advanced; was considered and rejected by the recent constitutional convention; and has been submitted to the voters of Ohio in form of an amendment to the constitution, only to be decisively rejected.

Undaunted by defeat, indeed only spurred there- ' by to stronger agitation and action, it was discpvered over night that after all an amendment to the constitution was wholly unnecessary and that the general assembly always possessed the power to put in full operation in Ohio the system of [548]*548classification of property for taxation purposes already in vogue in many of the states of the Union.

Thereafter the general assembly, by a nearly unanimous vote, availed itself of this newly-found power and enacted the law now assailed by the plaintiff in the instant case.

The position of those who challenge the law' is that a mortgage, or the debt secured thereby, is a credit, and that this law exempts it from taxation.

Those defending the law, while conceding that the mortgage, or the debt, as the case may be, is a credit, and that it is to be withdrawn from taxation, yet answer it is not property and the act does not exempt property from taxation.

This latter position is sought to be maintained on the theory that no new property is created by the transaction by which a mortgagor borrows money and transfers to the mortgagee, through the instrumentality of a mortgage, an interest in his real estate, to secure its payment.

It is suggested that, before the consummation of the transaction, the borrower owns the land, the lender the money; when consummated, the borrower owns the money and the lender becomes the owner of an estate in the land, for his protection, and in addition receives the personal obligation of the borrower to repay.

It is further suggested that this transaction is a mere exchange of property without the creation of any new property.

Upon this foundation, then, is sought to be built the structure not of exemption but of destruction [549]*549of property; for, although before the consummation of the transaction the money in hands of the lender is taxable, as is the realty in the hands of the borrower, yet, once consummated, the money ceases to have being.

Should we adopt the reasoning of the defenders of the new law it would be a gross misnomer to characterize this change of the property as the creation of an intangible asset. It is a destruction of the very existence of the money. It vanishes into something less than intangibility. It becomes so interminably associated with the real estate in question that the state cannot impute value to the one class of property, that is, the mortgage note, since it already has seized for taxation the real estate so mortgaged. The money from a taxation standpoint has been absorbed and its identity completely lost.

The defendant seeks further to justify the new law by returning to the old-time charge against the state, that, in continuing to collect taxes from the mortgagor on the full value of the mortgaged real estate, and also from the mortgagee on the full amount of the credit, it, the state, is guilty of practicing a system of double taxation.

For instance, the prospective purchaser of a ten thousand dollar farm lacks five thousand dollars of the amount necessary to complete the transaction. He consults the money lender, and borrows five thousand dollars by mortgage on the farm. The state, it is claimed, is taxing a man of straw when it exacts its rate both from the ten thousand dollar farm and the five thousand dollar mortgage.

[550]*550There would be much more virtue in the claim of double taxation if the court had under review a law, which, while requiring the mortgagee to submit his credit for taxation, at the same time provided that the mortgaged land was to go on the duplicate only to the extent of the difference between its true value in money and the amount of the mortgage.

Under the law as we find it, no relief is afforded to the real victim of double taxation, if any there be. He is left where the general assembly finds him. The real advantage, and the only apparent one, is gained by the lender of money in his entire relief from taxation.

We do not feel that it lies in the conscience of the mortgagee to avail himself of the charge of double taxation in order to defend the law.

One thing is quite certain, he is not being doubly taxed when he transfers his property from its money form to the mortgage form.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-price-v-frillman-ohio-1917.