State Tax Commission v. Western Maryland Ry. Co.

52 A.2d 615, 188 Md. 240, 1947 Md. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 16, 1947
Docket[Nos. 74, 108, October Term, 1946.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 52 A.2d 615 (State Tax Commission v. Western Maryland Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Tax Commission v. Western Maryland Ry. Co., 52 A.2d 615, 188 Md. 240, 1947 Md. LEXIS 260 (Md. 1947).

Opinions

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The decision in these two cases requires an interpretation of the gross receipts tax on steam railroads, imposed by Article 81, sections 94% to 99 of the Code. It differs in this respect from the tax construed in No. 70 of this Term (Rogan, State Tax Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 188 Md. 44, 52 A. 2d 261) which was imposed by a special statute affecting only the railroad in that appeal, Act of 1878, Ch. 155. That statute, however, was a compromise agreement for the application to the Baltimore and Ohio of the first Maryland gross receipts laws, Act of 1872, Ch. 234, and Act of 1874, Ch. 408. These laws were the basis of the general law now in force and the intention evidenced in. them, and reflected in the Act of 1878, has some bearing upon the cases now before us. The Act of 1878 was passed after the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad had been sued for gross receipts taxes under the Act of 1872 (State v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 48 Md. 49), and while an appeal by the railroad from an adverse decision in that case was pending in the Supreme Court of the United States. In No. 70 we construed the Act of 1878 as a tax to be measured by the gross receipts of the Baltimore and Ohio within the State, the determination of which was not confined to the length of line or line mile method as contended by the railroad. We held it could be determined by what was contended to be a more accurate method namely, the so-called all track method, *244 used by the State Tax Commission in that case. The main question in the two cases now under discussion is whether, under the general law, gross receipts earned within the State by steam railroads other than the Baltimore and Ohio, must be determined according to the length of line method, or whether other methods can be used.

The difficulty arises when a railroad (such as the two in the cases before us) has receipts from business done wholly within the State, receipts from business done wholly outside the State and receipts from business done partly in the State and partly outside. The amount of the receipts from the first two classes of business is easily ascertainable. The third class presents the problem. Practically all the inter-state railroads passing through the State claim that they cannot segregate the receipts earned in the State from inter-state business, and therefore some method of approximation must be adopted. The length of line or line mile basis divides the whole length of the railroad by the length of its line in the State, and uses the result as a denominator of the entire gross earnings. The figures used are the lengths of main lines (single track) on the entire system and in the State. By the all track method, all the lines, main track, double or second track, switches, spurs, etc., are included. The difference is illustrated in the case of the Western Maryland Railway Company. Its length of line is 850 miles of which 32% is in Maryland. Its entire track, however, is 1390 miles of which 39% is in Maryland. Under the length of line method, therefore, it would pay a tax measured by 32% of its gross receipts. Under the all track method it would pay on 39%.

The State Tax Commission assessed the Western Maryland for the years 1942, 1943 and 1944 according to the all track method. The railway paid the taxes and appealed to the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. That Court on April 18, 1946, set aside the assessments and remanded the proceedings to the Commission with directions to recompute the taxes upon the main line or length of line *245 basis. From that order the appeal is brought here in the name of the State Tax Commission by the attorney-general and the deputy attorney-general of the State. This is case No. 74.

A motion has been made to dismiss the appeal because it is claimed that Section 194(b) of Article 81 only gives the parties named in that section the right of appeal. And while one of these parties is “the Attorney-General on behalf of the State” the appeal was taken on behalf of the State Tax Commission, which is not a party named. It appears, however, that Section 175 (13) of Article 81 authorizes the State Tax Commission to participate in any proceeding in court wherein any assessment or taxation question is involved. The Commission participated in this proceeding below and had the right of appeal granted by Section 30 of Article 5 of the Code to any party to a suit. This right has been frequently recognized by this Court, either impliedly or expressly. State Tax Commission v. Baltimore National Bank, 169 Md. 65, 180 A. 260; Board of Zoning Appeals v. McKinney, 174 Md. 551, at page 561, 199 A. 540, 117 A. L. R. 207. The motion to dismiss will be denied.

After the decision in the Western Maryland case, the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad Company filed its bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City alleging that for the year 1943 and thereafter the State Tax Commission had assessed its gross receipts within the State by a composite method which the railroad believed produced substantially accurate results. This method was to assign the intra-state revenues to Maryland, to disregard the wholly out of State revenues and to prorate the inter-state revenues on all track basis. The railroad alleged that under the Western Maryland decision, the State Tax Commission would have to use the length of line method as to the Maryland and Pennsylvania, and it claimed that a tax produced by this method, as applied to it, would be unconstitutional and void. It denied the correctness of the Court’s decision as applied to all railroads. It asked a declaratory decree and an *246 injunction. The Circuit Court dismissed its bill after a hearing, and the railroad appealed here. This is case 108.

The contention of the Western Maryland (upheld .by the decision of the lower court) is that the tax is upon the gross receipts calculated according to the length of line method. It bases this contention upon its conception of the proper interpretation of the statute, and upon what it claims is long-continued judicial and administrative construction. In the consideration of this contention and the contrary contention of the State Tax Commission that any reasonable method may be used to find what are the gross receipts, we are not unmindful of the multitude of decisions in the State courts throughout the country and in the Supreme Court of the United States which discuss gross receipts taxes. These are concerned primarily with the right to tax gross receipts, when they can be taxed, and how the tax may be levied. In general it may be said that the gross receipts of a railroad earned within a State may be taxed as such if no other taxes are levied against it; that gross receipts earned both within and without a State may be used as a basis for the calculation of a franchise tax; that gross receipts earned outside of a State may not be taxed as such; that no apportionment of inter-state receipts which unduly burdens inter-state commerce may be used, whether the tax is called a franchise tax or not, and that an honest State effort to make an apportionment will be upheld unless it produces a “palpably disproportionate result.” 28 Mich. Law. Rev. 328; Galveston, etc., Ry. Co. v. State of Texas,

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Bluebook (online)
52 A.2d 615, 188 Md. 240, 1947 Md. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-tax-commission-v-western-maryland-ry-co-md-1947.