State v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co.

134 A. 59, 125 Me. 350, 1926 Me. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 134 A. 59 (State v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co., 134 A. 59, 125 Me. 350, 1926 Me. LEXIS 66 (Me. 1926).

Opinion

Deasy, J.

The State tax assessors levied upon the defendant as its annual excise tax for the year 1923 the sum of $158,958.85, and for the year 1924, $163,714.32.

The defendant admitted liability for and paid a large part of the tax of each year, leaving, however, unpaid and disputed a balance of $38,566.30 upon the tax of 1923 and $39,722.07 upon that of 1924. Hence this suit.

The parties disagree as to the proper basis of tax assessment. If the State is right in its contention judgment must be entered against the' defendant for said balances plus interest. If the defendant’s is the correct theory nothing is due.

In lieu of municipal taxes upon railroads, their property and stock, which are with some exceptions exempt from other taxation, railroad companies in this State are required by statute to pay an annual excise tax. B. "S., Chap. 9, Sec. 26. The rate of such taxation depends upon the gross transportation receipts per mile, the maximum being five and one half per ceflt. It is not- disputed that the defendant is hable to pay the maximum rate,

•' In all cases the tax is required to be assessed upon the gross transportation receipts in the State. If the railroad is wholly within the State such gross receipts appear in the corporation’s return to the Public ’Utilities Commission. If it lies partly within and partly without the State such' gross receipts are determined according to the following-statutory rule:

“The gross transportation receipts of such railroad fine or system as the case may be over its whole extent within and without the State . shall be divided by the total number of miles operated to obtain the average gross receipts per mile, and the gross receipts in the State shall be taken to be the average gross receipts per mile, multiplied by the number of miles operated within the State.” Laws of 1917, Chapter 42.

[352]*352This ease involves a construction of the section of statute next above quoted. In the last analysis its decision depends upon the meaning to be attached to the phrase “number of miles (of railroad) operated within the State.”

Of nearly fifteen thousand miles of road used by the defendant something less than two per cent, namely, 233.70 miles are in the State of Maine. This includes 56.60 miles between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro. The rest, 177.10 miles, which is owned and exclusively used by the defendant, is admittedly operated by it. It concedes liability for a tax based upon such mileage, and has paid it. But the stretch between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro, it says, it does not operate, and so far as the tax is based upon the operation of such mileage it declines to pay.

The Maine Central fine between Bangor and Vanceboro runs by way of Mattawamkeag. In 1887 the Atlantic & Northwest Railway Company, the defendant’s predecessor, was about to build a fine of railway through the State connecting with the Maine Central at or near Mattawamkeag. Because it was admitted by both corporations to be for “the mutual benefit and interest of both parties hereto to jointly use the track of that portion of the said railroad between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro,” a contract for such joint use was on February 4th, 1887 entered into between the Atlantic & Northwest Railway Company and the Maine Central Railroad Company. The defendant has succeeded to- the rights and obligations of the former corporation.

It is unnecessary to recite in full any of the fifteen sections of the contract other than the first.

The first section is as follows:

“That said party of the first part (Maine Central R. R. Co.) hereby grants, conveys, leases and hires to the said party of the second part (Atlantic & Northwest Railway Co.) the right to use said railroad between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro, as aforesaid, for all the engines and trains of cars that said party of the second part may desire to run over it, and to transport in and upon its said trains freight and passengers of every description between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro; it being distinctly understood and agreed that said party of the second part hereby acquires and shall enjoy full, free and equal running powers over the said railroad between Mattawamkeag and Vanceboro as aforesaid; it being further understood [353]*353and agreed that, limited only by the necessary conditions of joint operation and the equal rights of the party of the first part, these running rights shall be as full and free as if the fine were its own property between the points named; it being.however expressly provided and agreed that the trains, engines and cars and conductors, enginemen and other employes of the party of the second part connected with such trains, engines and cars, shall, while on the joint fine, be subject to the rules and regulations of the party of the first part, and to the orders of the Manager, Superintendent, Train Masters, Train Despatchers and all other officers of the party of the first part, in all matters relating to .the movement of trains or in any way affecting the safe and proper working of said joint section, and said conductors, enginemen and other employes, shall, on demand of said party of the first part, be dismissed and discharged for violating the rules of said party of the first part or the orders of its officers aforesaid, and provided further that all employes at the stations, and all trackmen and other employes of said joint section, shall be appointed by the party of the first part, but shall be subject to dismissal and discharge on the reasonable complaint of the party of the second part, the ground of such complaint being stated; and provided further that all employes on said joint section, other than trainmen, shall be deemed joint employes, and shall under no circumstances favor one company at the expense of the other, but shall give equal care and attention to forwarding the business of both.”

The fourth section agrees that the party of the second part shall provide its own side tracks and other facilities at Mattawamkeag. At other points side tracks and other facilities built or to be built by the party of the first part to be jointly used.

The sixth section provides that the party of the second part shall “pay its proportion, reckoned on the basis of wheelage computed in the usual manner,' of the following expenses: Repairs, maintenance and renewal of track, roadway, bridges, superstructure, buildings, water stations, fences and other structures, wages of all station men, signal men, track men, all station, track or other expenses necessary to the safe and convenient maintenance and working of said section used jointly. Repairs and renewals to be done by the party of the first part and paid for jointly as above.

. The eighth section agrees that the cost of reduction of gradients, new sidings and changes in bridges “necessary to afford safe and [354]*354convenient passage for the engines and cars of the party of the second part and other work of similar nature which is to be done before connection is made between the tracks of the two parties is to be paid for equally.

We roughly summarize the other eleven sections as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A. 59, 125 Me. 350, 1926 Me. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-canadian-pacific-railway-co-me-1926.