State v. United New Jersey Railroad

68 A. 796, 76 N.J.L. 72, 1908 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 24, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 68 A. 796 (State v. United New Jersey Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. United New Jersey Railroad, 68 A. 796, 76 N.J.L. 72, 1908 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168 (N.J. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Swayze, J.

Upon an application to the Chief Justice for a certiorari to review taxes assessed against the railroad companies under the act of 1906 (Pamph. L., p. 121), he allowed the writ, upon condition that the railroad pay the amount which would have been assessable under the Eailroad [73]*73Tax act of 1884, “less any sum or sums heretofore paid on account of the state tax for 1906.” The question now is whether that condition was complied with. Counsel have stipulated that the hearing shall proceed as if a writ of certiorari had been allowed and return made, to the end that judgment final may be entered, which may be reviewed on writ of error by the Court of Errors and Appeals. They have also waived other objections and agreed that the cases shall be submitted on the question whether $298,128.98, or any part thereof, of the assessment of taxes for the year under review was paid at the time of the making of the order now in question. In view of this stipulation we have not considered whether the procedure provided by section 14 of the Railroad Tax act (Gen. Stat., p. 3328, pi. 225) is of such a character that it can be reviewed by certiorari, or whether the judgment entered in the Supreme Court is to be reviewed like other judgments of that court, by writ of error only.

The facts are as follows: The railroad company has paid to the state every year since the passage of the Transit act of 1869 (Pamph. L., p. 226) $298,128.98. This amount is the same that had been paid in the year 1868 under the then existing legislation. Since 1884 the company has paid, in February of each year, the difference between that sum and the sum assessable under the Railroad Tax act of 1884. The state credits the payments of 1884 and January, 1885, upon taxes under the Transit act of 1869. The company claims that these payments should be credited upon taxes assessed under the Railroad Tax act of 1884. The state’s method of stating the account shows the company in arrears for the amount above stated.

In other words, the question is whether payments made by the company, amounting to $74,532.29 each, on April 11th, 1884; July 17th, 1884; October 15th, 1884, and January 21st, 1885, are to be credited upon the tax imposed under the Railroad Tax act of 1884, as the company contends, or upon the tax imposed by what is called the Transit act of 1869 (Pamph. L., p. 226), as the state contends. By the acceptance of that act (Pamph. L: 1869, p. 1487) the company [74]*74became liable to pay each year, in quarterly payments, as theretofore, the sum of $298,138.98, until the legislature should by general law impose a uniform state tax equally applicable to all railroads and canal corporations, after which it was to pay such uniform tax. The amount was fixed by the sum which the company had paid previous to 1869 by virtue of a provision that until a general law should be framed no company theretofore paying transit duties should pay a less sum than that paid by it for taxes and duties of all kinds for the year 1868.

By the act of 1884 it was enacted that the tax imposed by the act should be in lieu of all other taxation. In our opinion, the question involved is one of statutory construction only, and cannot be affected by the language of some of the check vouchers by which the company paid the tax, nor by the language of the receipts given in 1884 and January 21st, 1885. By the former the company in later years sought to make the payments applicable to taxes which, under the act of 1884, became due subsequently to the payments. By the latter the state receipted for the payments as for taxes due under the Transit act of 1869. The amount of payments is not in dispute, and as the receipts given in 1884 did not indicate any other appropriation of payments they must be applicable to the company’s liabilities in the order of date. It is conceded that the company constantly claimed that its only liability to taxation was under the act of 1869, which it¡ asserted was an irrepealable contract, and that all payments in excess of $298,128.98 were voluntary, and made under section 29 of the act of 1884, so as not to be a waiver of the alleged contract. It would be quite inconsistent with that position for the company to claim that payments made by it under the act of 1869 were, by its own determination, appropriated to the payment of taxes under the act of 1884, which it claimed were illegal. It was, to be sure, entitled to the benefit of those payments by virtue of section 29 in case the act of 1884 was legally and constitutionally applicable, but whether the amount of the voluntary payment was dependent upon the amount paid under the Transit act in the previous [75]*75or in the current year was not determined by this section. The indication, so far as there is any, is that the previous payments were not the decisive factor, for the amount of the voluntary payment depended not upon the difference between the amount of the tax under the act of 1884 and the amounts paid under the act of 1869, but upon the difference between the former amount and the tax “now assessable” against the corporation. The words “now assessable” point rather to an inchoate liability than to a past payment. The company was, in fact, paying quarterly the amount for which it was liable under the act of 1869, and this payment was necessarily continuous, notwithstanding the act of 1884, if the company was to maintain its position that the Transit act constituted an irrepealable contract. What it actually did was to pay, on or about the first of February in each year, beginning February 1st, 1885, an additional sum as a voluntary payment. The question of the year for which the new tax was imposed and the application of the payments thereto could not arise. Whether it was for the year 1884 or 1885, it was payable February 1st, 1885, and the amount of the payment by the company was the same, whether it deducted what it had actually paid in 1884 or what was assessable against it in 1885, if the Transit act were still in force, for the amount under the Transit act was a fixed sum.

This view disposes also of the argument that the company’s payments in 1884 and on January 21st, 1885, must have been applicable to taxes for the year 1884. Yo doubt they were, but it was to taxes under the Transit act of 1869, which the company claimed still governed, and not to taxes under the act of 1884, which the company claimed was not binding.

This view is borne out by the form of receipts given by the state and accepted by the company April 16th, July 17th, October 15th, 1884, and January 21st, 1885, which treat the payments as made under the Transit act of 1869. It was not until May 8th, 1885, that a receipt was given indicating that a question had arisen as to the validity of the act of 1884. It was then, for the first time, that the state accepted a payment as a partial payment under the act of 1884. The subsequent [76]*76acceptance, beginning with 1890, by the state officers of check vouchers prepared by the company, which asserted a different claim as to the appropriation of payments and the failure to enforce penalties for deferred payments, cannot estop the state. Neither the treasurer nor the treasurer and comptroller together can thus release the state’s claim for taxes.

We proceed therefore to the construction of the statutes. The transit duties, by the terms of the act of 1869, were to be paid until the legislature by general law imposed a uniform state tax.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 796, 76 N.J.L. 72, 1908 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-united-new-jersey-railroad-nj-1908.