State v. Yard

42 N.J.L. 357
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 N.J.L. 357 (State v. Yard) 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. Yard, 42 N.J.L. 357 (N.J. 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Knapp, J.

The prosecutor, a private corporation located in the city of Trenton, was assessed for taxes in 1879, on its real estate, at a valuation of $139,734, and on personal estate valued at $47,200. No objection was made to the tax on the real estate; that upon the personal property is in controversy.

Upon the facts admitted and proved in the case, the assessment is not sustainable, if the contention of the prosecutor be correct, that the act of 1876 is alone applicable in the taxation of this company, The defendant insists that the supplement to the act concerning corporations, passed March 7th, 1878, (Pamph. L., p. 61,) governs in and makes valid the assessment.

The fifteenth section of the tax act of 1866, (Rev., p. 1156, pi. 74,) provides “ that all private corporations in this state, except” banking institutions and some others, in which theproseculor is not embraced, “ shall be assessed and taxed at the full amount of their capital stock paid in and accumulated surplus.” The twenty-third section of the act-, {Rev., p. 1159, [359]*359pi. 81,) requires the real estate of private corporations to be assessed in the township or ward in which said real estate is located, in the same manner as the real estate of individuals, and provides that the amount of said assessment—which I understand to mean the valuation of said real estate—shall be deducted from the amount of the capital stock and surplus and valuable assets of the corporation.

Under these provisions, the prosecutor asks exemption from the personal tax, because the value of the real estate taxed exceeds the amount of the capital stock and accumulated surplus of the company, as the words “ accumulated surplus,” as used in the fifteenth section, have been interpreted in our courts—that is, the property or fund which the corporation has in excess of its capital stock, and above all its debts and liabilities. State, Mut. Ben. Life Ins. Co., pros., v. Utter, 5 Vroom 489; State, People’s Ins. Co., pros., v. Parker, Id. 479; S. C. on error, 6 Vroom 575.

The fact appears that the prosecutors, at the time the tax was levied, owed debts to creditors out of the state, exceeding in amount the capital stock and value of other property of the company, reduced by the assessed value of the lands. So, under those sections, there remained neither capital nor surplus to be taxed.

But, in support of the tax, the city claims it to be valid under the provisions of the one hundred and fifth section of the act concerning corporations, (Rev., p. 96,) as amended by the act of March 7th, 1878, (Pamph. L.,p. 61,) entitled “A supplement to the act entitled ‘An act concerning corporations.’”

The one hundred and fifth section, which first appears in the Revision, enacts “ that all the real and personal estate of any corporation hereafter incorporated by any act of the legislature, or by filing a certificate, or otherwise, under any general law of this state, shall be taxed the same as the real and personal estate of an individual.” This act could not have applied to the prosecutor, as its incorporation antedates the enactment.

By the supplement of 1878, it was enacted that the one [360]*360hundred and fifth section be amended to read as follows: “ That all the real and personal estate of every corporation incorporated by any act of the legislature, or by the filing of a certificate, or otherwise, under any general law of this state, shall be taxed the same as the real and personal estate of an individual; provided, however, that the provisions of this section shall not apply to railway, turnpike, insurance, canal, or banking corporations, or to savings banks, cemeteries, church property, or to purely charitable or educational associations.”

The second section repealed all inconsistent legislation.

The supplement left out the word “hereafter,” and thus made its application general, extending to all corporations not expressly excepted from its operation.

This law, if valid, modified, in an essential degree, the fifteenth section of the act of 1866. Under the construction put upon the words “accumulated surplus,” which limited their meaning to their appropriate sense, as a commercial phrase, inequalities in the taxable valuation of property between individuals, corporations having a capital stock and such as had none, was found to result, and such as seemed inimical to the general design of the tax act of 1866, which was to secure equality in taxation.

Individuals were taxable for all their real and personal property in the state, at its full value, reduced only by such debts as they, under oath, showed to be justly due and owing to creditors residing within the state.

Stock corporations having property largely in' excess of their capital stock, were taxable on it at a valuation reduced by all their debts, wheresoever owing, while corporations having no capital stock were taxable upon all their property, without any deduction for debts or liabilities.

This case would present no inapt illustration of the practical inequality introduced by this section of the tax act.

The prosecutor has in this state, under the protection of its laws, property to the admitted value of $608,000. Under the operation of the sections referred to in the act of 1866, it [361]*361would be taxable on about $140,000. If but $90,000 had been represented by lands, that would have been the entire •amount of its taxable property. The same property held by an individual or private association would, after deducting debts due to creditors in the state, be taxable at $590,000. Owned by a corporation having no capital stock, the tax would have been levied upon the whole sum of $608,000.

Against this manifest want of uniformity, it was the purpose of the legislature, by the act of 1878, to provide. By virtue of its provisions, corporations brought within its terms stand with natural persons, in respect to their taxable property, on an even plane.

The act is in accord with the spirit and purpose of the general tax law, and falls into harmony with all its principal provisions, save those of the fifteenth and twenty-third sections. With parts of these, it is in conflict, and they must, to the extent of the inconsistency, yield to the later expression •of the legislative will, if the act has the force of law.

The prosecutor questions' the validity of the act of 1878, on two grounds. The first is rested upon the following •theory: that the one hundred and fifth section of the act of 1875, limiting its application to corporations created after its passage, tvas a special act, embracing only a portion of a class of subjects, to the exclusion of others, possessed of like qualities and attributes; and the amendment to the constitution ordaining that property be assessed for taxes under general laws and by uniform rules, being self-executing, was fatal to, and annulled this section; and it having thus fallen, by force of the constitutional conflict, it could not, as a dead law, be the subject of, or support an amendment.

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Related

General Electric Co. v. City of Passaic
147 A.2d 233 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.J.L. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yard-nj-1880.