Union Pac. R. v. Lincoln County

24 F. Cas. 631, 1 Dill. 314

This text of 24 F. Cas. 631 (Union Pac. R. v. Lincoln County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Pac. R. v. Lincoln County, 24 F. Cas. 631, 1 Dill. 314 (circtdne 1871).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

I. The authorities of the state of Nebraska have assessed and levied, for the year 1869, taxes upon the property of the Union Pacific Railroad Company situate therein. The company brings the present bill, in this court, to restrain the collection of these taxes. No question is made concerning jurisdiction. The cause is before the. court on the motion of the company to continue in force the injunction allowed in vacation, and has been ably argued by counsel, on the merits of the application.

One of the grounds for the injunction is fundamental in its nature, and if well taken is decisive, not only of the present case, but against the power of the state, in any event, to subject tne property of the company to taxation by its authority. To this ground, therefore, we shall first direct our attention. It is that the state of Nebraska has no power to levy a tax upon any property of the Union Pacific Railroad Company which is appurtenant to, or necessary for, the use and opeiation of its road. The argument in support of this proposition is, that the corporation was created by congress, and not by the state; that it was created because deemed by congress a fit instrumentality or means of exercising the constitutional powers of carrying .on, promoting or facilitating the operations, or executing the duties of the general government, and that if it be such instrumentality or means, it is settled that it is beyond the taxing power of the state.

Reliance is placed upon the cases of McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 316, and Osborn v. Bank of U. S., 9 Wheat. [22 U. S.] 738, in which it was held by the supreme court that this bank, “as the great instrument by which the fiscal operations of the government were effected." and “as a public corporation, created for public and national purposes/' was not, on its capital or in its operations, taxable by the states. In a word, it is claimed by the company that as respects immunity from taxation, it stands precisely in the situation of the bank, and that taxation of it by the states is unconstitutional, for the same reasons that in those cases the laws of Maryland and Ohio taxing the bank., were adjudged to be invalid.

The defendant controverts these propositions, and contends that the Union Pacific Railroad Company, though chartered by congress, is essentially a “private corporation, whose principal object is individual trade and individual profit, and not a public corporation, created for public and national purposes;’ and denies that it is an instrument. agency, or means of the general gov-emment, in such a sense as, on this ground, to exempt it by necessary implication from taxation by the states. The cases referred to undoubtedly establish the doctrine that no state has the right to tax the means, agencies, or instrumentalities rightfully employed within the states by the general government for the execution of its powers; and this doctrine is adhered to, and, when understood with the necessary qualifications, declared to be sound by the supreme court, in its latest adjudications on the subject Thompson v. Pacific R. R., 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 579, 591; National Bank v. Com., Id. 353, 361.

The doctrine of the implied exemption of federal instrumentalities from state taxation, its rationale, and its limitations, are so clearly stated by the learned justice assigned to this circuit, in the case last cited, that his observations may be advantageously extracted to aid our present inquiries. The case related to the right of the states to tax shares of the national banks, and “it is argued.” says Mr. Justice Miller, “that the banks, being instrumentalities of the federal government, by which some of its important operations are conducted, cannot be subjected to such state legislation. It is certainly true that tne Bank of the United States and its capital were held to be exempt from state taxation on the ground here stated, and this principle, laid down in the case of McCulloch v. Maryland has been repeatedly affirmed by this court. But the doctrine has its foundation in the proposition that the right of taxation may be so used in such cases as to destroy the instru-mentalities by which the government proposes to effect its lawful purposes in the states, and it certainly cannot be maintained that banks oy other corporations or instru-mentalities of the government are to be wholly withdrawn from the operation of state legislation. * * * The principle we are discussing has its limitation, — a limitation growing out of the necessity on which the principle itself is founded. That limitation is, that the agencies of the federal government are only exempted from state legislation so far as that legislation may interfere with, or impaii their efficiency in performing, the functions by which they are designed to serve that government. Any other rule would convert a principle founded alone in the necessity of securing to the government of the United States the means of exercising its legitimate powers, into an unauthorized and unjustifiable invasion of the rights of the states. It is only when the state law incapacitates the banks from discharging their duties to the government that it becomes unconstitutional.” [National Bank v. Com.] 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 361, 362. The state legislation, then, to come within the operation of the principle, must relate not simply to an agent, but to an agency of tlie general government, and must be of a [634]*634character which incapacitates the agency to perform, or interferes with its efficiency in performing its duties to the government, or it must (as in the case of a tax, which if valid at all, is valid to any extent the state may see fit to press it), assert a principle in its nature antagonistic to the federal instrumentality, and which may be exercised to destroy it.

Having thus defined and limited the principle on which the company relies as exempting it from the right of the state to tax its property, the next step in the inquiry is to determine whether this corporation is a federal instrumentality, within the meaning of the rule, and one which might be destroyed by the state if it was permitted to tax it.

Upon the most careral examination of the acts of congress relating to this company, and upon the best reflection I have been able to give the subject, I am of opinion that the interest of the government in the corporation, though organized under congressional authority, is not such as will bring it within the principle of implied exemption from the taxing power of the state. That there is, in any act of congress, an express provision on the subject of taxation, or a prohibition to the state to tax the company, is not claimed.

The Union Pacific Railroad Company is a private corporation, in the sense that all of its capital stock is owned by the stockholders, and these constitute the corporate body. The government has no stock in the road. But, in another sense, the corporation is a public one as respects the government, and the relations it sustains to the government are very peculiar. The government created the corporation, and both authorized and aided the building of the road. It was to_ be constructed within the territories of the United States; and if congress was not the only power which could erect said corporation, and authorize it to build the road therein, it is certain that no road could have been constructed through the national domain against the will of congress.

The purpose of congress is manifest, not only from the nature of the legislative provisions. but from the plain expression of it, both in the title and in the body of the ineorporat-ing act.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 631, 1 Dill. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pac-r-v-lincoln-county-circtdne-1871.