Levine, J.
The plaintiff, the White Motor Company, seeks to enjoin John A. Zangerle, as auditor, and John J. Boyle, as treasurer, of Cúyahoga county, from adding to its tax return credits to the amount of $1,233,000 and from collecting taxes on same.
The operative facts-necessary to a determination of this ease are as follows:
[354]*354During the month of May, 1919, the plaintiff filed with the defendant,- John A. Zangerle, as auditor of Cuyahoga county, its tax return for the year 1919, showing the total of its personal property subject to taxation as $6,982,000, distributed as follows :
Moneys in possession or on deposit subject to order,
on listing day, 1919 ......................$ 682,000.00
Average value of raw material, materials in process
of manufacture, and finished articles ...... 5,114,000.00
Tools and machinery ......................... 1,186,000.00
No return was made by the plaintiff of any credits owned by it. The reason assigned for that omission is, that the total of legal, bona fide debts, owing by said company, was greater ■Hia-n the total of all credits owned by it, as follows:
Total credits ........................$4,940,866100
Total debts .......................... 6,732,107.00
The plaintiff claims that it was entitled to set off this last item of total indebtedness, therefore leaving no net credits subject to taxation in Cuyahoga county.
In the sum of $6,732,107, being the sum total of all its debts, was included the amount of $3,025,000, owing by the plaintiff to the government of the United States, for income and excess profit taxes for the year ending Dec. 31, 1918. The plaintiff claims the right to include this amount in its legal, bona fide debts. The defendant, John A. Zangerle, auditor of Cuyahoga county, refused to permit the plaintiff to include in its legal, bona fide debts, said amount of $3,025,000, owing by it to the government of the United States for income and excess profit taxes for the year ending Dee. 31, 1918, as above stated.
Deducting this amount of $3,025,000 from the total indebtedness of the White Motor Company, leaves a balance of $3,717,-307, as the total of legal bona fide debts of the plaintiff. Holding to that view, the county auditor accordingly allowed only said amount of $3,717,107 to be deducted from the company’s total credits of $4,940,866, leaving an item of net credits in the amount of $1,233,000. The county auditor entered • upon [355]*355the tax list, or duplicate, this last item, as taxable against the plaintiff for the year 1919.
The right of the plaintiff company to include the amount owing by it to the government of the United States, as income and excess profit taxes, in its legal, bona fide debts, rests entirely upon the interpretation of Section 5327, General Code, of Ohio, reading as follows: .
“Credits. The term ‘credits’ as so used, means the excess of the sum of all legal claims and demands, whether for money or other valuable thing, or for labor or service due or to become due to the person liable to pay taxes thereon, including deposits in banks' or with persons in or out of the state, other than such as are held to be money, as hereinbefore defined, when added together, estimating every such claim or demand at its true value in money, over and above the sum of legal bona fide debts owing by such person. In making up the sum of such debts owing, there shall not be taken into account * * ® an acknowledgment of indebtedness, unless founded on some consideration actually received, and believed at the time of making such acknowledgment to be a full consideration therefor.”
What is the meaning of the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts OAving by such person?” The defendants eontend'that the debts contemplated by the statute are such only as are founded on a consideration actually received by the debtor from the creditor ; in other words, a debt which arose from contractual relations between the debtor and the creditor. The plaintiff contends that the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts” contemplates all obligations due and existing, regardless of how the obligation arose.
A careful perusal of the authorities cited in counsel’s briefs discloses that, in a strict, technical sense, “debt” implies an obligation arising from contract; or, to use the language of counsel for defendant, “a debt for which a consideration'was actually received by the debtor.”
A tax, in its essential charactéristies,' is technically not a “debt.” It is an'impost, levied by authority of government upon its citizens for the support of the state. It is not founded On contract nor agreement.
[356]*356In an enlarged sense, the word “debt” means a duty to pay on any ground, and, in this sense, includes a tax.
In the case of Gillion Co. v. Westwood County, 13 Pac., 324, or 14 Ore., 525, the court holds:
“ ‘Debt,’ in an enlarged sense, means a duty to pay on any .ground, and, in this sense, includes a tax, though in a strict, technical sense, a tax is not a debt.”
Applying to the phrase, “legal bona fide debts,” a-strict, technical definition, it would necessarily exclude taxes. Applying to the phrase, “legal bona fide debts,” the meaning of the word “debt,” in an enlarged sense, it would include all obligations due and existing on any ground, and would therefore include taxes.
What was the intent of the Legislature? Did it intend to use the word “debt” in a strict, technical sense, or did it intend to use the same in an enlarged sense? Upon the' answer to that question rests the determination of this ease.
An early act, passed by the General Assembly, April 13, 1852 (50 Laws of Ohio, 151), dealt with the subject of taxation. Section 10 of said act is pertinent to the purpose of this inquiry:
‘ ‘ In making up the amount of moneys and credits which any person is required to list for himself or any other person, company or corporation, he shall be entitled to deduct from the gross amount all moneys and credits, the amount of all bona fide debts owing by such person, company or corporation, to any other person, company or corporation, for a consideration received.”
This last section was held unconstitutional, in Exchange Bank of Columbus v. Hines, 3 O. S., 1.
To remedy the defects of said Section .10, the General Assembly of Ohio passed the act of April 1, 1856 (53 Laws of Ohio 52) ;
“The term ‘credits’ shall.be held to mean the excess of the sum of all legal claims and demands, whether for money or any other valuable thing” * * * “when added together, over and above the sum of the legal bona fide debts owing by such person. ’ ’
[357]*357Note the important omission of the phrase, “for a consideration received.”
. Section 5327, General Code of Ohio, likewise omits the phrase, “for a consideration received.” It is therefore apparent that the Legislature did not intend to qualify the phrase, “legal,
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Levine, J.
The plaintiff, the White Motor Company, seeks to enjoin John A. Zangerle, as auditor, and John J. Boyle, as treasurer, of Cúyahoga county, from adding to its tax return credits to the amount of $1,233,000 and from collecting taxes on same.
The operative facts-necessary to a determination of this ease are as follows:
[354]*354During the month of May, 1919, the plaintiff filed with the defendant,- John A. Zangerle, as auditor of Cuyahoga county, its tax return for the year 1919, showing the total of its personal property subject to taxation as $6,982,000, distributed as follows :
Moneys in possession or on deposit subject to order,
on listing day, 1919 ......................$ 682,000.00
Average value of raw material, materials in process
of manufacture, and finished articles ...... 5,114,000.00
Tools and machinery ......................... 1,186,000.00
No return was made by the plaintiff of any credits owned by it. The reason assigned for that omission is, that the total of legal, bona fide debts, owing by said company, was greater ■Hia-n the total of all credits owned by it, as follows:
Total credits ........................$4,940,866100
Total debts .......................... 6,732,107.00
The plaintiff claims that it was entitled to set off this last item of total indebtedness, therefore leaving no net credits subject to taxation in Cuyahoga county.
In the sum of $6,732,107, being the sum total of all its debts, was included the amount of $3,025,000, owing by the plaintiff to the government of the United States, for income and excess profit taxes for the year ending Dec. 31, 1918. The plaintiff claims the right to include this amount in its legal, bona fide debts. The defendant, John A. Zangerle, auditor of Cuyahoga county, refused to permit the plaintiff to include in its legal, bona fide debts, said amount of $3,025,000, owing by it to the government of the United States for income and excess profit taxes for the year ending Dee. 31, 1918, as above stated.
Deducting this amount of $3,025,000 from the total indebtedness of the White Motor Company, leaves a balance of $3,717,-307, as the total of legal bona fide debts of the plaintiff. Holding to that view, the county auditor accordingly allowed only said amount of $3,717,107 to be deducted from the company’s total credits of $4,940,866, leaving an item of net credits in the amount of $1,233,000. The county auditor entered • upon [355]*355the tax list, or duplicate, this last item, as taxable against the plaintiff for the year 1919.
The right of the plaintiff company to include the amount owing by it to the government of the United States, as income and excess profit taxes, in its legal, bona fide debts, rests entirely upon the interpretation of Section 5327, General Code, of Ohio, reading as follows: .
“Credits. The term ‘credits’ as so used, means the excess of the sum of all legal claims and demands, whether for money or other valuable thing, or for labor or service due or to become due to the person liable to pay taxes thereon, including deposits in banks' or with persons in or out of the state, other than such as are held to be money, as hereinbefore defined, when added together, estimating every such claim or demand at its true value in money, over and above the sum of legal bona fide debts owing by such person. In making up the sum of such debts owing, there shall not be taken into account * * ® an acknowledgment of indebtedness, unless founded on some consideration actually received, and believed at the time of making such acknowledgment to be a full consideration therefor.”
What is the meaning of the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts OAving by such person?” The defendants eontend'that the debts contemplated by the statute are such only as are founded on a consideration actually received by the debtor from the creditor ; in other words, a debt which arose from contractual relations between the debtor and the creditor. The plaintiff contends that the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts” contemplates all obligations due and existing, regardless of how the obligation arose.
A careful perusal of the authorities cited in counsel’s briefs discloses that, in a strict, technical sense, “debt” implies an obligation arising from contract; or, to use the language of counsel for defendant, “a debt for which a consideration'was actually received by the debtor.”
A tax, in its essential charactéristies,' is technically not a “debt.” It is an'impost, levied by authority of government upon its citizens for the support of the state. It is not founded On contract nor agreement.
[356]*356In an enlarged sense, the word “debt” means a duty to pay on any ground, and, in this sense, includes a tax.
In the case of Gillion Co. v. Westwood County, 13 Pac., 324, or 14 Ore., 525, the court holds:
“ ‘Debt,’ in an enlarged sense, means a duty to pay on any .ground, and, in this sense, includes a tax, though in a strict, technical sense, a tax is not a debt.”
Applying to the phrase, “legal bona fide debts,” a-strict, technical definition, it would necessarily exclude taxes. Applying to the phrase, “legal bona fide debts,” the meaning of the word “debt,” in an enlarged sense, it would include all obligations due and existing on any ground, and would therefore include taxes.
What was the intent of the Legislature? Did it intend to use the word “debt” in a strict, technical sense, or did it intend to use the same in an enlarged sense? Upon the' answer to that question rests the determination of this ease.
An early act, passed by the General Assembly, April 13, 1852 (50 Laws of Ohio, 151), dealt with the subject of taxation. Section 10 of said act is pertinent to the purpose of this inquiry:
‘ ‘ In making up the amount of moneys and credits which any person is required to list for himself or any other person, company or corporation, he shall be entitled to deduct from the gross amount all moneys and credits, the amount of all bona fide debts owing by such person, company or corporation, to any other person, company or corporation, for a consideration received.”
This last section was held unconstitutional, in Exchange Bank of Columbus v. Hines, 3 O. S., 1.
To remedy the defects of said Section .10, the General Assembly of Ohio passed the act of April 1, 1856 (53 Laws of Ohio 52) ;
“The term ‘credits’ shall.be held to mean the excess of the sum of all legal claims and demands, whether for money or any other valuable thing” * * * “when added together, over and above the sum of the legal bona fide debts owing by such person. ’ ’
[357]*357Note the important omission of the phrase, “for a consideration received.”
. Section 5327, General Code of Ohio, likewise omits the phrase, “for a consideration received.” It is therefore apparent that the Legislature did not intend to qualify the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts,” so as to limit the same-to such debts only, for which a consideration was received by the debtor.
Counsel for the defendants points to the language of the last part of Section 5327, as follows:
“In making up the sum of such debts owing, there shall not be taken into account * * * an acknowledgment of indebtedness, unless founded on some consideration actually received, and believed at the time of making such acknowledgment to be a full consideration therefor.”
Claiming that this last-quoted language supports the contention that the phrase, “legal bona- fide debts” is limited to such debts only, for which a consideration was received by the debtor. In this the court can not concur. An acknowledgment of indebtedness must be differentiated from “legal, bona fide debts.” The. above-quoted language was intended by the Legislature to prevent fraud and imposition on the part of taxpayers, and it therefore provides that in making up the stun of legal, bona fide debts owing, no acknowledgment of indebtedness, such as the signing of promissory notes, or any other form 'of evidencing indebtedness, can be taken into account, unless such acknowledgment of indebtedness is founded on a consideration actually received by the debtor.
There is undoubtedly significance in the omission of the phrase, “for a consideration received,” following the phrase, “over and above the sum of legal, bona fide debts owing by such person,” and which was present in Section 10 of the act of April 13, 1852, heretofore referred to.
I shall refer to other sections of the General Code, as helpful to our inquiry.
Section 5697:
“Hoiv treasurer to collect delinquent personal tax. When personal taxes stand charged against a person, and are not [358]*358paid within the time prescribed by law for the payment of such taxes, the treasurer, in addition to any other remedy provided by law for the collection of personal taxes, shall enforce the collection thereof by a civil action in the name of such treasurer against such person for the recovery of unpaid taxes. It shall be sufficient, having made proper parties to the suit, for the treasurer to allege in his bill of particulars or petition that the taxes stand charged upon the duplicate of the county against such person, that they are due and unpaid, and that such person is indebted in the amount appearing to be due on the duplicate.” i ;
Note the language of the Legislature, “that such person is indebted,” meaning thereby the obligation to pay taxes.
Section 5698:
“On the trial of the action provided in the next preceding section, if it is found that such-person is indebted, judgment! shall be rendered in favor of the treasurer prosecuting the action, as in other cases.
“The judgment debtor” (speaking of the person against whom the action was brought and judgment taken) “shall not be entitled to the benefit of the laws for stay of execution or exemption of homestead, or other property, from levy or sale on execution in the enforcement of such judgment.”
But Section 10714, which deals with the duty of executors and administrators to pay debts, reads as follows:
“Order in which debts are to be paid: * * * 4. Public rates and taxes.”
Herein the Legislature expressly speaks of public taxes as debts.
Recurring to Section 5327, and the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts,” used in that section; what was the purpose of this section, which in substance provides that “legal, bona fide debts” may be set off against credits, and that net credits only are taxable? There is but one answer. The Legislature apparently recognized the injustice of taxing credits, without regard to legal, bona fide debts „owing by the person whose credits are sought to be taxed. Credits do not constitute a correct criterion or representation of what a person possessing same owns as his personal property. The injusticé of taxing credits with[359]*359out regard to debts is not a debatable question. By force of said Section 5327, balances only may be taxed.
In this, the Legislature followed not only the dictates of .justice, but also sound business policy, recognizing that a correct estimate of the financial standing of an individual or corporation can not be ascertained unless both sides of the ledger, debit as well as credit, are considered, and a trial balance struck. Bearing in mind the purpose of the Legislature, it is presumed that the language used by it was intended to be broad enough to. carry out said purpose. If the contention of the defendants is correct, that the ph-rase, "legal, lona fide debts” is intended in a strict, technical sense, and is therefore limited to such debts only as arise from contractual relations between debtor and creditor, and for which a consideration was received by the debtor, and necessarily excluding the obligation to pay taxes to the government, then the Legislature failed of its purpose, _ which was to tax net credits, or balances, only.
The strict, technical construction sought for by the defendants, is, to my mind, inimical to the ends of justice, and would prove a source of oppression of the citizens of the state. The effect of it would be to tax individuals and corporations on personal property which they do not, in fact, own or possess. There are numberless obligations to pay, which arise other than from contractual relations. The obligations are nevertheless due and existing, and necessarily affect the value of the credits sought to be taxed.
The liberal construction of the phrase, "legal, tona fide debts,” sought for by the plaintiff, is more in conformity with abstract justice, and the very purpose which the Legislature had, in passing said Section 5327.
Reference is made to the case of Bayliss v. City of Des Moines, 127 Ia., 124. The syllabus of the case is as follows:
1 ‘ The term ‘ debt, ’ as used in Code, Section 1311, does not include delinquent taxes, in the sense that the statute authorizes a taxpayer to set forth against the assessment of his moneys and credits, the unpaid taxes of a previous year, as .a debt in good faith owing by him.”
It is pointed out to this court that, if- the term "legal, tona [360]*360fide debts” is broad enough to include an obligation to pay taxes, that persons and corporations within this state who are delinquent in the payment of their obligation to pay taxes, will be enabled to off-set the unpaid taxes of a previous year or years, as debts, thereby causing great loss to the state. This contention is groundless, for emphasis must be placed upon the words, “bona fide.” Such delinquent taxes, while they may be considered legal debts, are not bona- fide within the meaning of the section.
The obligation of this plaintiff to pay to the government of the United States, income and excess profit taxes, is personal in its character, and is a legal obligation. There is no question as to the good faith of this legal obligation, and it is, therefore, bona fide.
I therefore hold that the Legislature intended the phrase, “legal, bona fide debts,” as used in Section 5327, to cover all obligations to pay money, due and existing, on any ground, and includes the obligation to pay taxes to the government. The test is not how the debt arose, but is it legally due and existing, and bona fid'e?
The plaintiff was entitled to include the amount of $3,025,000 owing by it to the government of the United States, for income and excess profit taxes for the year ending Dec. 31, 1918, in its legal, bona fide debts, and to set off the same against credits owned by it.
Various other considerations have been urged upon this court, in support of a strict, technical definition of the word “debts,” as used in the statute, among them the loss that would ensue to tbe state. In this, I can not concur. The state can not be said to lose by failing to obtain or keep money or funds to which it is not legally entitled. It should not seek to enrich itself by oppressive or illegal means. I have no doubt that the state authorities are actuated by a noble sense of duty in seeking to bring to the public treasury all possible funds. The ends of justice, however, require otherwise, and I therefore grant the prayer of plaintiff’s petition.
The defendants are permanently enjoined as prayed for in said petition.