Citation Numbers: 48 A. 503, 92 Md. 668, 1901 Md. LEXIS 129
Judges: McSherry, Fowler, Briscoe, Pearce, Schmucker
Filed Date: 2/20/1901
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Allegany County in favor of the State of Maryland for the sum of $76,992.73. The State sued to recover from the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad Company, certain taxes claimed to be due for the eight years from January 31st, 1890, to January 31st, 1898. These taxes for each of the six *Page 676 years up to January 31st, 1896, were duly assessed under the provisions of sec. 1 of ch. 559, of the Acts of 1890, and those for the two ensuing years, under the provisions of sec. 146 of ch. 120, of the Acts of 1896, which repealed and re-enacted the Act of 1890. A plea of nil debet was filed by the defendant, upon which issue was joined, and the case was submitted to the Court without the intervention of a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts, the plaintiff offering one prayer which was granted, and the defendant offering six prayers, all of which were rejected; to which rulings the defendant excepted. These prayers will be fully set out by the reporter.
The Act of 1890 declared "a State tax of one per centum shall be and is hereby levied annually upon the gross receipts of all railroad companies worked by steam, incorporated by or under the authority of this State, and doing business therein. * * If any such railroad company has any part of its road in this State, and a part thereof in another State or States, such company shall return a statement of its gross receipts over its whole line of road, together with a statement of the whole length of its line in this State, and such company shall pay to the State at the said rates hereinbefore prescribed, upon such proportion of its gross earnings as the length of its line in this State bears to the whole length of its line."
The Act of 1896 increased the tax upon gross receipts of railroad companies worked by steam power, establishing a scale of rates graded according to the earnings per mile, and specifically declaring the tax to be a franchise tax, but leaving unchanged the apportionment according to the mileage within the State.
The agreed statement of facts sets out that part of the defendant's gross receipts upon which the taxes had been assessed by the State Tax Commissioner were derived from the business of interstate commerce, and what part from business exclusively within the State; also what amount of taxes for the period mentioned were claimed by the State upon the entire gross receipts of defendant, and what amount for the same period were admitted to be due by the defendant upon *Page 677 the entire gross receipts upon business done exclusively within the State, and sets out the tender of this last amount by the defendant at the proper times, and its refusal by the plaintiff. It also showed that the defendant's road is operated in Maryland under a charter from the State of Maryland and in West Virginia under a charter from the State of Virginia; that the termini of its road are at the city of Cumberland, in Maryland, at the Pennsylvania State line, and at Piedmont, in West Virginia; that the whole length of its road is 32 65-100 miles, of which 32 44-100 are in Maryland, and 21-100 in West Virginia, and that it is chiefly a coal road forming a connecting link between the B. O.R. system at Piedmont and the Pa. R.R. system at the State line of Pennsylvania, and that everything necessary to be done by defendant in order to avail itself of the defense made, had been duly done.
The single question thus presented for determination is whether the tax sued for is in part invalid, as being a regulation of commerce among the several States, and therefore in contravention of Art.
Standing then upon the just and impregnable principle announced in the language which we have reproduced, we will consider the question in the light of all the authority which can be derived from the decisions of the Supreme Court upon statutes of similar form and design to that before us. Unless the decision in the case of The State Tax on Railway Gross Receipts, 15 Wall. 284, is to be disregarded, it must be accepted as requiring the affirmance of the judgment here assailed, and the appellant's counsel, conceding this, have directed all their energy to the effort to show that that decision, if not literally overruled, has been so criticised and discredited by later decisions, as to be shorn of all authority, and to warrant, if not to require, the State Courts to refuse longer to follow it. The circumstances under which that decision was pronounced are so noteworthy as to justify extended reference to them here. At the December term, 1872, of the Supreme Court of the United States, two cases were argued, in each of which the Reading Railroad Company was appellant, and the State of Pennsylvania was appellee. In each of these cases the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania had affirmed the validity of a statute of the State, which the plaintiff in error alleged to be in contravention of that clause of Art.
In the Case of the State Freight Tax, the Court said: "The question calls upon us to trace the line, always difficult to be traced between the limits of State sovereignty in imposing taxation, and the power and duty of the Federal government to protect and regulate interstate commerce;" and after declaring that the constitutionality of a State tax is to be determined, not by the form or agency through which it is to be collected, but by the subject upon which the burden is laid, asked, "Upon what is the tax imposed to be considered as laid? *Page 680 Where does the substantial burden rest? Very plainly it was not intended to be, nor is it in fact a tax upon the franchise of the carrying companies, or upon their property, or upon their business measured by the number of tons of freight carried. On the contrary, it is expressly laid upon the freight carried, and the tax is not proportioned to the business done in transportation. The transportation of freight is a constituent of commerce itself. * * * And a tax upon freight transported from State to State is a regulation of interstate transportation and therefore a regulation of commerce between the States, and the conclusion is inevitable that it is in conflict with the Constitution of the United States. * * * * But while holding this, we fully recognize the power of each State to tax at its own discretion, its own internal commerce, and the franchises,property, or business of its own corporations."
Having thus plainly and conclusively traced the line between the power of the State to impose, and of the Federal government to prohibit taxation, and having asserted the power and duty of the Federal government in the case before it, the Court turned to the consideration of the case of the State tax on railway gross receipts, and proceeded to inquire whether such a tax is a tax upon commerce, so far as that commerce consists in moving goods or passengers across State lines, using, in the course of the opinion delivered, this lucid and convincing reasoning: "No doubt every tax upon personal property or upon occupations, business or franchises, affects more or less the subjects and the operations of commerce, yet it is not everything that affects commerce, that amounts to a regulation of it, within the meaning of the Constitution. We think it may be safely asserted that the States have authority to tax the estate, real and personal, of all their corporations, including carrying companies, precisely as they may tax similar property when belonging to natural persons, and to the same extent. We think also that such taxation may be laid upon a valuation, or may be an excise, and that in exacting an excise tax from their corporations, the States are not obliged to impose a fixed sum upon the franchises, or upon the value of *Page 681 them, but they may demand a graduated contribution, proportioned either to the value of the privileges granted, or to the extent of their exercise, or to the result of such exercise. No mode ofeffecting this, and no forms of expression which have not ameaning beyond this, can be regarded as violating theConstitution. A power to tax to this extent may be essential tothe healthy existence of the State governments, and the FederalConstitution ought not to be so construed as to impair, much lessdestroy anything that is necessary to their efficientexistence." It was accordingly held that the act imposing the tax was not in conflict with the Constitution of the United States, and the decision was placed upon two distinct grounds: 1st. That such a tax is laid upon a fund, which though in part derived from freight earned, has lost its distinctive character, and has become the property of the company, and has been incorporated with the general mass of its property. The Court said upon this point: There seems to be no stronger reason for denying the power of a State to tax the fruits of such transportation after they have become intermingled with the general property of the carrier, than there is for denying her power to tax goods which have been transported, after their original packages have been broken, and after they have been mixed with the mass of personal property in the country. We think it may be safely laid down that the gross receipts of railroad companies, after they have reached the treasury of the carriers, though they may have been derived in part from the transportation of freight between States, have become subject to legitimate taxation * * * It is not denied that net earnings of such corporations are taxable by State authority without any inquiry after their sources. * * * And net earnings are a part of grossearnings." The analogy here used, we think, has its foundation in the true philosophy of constitutional law, and the reasoning of the Court will endure the most searching analysis.
The second ground upon which the decision was placed, is upon the right of the States — which the Court declared to be unquestioned — to tax the franchises of companies created by *Page 682 them, saying: "It is not deniable that gross receipts may be a measure of proximate value, or if not, at least of the extent of enjoyment. If the tax be in fact laid upon the companies, the adoption of such a measure imposes no greater burden upon any freight, or business from which the receipts came, than would an equal tax laid upon a direct valuation of the franchise. In both cases, the necessity of higher charges to meet the exaction is the same."
To this decision, and to the wise and sound construction, and logical reasoning by which it is supported, JUSTICES MILLER, FIELD and HUNT, in vain opposed their adverse views, which, though often repeated elsewhere, have never, in our judgment, been more forcibly expressed than in the dissenting opinion of JUSTICE MILLER in that case.
Since the decision in State v. P.W. B.R.R.,
The Gross Tax Receipts Tax case was approved in Osborne v.Mobile, supra, sustaining a license tax upon an express business carried on in Mobile, and including transportation beyond the limits of the State, CHIEF JUSTICE CHASE, saying: "It comes directly within the rule laid down in the case relating to the tax on the gross receipts of railroads, and is no more a tax upon interstate commerce than a general tax on drayage would be, because the licensed drayman might sometimes be employed in hauling goods to vessels to be transported beyond the limits of the State."
It was again approved in the case of the Del. R.R. Tax, 18 Wall. 232, where JUSTICE FIELD, dealing with a similar statute imposing a tax upon the net earnings of the railroad, said; "The tax imposed by the Act in question, affects commerce among the states in just the same way, and in no other, that taxation of any kind necessarily increases the expense attendant upon the use or possession of the thing taxed, and a tax upon a corporation may be proportioned to the income received, as well as to the value of the franchise granted or the property possessed. The exercise of the authority which every State possesses to tax its corporations and all their property, real and personal, audtheir franchises, and to graduate the tax upon the corporations according to their business and income, or the value of their property, when this is not done by discriminating against rights held in other States, and the tax is not on imports, exports, ortonnage, or transportation to other States, cannot be regarded as conflicting with any constitutional power of Congress." TheGross Receipts case has also been approved in numerous subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States to which reference here is unnecessary.
We shall not attempt to review all the cases cited by the appellant in support of its contention, but will refer briefly to a class of these cases which we think can be broadly discriminated, *Page 684 before we take up the cases which it is contended have overruled the Gross Receipts case.
In Tel. Co. v. Texas,
In Tel. Co. v. Alabama,
But the appellant contends that the Gross Receipts case in 15 Wall. has been overruled in Fargo v. Michigan,
In Phil. and Southern Steamship Co. v. Pennsylvania,
It is only by confining inquiry to the precise facts in each case before the Supreme Court, that we can with fairness to that Court, and with due regard for the reputation of this Court, reach any proper conclusion as to just what was intended to be decided in each case, and in the review of the cases which we have here attempted, we have endeavored to state fairly and fully what we understand to be the controlling facts, and to make no forced or biased deductions therefrom. It is not to be denied that in these and other decisions of the Supreme Court, since theGross Receipts case, 15 Wall., there is manifested a tendency to enlarge the authority of the Federal Government, and to curtail the taxing power of the State, when applied to questions, however remotely, affecting the subjects of interstate commerce; but whatever may be thought of the decision in Phila. SteamshipCo. v. Pa., supra, or of the other cases relied on by the appellant as dethroning the authority of the Gross Receiptscase, we regard the case of Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway,
In that case, the statute of Maine required every corporationoperating a railroad in the State, to pay "an annual excise tax for the privilege of exercising its franchise in the State," and provided that the annual gross transportation receipts should be divided by the number of miles operated, to ascertain the average gross receipts per mile; and that when a railroad laid partly within and partly without the State as that railroad did, the gross receipts over the whole line, within and without theState, should be divided by the total number of miles operated, to obtain the average gross receipts per mile; and the gross receipts within the State, should be determined by multiplying the general average per mile by the number of miles operated within the State. The Attorney-General of Maine in his reported argument, admirable alike for its clearness and condensation, declined to make any general review of the cases bearing upon the general question, and referred only to those closely in point, sustaining *Page 689
his contention, viz.: The Gross Receipts case, 15 Wall. and theDel. R.R. Tax, 18 Wall., supra, and also the two cases there and here relied on as overthrowing the case in 15 Wall.; though it is singular that they do not seem to be relied on as in any way assailing the case in 18 Wall., and he apparently succeeded in demonstrating to the satisfaction of a majority of the Court, that 15th Wall. had not been overruled by the 121st or 122nd U.S., and that its authority was still acknowledged by the Court. That opinion was delivered in 1891 by JUSTICE FIELD, and fully sustained the contention of the State. The Court said, "The tax, for the collection of which this action is brought, is an excise tax upon the defendant corporation for the privilege of exercising its franchises within the State of Maine. It is so declared in the statute which imposes it, and that a tax of this character is within the power of a State to levy, there can be no question. The designation is used more frequently in this country in the sense of an impost for a license to exercise particular franchises than in any other sense. The privileges of exercising the franchise of a corporation within a State is generally one of value, and often of great value, and the subject of earnest contention. It is natural, therefore, that the corporationshould be made to bear some proportion of the burdens ofgovernment. As the granting of the privilege rests entirely inthe discretion of the State, whether the corporation be ofdomestic or foreign origin, it may be conferred upon suchconditions, whether pecuniary or otherwise, as the State in itsjudgment may deem most conducive to its interests or policy. It may require the payment into its treasury each year of a specific sum, or may apportion the amount exacted according to the value of the business permitted, as disclosed by its gains or receiptsof the present or past years. The character of the tax or its validity is not determined by the mode adopted in fixing its amount for any specific period or the times of its payment. The whole field of inquiry into the extent of revenue from sources at the command of the corporation is open to the consideration of the State in determining what may be justly *Page 690
exacted for the privilege. The rule of apportioning the chargeto the receipts of the business would seem to be eminently reasonable and likely to produce the most satisfactory results both to the State and the corporation taxed." * * * * "A resort to the receipts was simply to ascertain the value of the business done by the corporation, and thus obtain a guide to a reasonable conclusion as to the amount of the tax which should be levied; and we are unable to perceive in that resort any interference with transportation, domestic or foreign, over the road of the railroad company, or any regulation of commerce which consists in such transportation." * * * "The case of Phil. and South.Steamship Co. v. Pa.,
If this is not a confirmation of the authority of 15th and 18th Wall, we are at a loss to understand the force of plain language, and we regard the Maine case as a clear indication on the part of the Court that the extreme limit of expansion of Federal authority in that direction, had been reached in the Phil.Steamship case and as a further indication that they meant to say in the Gross Receipts case, what they said in the Mainecase, regardless of any apparent intimations to the contrary in the intervening period. They could not logically sustain the Maine statute while upholding the Steamship case, without recognizing the distinction between that case and those in 15th and 18th Wall. which we have already drawn in the discussion of those cases. But if we should believe with JUSTICE BRADLEY, in his dissenting opinion in the Maine case, that it overrules theSteamship case, then, there is an end of all argument, and we rest securely upon the Gross Receipts case. The Maine case is the latest upon the point, and its principles have been approved by the Supreme Court in numerous subsequent decisions, notably inErie R.R. v. Pa.,
If in the Maine case, the Court, in response to the argument *Page 691 of the State based confessedly upon the continued authority of the Gross Receipts case and the Del. R.R. Tax case, as announcing the same doctrine, had chosen plainly to overrule those cases, or without saying in plain words how much authority they should continue to have, had struck down the Maine statute; in one case it would have been, and in the other it possiblymight have been, our duty to follow its action in that case, though some of our own decisions might still be formally in the way. But understanding the Maine case as we do, and being profoundly impressed with the absolute soundness of the principles announced in the Gross Receipts case, and approved in the Maine case, we are bound, in duty to the State, to uphold the tax in question, leaving it to the Supreme Court to say, if invoked, whether we have misinterpreted their meaning.
The legality and propriety of the mileage method of measuring the value of a franchise tax, otherwise valid, has been so repeatedly declared, and so emphatically stated in the Mainecase, that we shall not refer to any other authority.
Under secs. 6 and 7 of ch. 559 of 1890, which regulate the proceedings for recovery of all these taxes, they are due and payable July 1st in each year, and if not paid within thirty days thereafter the corporation is to forfeit and pay to the State an additional amount of five per cent, as penalty or damages, to be added to such taxes so due and unpaid; and if judgment is rendered for the State in any suit to recover such taxes, judgment is to be entered without stay for the amount of taxes so due, and the five per cent additional, as damages, with interest and costs. This it was clearly within the power of the Legislature to provide. We think the interest was correctly charged from the first of August only, as suit was only authorized after that time, and that no interest is allowable on the five per cent penalty or damages. It follows from what we have said, that the plaintiff's prayer was properly granted, and the defendant's six prayers were properly rejected — and the judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed with costs above and below.
(Decided February 20th, 1901.) *Page 692
Leloup v. Port of Mobile , 8 S. Ct. 1380 ( 1888 )
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Alabama State Board of ... , 10 S. Ct. 161 ( 1889 )
Telegraph Co. v. Texas , 26 L. Ed. 1067 ( 1882 )
Fargo v. Michigan , 7 S. Ct. 857 ( 1887 )
WU Tel. Co. v. Massachusetts , 8 S. Ct. 961 ( 1888 )
Tioga R. Co. v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. New York, L. ... , 158 U.S. 440 ( 1895 )
Philadelphia & Southern Steamship Co. v. Pennsylvania , 7 S. Ct. 1118 ( 1887 )
Osborne v. Mobile , 21 L. Ed. 470 ( 1873 )
M'culloch v. State of Maryland , 4 L. Ed. 579 ( 1819 )