1. Lands in Arkansas granted by the state to the Memphis and St.
Louis Railroad Company and held for the purpose of raising money to
build its road are not, by its charter, exempt from taxation.
Railroad Company v. Loftin, 98 U. S.
559, cited upon this point and approved.
Quaere
are the lands exempt which were acquired by the company in payment
for its increased stock?
2. The swamp and overflowed lands donated by the United States
to Arkansas are, unless sooner reclaimed, exempt from taxation for
ten years after they have been sold by the state.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit in equity brought by the Memphis & St. Louis
Railroad Company in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Arkansas,
to restrain the collection of taxes imposed under the authority of
the state upon certain lands in that county owned by the company.
The Supreme Court of the state affirmed the decree of the circuit
court dismissing the bill on demurrer. The complainant thereupon
sued out this writ of error.
Two questions are presented for our consideration:
1. Whether the state, by imposing the tax, has impaired the
obligation of a contract in the charter exempting the capital stock
of the company from taxation, and,
Page 105 U. S. 259
2. Whether it has impaired the obligation of a contract made
with the purchasers of its swamp and overflowed lands for exemption
from taxation.
1. As to the charter.
The section of the charter relied on is as follows:
"SEC. 21. The capital stock of said company, with all the
immunities and franchises herein specified, and all machinery,
cars, engines, or carriages, belonging to said company, together
with all their works and property and all profits which shall arise
from the same, shall be vested in the respective stockholders
forever in proportion to their respective shares, and the capital
stock of said company and the dividends shall be exempted from
taxation until a dividend of six percent is realized upon the
capital stock, and the road, with all its fixtures, and
appurtenances, including workshops, warehouses, and vehicles of
transportation, shall be exempted from taxation for the period of
twenty-five years from the completion of the road, and no tax shall
ever be levied on said road or its fixtures which will reduce its
dividends below ten percent per annum. Said stockholders shall not
be bound or liable for any greater amount than the respective
shares of stock which they or either of them own."
The averment in the complaint to bring the lands in question
under this exemption is in the following words:
"And that the said lands were acquired by the plaintiff and are
now held by it for the purpose of raising money to build said road,
and that it is a part of the property of said company, fully
represented by its capital stock and not otherwise, and that said
road has not as yet been completed, and that no dividend has as yet
been realized on said capital stock, or any part thereof."
In
Railway Company v. Loftin, 98 U. S.
559, in passing upon a provision of the charter of the
Mississippi Valley Railroad Company substantially like the section
here relied on, this Court held that the exemption did not extend
to lands granted by the state to the company to aid in the
construction of its railroad. Such lands, it was then said, were
used in lieu of capital, and to the extent they could be made
available relieved the company from the necessity of raising money
through stock subscriptions. Like the court below, we are
Page 105 U. S. 260
unable to distinguish the case made by this complaint from that.
The only material averment of fact in this connection is that the
lands in question are held by the company for the purpose of
raising money to build its road. This is entirely consistent with
their use in lieu of capital. It is true the complaint alleges that
the lands are fully represented by the capital stock, but that is
only as a legal conclusion from what was stated before. The facts
showing why the lands represented the capital must be set forth.
Those which have been stated are not enough, and consequently the
legal conclusion which the pleader has drawn from them in the
complaint cannot be sustained.
In the elaborate printed argument presented for the plaintiff in
error, reference is made to facts not stated in the complaint.
These we cannot consider. As the case was submitted on demurrer,
only the averments in the complaint are before us. While we may
take judicial notice of the several statutes of the state which are
relied on, the complaint alone must be looked to for information as
to the manner in which the lands were acquired and the purposes for
which they are held. While it may be true, as is claimed, that,
under sec. 3 of the charter of the company, lands might have been
accepted in payment for increased stock, and that the lands in
question were acquired in that way, it is not so stated in the
complaint. Whether, if the facts as claimed in argument had been
stated, the exemption contended for would follow is not for us now
to decide. Upon this branch of the case as it comes to us, the
judgment below was, in our opinion, right and must consequently be
affirmed.
2. As to the swamp lands.
These were part of the swamp and overflowed lands donated by the
United states to the state, and the state statute providing for
their reclamation and sale contained the following:
"SEC. 14.
Be it further enacted that to encourage by
all just means the progress and completion of the reclamation by
offering inducements to purchasers and contractors to take up said
lands, that the swamp and overflowed lands shall be exempt from
taxation for the term of ten years, or until said lands are
reclaimed. "
Page 105 U. S. 261
That under this section purchasers of the lands acquired a right
by contract to exemption from taxation for the stipulated time is
not denied, and this Court so decided in
McGee v.
Mathis, 4 Wall. 143. The only dispute is as to the
time the exemption is to continue. The railroad company insists
that it is for ten years absolutely, and thereafter until the lands
are reclaimed; the state that it is for ten years, if the lands are
not sooner reclaimed, but if they are, that it ceases on the
reclamation. The supreme court of the state, in
State v. County
Court of Crittenden County, 19 Ark. 360, as early as January,
1858, gave the statute the construction now contended for by the
state, and this decision has never been overruled. It was expressly
recognized by the supreme court of the state in
McGee v.
Mathis, 21 Ark. 40, and by this Court in the same case, which
came here on writ of error, and is reported in the 4th of Wallace,
supra. Counsel frankly concede that the language of the
statute is ambiguous, and that the grammatical construction is in
accordance with what has been ruled. All such exemptions are to be
construed strictly. Every doubt is to be resolved in favor of the
power to tax. Under such circumstances, if the question were an
open one, we should have little difficulty in reaching the same
conclusion as the courts of the state have done. Manifestly,
therefore, we are not now called upon to overrule what has been
settled for nearly a quarter of a century.
It is expressly stated in the complaint that the lands held by
the company were sold by the state more than ten years before this
suit was begun. Consequently they are not exempt as swamp
lands.
Judgment affirmed.