The general questions arising and argued in this case are fully
discussed and decided in the case of
Poindexter v. Greenhow,
ante, 114 U. S. 270.
The remedy by injunction to prevent the collection of taxes by
distraint upon the rolling stock, machinery, cars, and engines, and
other property of railroad corporations, after a tender of payment
in tax receivable coupons, is sanctioned by repeated decisions of
this Court, and has become common and unquestioned practice, in
similar cases, where exemptions have been claimed in virtue of the
Constitution of the United States, the ground of the jurisdiction
being that there is no adequate remedy at law.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity filed by the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad Company, a corporation created by the laws of Maryland,
and a citizen of that state, against the appellants, who were
defendants below, of whom Allen is Auditor of Public Accounts;
Revely, Treasurer of the State of Virginia, and Hamilton, Treasurer
of Augusta County, in that state, and all citizens of Virginia.
The complainant is the lessee in possession of certain railway
lines in Virginia -- the Winchester and Potomac, the Winchester and
Strasburg, and the Strasburg and Harrisonburg Railroads -- and also
operates a railroad belonging to the Valley Railroad Company in
that state.
It is alleged in the bill that,
"By the 20th and 21st sections of an act of the General Assembly
of Virginia, approved on
Page 114 U. S. 312
the 22d day of April, 1882, and entitled"
"An act for the assessment of taxes on persons, property,
income, and licenses, and imposing taxes thereon for the support of
the government and free schools, and to pay the interest on the
public debt,"
"provision was made for the assessment and taxation of the
railroads within the state; the board of public works, acting upon
the reports of the officers of the railroad companies, and upon the
best and most reliable information that could be procured, being
authorized and required to ascertain and assess the value of the
real and personal property of such companies for taxation at the
rate of forty cents on every hundred dollars of the estimated value
thereof and said act further provides that it shall be the duty of
every railroad company so assessed, to pay into the treasury of the
state, within sixty days after receipt of notice of such
assessment, the tax imposed by law, and a company failing to pay
the tax assessed upon its property, shall be immediately assessed
under the direction of the Auditor of Public Accounts, by any
person appointed by him for the purpose, rating their real estate
and rolling stock at $20,000 per mile, and a tax thereon levied of
forty cents on the $100 of such fixed value, and the amount so
assessed shall be collected by any treasurer to whom the auditor
may deliver the assessment, who is authorized to distrain and sell
any personal property of such company for the amount of such
taxes."
It is further alleged that on November 22, 1882, the board of
public works assessed said railroads for taxation at the rate of
$15,000 per mile, of which notice was given to the complainant, on
January 17, 1883, as the party liable by law for the payment of the
taxes assessed upon them; that on March 16, 1884, within sixty days
thereafter, the complainant obtained from the Auditor of Public
Accounts warrants to pay into the treasury the several amounts
charged as to each of said railroads, which the treasurer of the
commonwealth, by endorsement thereon, required to be paid into a
specified bank in the City of Richmond, that being the only mode
recognized by law for making such payments; that at that time, the
complainant, being the owner and holder of the requisite amount of
coupons for interest, cut from bonds of the State of Virginia,
Page 114 U. S. 313
issued under the Act of March 20, 1871, entitled "An act to
provide for the funding and payment of the public debt," and
receivable by virtue thereof in payment of taxes, tendered the
same, with coin sufficient exactly to make the required amounts, to
the said bank in Richmond, in discharge of said warrants; that said
coupons were refused, and the same having been set apart, when
complainant brings the same into court, subject to its order in
payment of said taxes; that similar tenders were made to the
Auditor of Public Accounts, and to the treasurer of state, on the
same day, each of whom refused to receive the same; that thereupon
the defendant Allen the Auditor of Public Accounts, proceeded to
assess the said railroads upon their real estate, not having any
rolling stock at $20,000 per mile, as being in default for
nonpayment of the taxes assessed by the board of public works, and
placed copies of said assessment in the hands of the defendant
Hamilton, as Treasurer of Augusta County, for collection, in
pursuance of which he levied upon certain cars and locomotives
belonging to the complainant, used in operating said railroads, for
part of said taxes, and threatens to make further levies upon other
cars and engines, to be sold for payment of said taxes so assessed
by the Auditor of Public Accounts.
The bill prays for an injunction on the several grounds of
irreparable damage; that the acts complained of prevent the proper
exercise by the complainant of its franchise, involving a public
duty, of operating the railroads of which it is lessee, and in
possession; to avoid multiplicity of suits; the want of adequate
remedies at law; to remove the cloud upon the title to the railroad
property, occasioned by the fact that assessed taxes are a lien
thereon, and because it is necessary to protect the complainant in
the immunity to which it is entitled, by virtue of the contract
with the State of Virginia, secured against state laws impairing
its obligation by the Constitution of the United States.
It is admitted by the parties in the record that the coupons
tendered are genuine, though not verified as required by the Act of
January 14, 1882. It is also admitted in like manner that if the
property of the complainant levied on should be
Page 114 U. S. 314
sold,
"great sacrifice and loss must result therefrom, and that the
withdrawal from complainant's use of the amount of rolling stock
and machinery levied on and proposed to be sold as aforesaid will
cause serious and prolonged embarrassment to complainant's
business; that much delay must accrue before such rolling stock and
machinery, if sold, can be replaced, and that it will be difficult,
if not impracticable, to ascertain and estimate, with even
proximate certainty, the losses and damages which would result to
complainant from such sale; so that, although the estate of said J.
Ed. Hamilton should be sufficient to meet any verdict for damages,
in case the sale should be adjudged to have been illegal, the
pecuniary value of the complainant's losses and damages could not
be properly and adequately ascertained and fixed by the verdict of
a jury."
There was a final decree in favor of the complainant for a
perpetual injunction, as prayed for, and the case is brought here
by appeal by the defendants.
The general questions arising and argued in this and other cases
involving them are fully discussed in the opinion in the case of
Poindexter v. Greenhow. The conclusions reached in that
judgment apply to the present appeal, and require that the decree
of the circuit court should be affirmed.
It is deemed proper to add a few observations on the question of
the jurisdiction of the circuit courts, in such cases, in equity,
to grant relief by injunction.
The circumstances of this case bring it, so far as that remedy
is in question, fully within the principle firmly established in
this Court by the decision in
Osborne v. United States
Bank, 9 Wheat. 738, and within the terms of the
rule as declared in
Cummings v. National Bank,
101 U. S. 153,
quoted in the case of
Poindexter v. Greenhow.
The jurisdiction was exercised with energy in behalf of a
stockholder in a banking corporation in
Dodge v.
Woolsey, 18 How. 331, where the refusal of the
directors of the company to resist the collection of an
unconstitutional tax was made the ground of interposition in behalf
of a stockholder as a breach of trust.
In
Board of Liquidation v. McComb, 92 U. S.
531,
92 U. S. 541,
it is
Page 114 U. S. 315
said in the opinion of the Court, speaking on the question of
remedies:
"On this branch of the subject, the numerous and well considered
cases heretofore decided by this Court leave little to be said. The
objections to proceeding against state officers by mandamus or
injunction are first, that it is in effect proceeding against the
state itself, and secondly that it interferes with the official
discretion vested in the officers. It is conceded that neither of
these things can be done. A state, without its consent, cannot be
sued by an individual, and a court cannot substitute its own
discretion for that of executive officers in matters belonging to
the proper jurisdiction of the latter. But it has been well settled
that when a plain official duty, requiring no exercise of
discretion, is to be performed, and performance is refused, any
person who will sustain personal injury by such refusal may have a
mandamus to compel its performance, and when such duty is
threatened to be violated by some positive official act, any person
who will sustain personal injury thereby, for which adequate
compensation cannot be had at law, may have an injunction to
prevent it. In such cases, the writs of mandamus and injunction are
somewhat correlative to each other. In either case, if the officer
plead the authority of an unconstitutional law for the
nonperformance or violation of his duty, it will not prevent the
issuing of the writ. An unconstitutional law will be treated by the
courts as null and void."
And the opinion cites
Osborne v. Bank of the
United States, 9 Wheat. 859, and
Davis
v. Gray, 16 Wall. 220. The same principle was
applied in
State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S.
575. In the opinion of the Court it is said (p.
92 U. S.
615):
"In the examination which we have made of these cases, we do not
find any of the matters complained of to come within the rule which
we have laid down as justifying the interposition of a court of
equity. There is no fraud proved, if alleged. There is no violation
of the Constitution, either in the statute or in its
administration, by the board of equalization. No property is taxed
that is not legally liable to taxation, nor is the rule of
uniformity prescribed by the Constitution violated."
If the
Page 114 U. S. 316
facts here negatived had been affirmed, the converse of the rule
would have been equally applicable.
In
Transportation Co. v. Parkersburg, 107 U.
S. 691,
107 U. S. 695,
it was declared that a bill in equity would lie which seeks to have
a wharfage ordinance declared void, and for an injunction to
restrain further collections under it, and any further interference
with the right of the complainant to the free navigation of the
Ohio River, and perhaps, as incidental to the other relief, a
demand for the return of the wharfage already paid. The remedy to
restrain by injunction taxes levied upon railroads, in alleged
violation of a contract with the state, was administered in
Tomlinson v.
Branch, 15 Wall. 460, and in numerous other similar
cases where it has been denied, the jurisdiction to grant the
relief, if the facts had warranted it, has been assumed without
question.
And see Litchfield v. County of Webster,
101 U. S. 773.
In the case of national banks, the assessment and collection of
taxes illegally assessed under the authority of state laws in
violation of acts of Congress are habitually restrained by the
preventive remedy of injunction, and the jurisdiction of the courts
of the United States in those cases is regarded as in the highest
degree beneficial and necessary to prevent the agencies of the
government of the United States from being hindered and embarrassed
in the performance of their functions by state legislation. The
exercise of that jurisdiction and by means of that remedy in such
cases is to vindicate the supremacy of the Constitution, and to
maintain the integrity of the powers and rights which it confers
and secures, and that jurisdiction is vested in the courts of the
United States, because the cases embraced in it are necessarily
cases arising under the Constitution and laws of the United
States.
Where the rights in jeopardy are those of private citizens, and
are of those classes which the Constitution of the United States
either confers or has taken under its protection, and no adequate
remedy for their enforcement is provided by the forms and
proceedings purely legal, the same necessity invokes and justifies,
in cases to which its remedies can be applied, that
Page 114 U. S. 317
jurisdiction in equity vested by the Constitution of the United
States, and which cannot be affected by the legislation of the
states.
In the present case, the jurisdiction in equity to grant the
relief prayed for by injunction, and the propriety of its exercise,
are alike indisputable.
The decree of the circuit court is accordingly
Affirmed.