The Legislature of New Jersey, by a statute, enacted that a
"poor farm," belonging to the City of New Brunswick and situated in
the Township of North Brunswick, should be at all times thereafter
liable and subject to taxation by that township so long as it
should be embraced within its limits. Subsequently, it was enacted
by a statute that the property of the cities of the state, and all
land used exclusively for charitable purposes, should be exempt
from taxation, and that all inconsistent acts were repealed. The
"poor farm" was used exclusively for charitable purposes.
Held:
(1) The provision of the first statute was repealed.
(2) the legislature could constitutionally repeal the power of
taxation given by the first statute.
Page 130 U. S. 190
(3) The first statute did not create a contract between the
state and the township, the obligation of which could not be
constitutionally impaired by its repeal.
The power of taxation on the part of a municipal corporation is
not private property, or a vested right of property in its hands,
but the conferring of such power is an exercise by the legislature
of a public and governmental power which cannot be imparted in
perpetuity, and is always subject to revocation, modification, and
control, and it not the subject of contract.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of New
Jersey. The case arose on a writ of certiorari issued by that court
at the instance of the Mayor and Common Council of the City of New
Brunswick to review an assessment for taxation made by the Township
of North Brunswick, and a levy made by the collector of that
ownership, against a farm known as the "Poor Farm," and personal
property thereon, situated in the Township of North Brunswick and
owned by the Mayor and Common Council of the City of New Brunswick.
The case arose on the following facts, which were agreed upon by
the counsel for the respective parties:
By a Special Act of the Legislature of New Jersey approved
February 28, 1860, Laws 1860, c. 67, p. 162, parts of the Townships
of North Brunswick and Monroe, in the County of Middlesex, were set
off and established as a separate township, to be called "East
Brunswick," and part of the Township of North Brunswick was set off
and established as a separate township, to be called the "Township
of New Brunswick," and the township committees of the said
Townships of North Brunswick East Brunswick, and New Brunswick were
authorized
Page 130 U. S. 191
and required to divide the real and personal property of the
Township of North Brunswick between said townships.
The poor farm of the original Township of North Brunswick was
situate within the limits of what remained of the Township of North
Brunswick after the setting off of the Townships of East Brunswick
and New Brunswick as aforesaid.
By a Special Act of the legislature approved March 15, 1861,
Laws 1861, c. 170, p. 507, the said Township of New Brunswick and
the City of New Brunswick were declared to be one corporate body,
under the name of "The Corporation of the City of New Brunswick,"
and the said corporation was made subject to all the liabilities of
the inhabitants of the Township of New Brunswick. The poor farm and
the personal property thereon were never divided between the
Townships of North Brunswick and East Brunswick and the corporation
of the City of New Brunswick, but the townships agreed to sell and
convey their interests in the same to said corporation.
By a Special Act of the legislature approved February 18, 1862,
Laws 1862, c. 37, p. 52, the Township Committees of North Brunswick
and East Brunswick were authorized to convey all the interests of
the said townships in said farm and the personal property thereon
to the said corporation, and it was thereby further enacted that
the said poor farm and the personal property thereon should be at
all times thereafter liable and subject to taxation by the Township
of North Brunswick, so long as it should be embraced in the limits
of said township.
By virtue of the authority thereby given, the township
committees of said townships sold and conveyed said farm and the
personal property thereon to said corporation by deed of conveyance
bearing date March 27, 1862.
The said corporation of the City of New Brunswick entered into
possession of said farm and the personal property thereon under the
contract expressed in said deed of conveyance, and is still in
possession of the same, and the said farm is still within the
limits of the Township of North Brunswick.
The said farm and property have been duly assessed by the
Page 130 U. S. 192
Township of North Brunswick each year since said sale and
conveyance, and the taxes so assessed have been paid by the
corporation of the City of New Brunswick to the Township of North
Brunswick up to and including the year 1877, when further payments
were refused on the ground that said poor farm was used exclusively
for charitable purposes, and therefore was not liable to
taxation.
This certiorari brings up the assessment for the year 1878 for
the purpose of determining whether said farm and personal property
thereon are liable and subject to taxation by said Township of
North Brunswick.
The deed of March 27, 1862, which contains a copy of the act
approved February 18, 1862, is set forth in the margin.
*
Page 130 U. S. 193
It was agreed between the attorney for the plaintiff in the
certiorari and the attorney for the defendant that the sole
Page 130 U. S. 194
question to be discussed in the Supreme Court of New Jersey was
whether the poor farm, situated in the Township of North
Page 130 U. S. 195
Brunswick, and owned by the City of New Brunswick, was exempt
from taxation, and that the poor farm referred to, the buildings
thereon, and the furniture and fixtures therein, were used
exclusively for charitable purposes by the City of New Brunswick,
the owner thereof.
The questions considered by the Supreme Court of New Jersey were
(1) whether the 2d section of the Act approved February 18, 1862,
was repealed by the general tax law of the state approved April 11,
1866, Revised Laws 1150, the fifth section of which enacted that
the property of the cities of the state, and all buildings used
exclusively for charitable purposes, with the land whereon the same
are erected and which may be necessary for the fair enjoyment
thereof, and the furniture and personal property used therein,
shall be exempt from taxation, and the 32d section of which, after
repealing certain acts named, repealed all other acts or parts of
acts, whether special or local or otherwise, inconsistent with the
provisions of the act of 1866 except one act, approved in 1864, and
such special or local acts as had been approved since 1862; (2)
whether, if the legislature had, by the Act of April 11, 1866,
declared its purpose to repeal the second section of the Act of
February 18, 1862, such purpose could be constitutionally
enforced.
The supreme court held, 44 N.J.Law 165, (1) that the declaration
in the general law of 1866 that all acts and parts of acts, whether
special or local, or otherwise, inconsistent with its provisions
were repealed abrogated the provisions in the prior special act of
1862 for the taxation of the poor farm and the personal property
thereon by the Township of North Brunswick because such provision
in the act of 1862 was inconsistent with the provision in the act
of 1866 exempting from taxation all property of the cities of the
state and all property used exclusively for charitable purposes;
(2) that the legislature could constitutionally repeal the power of
taxing
Page 130 U. S. 196
the poor farm and the personal property thereon given by the act
of 1862 to the Township of North Brunswick. The court decided that
the provisions of the two statutes could not stand together, and
that it was impossible to give full effect to the language of the
repealing provision of the act of 1866 and keep in operation the
second section of the act of 1862. It also decided that the
provision of the second section of the act of 1862 did not become,
by reason of the subsequent conveyance of March 27, 1862, to the
corporation of the City of New Brunswick, a contract between that
corporation and the Township of North Brunswick the obligation of
which the legislature was forbidden to impair; that one legislature
could not confer upon a township a power of taxation which a
subsequent legislature could not revoke against the objection of
the township; that the power of a legislature over a corporation
created for the purposes of local government was supreme; that no
contract with such a corporation arose from the delegation to it of
taxing authority, citing
Tinsman v. Belvedere Del.
Railroad, 26 N.J.Law 148;
Mayor v. Jersey City &
Bergen Railroad, 20 N.J.Eq. 360, and
Rader v.
Southeasterly Road Dist., 36 N.J.Law 273, and that the power
of taxation was not in any sense the private property of the
municipality, but was peculiarly a public and governmental power,
and must, as such, be at all times susceptible of repeal or
modification, according to legislative discretion, so far as the
mere right of the township to exercise it was concerned.
The judgment of the supreme court was that the assessment of
taxes should be set aside. The collector of the township removed
the case by a writ of error to the Court of Errors and Appeals of
the state, which affirmed the judgment in an opinion, 46 N.J.Law
204, adopting the reasons given by the supreme court. The case
having been remitted to the supreme court, the collector has
brought it here by a writ of error to that court.
On the question as to the effect of the act of 1866 in repealing
the second section of the act of 1862, we concur with the highest
court of New Jersey that the provisions of the two
Page 130 U. S. 197
statutes cannot stand together and that it is impossible to give
full effect to the language of the repealing provision of the act
of 1866 and keep in operation the second section of the act of
1862. We must therefore hold, as the state court held, that the
second section of the act of 1862 was repealed by the act of 1866.
This leaves open only the consideration of the question as to
whether the second section of the act of 1862 created a contract
the obligation of which could not be constitutionally impaired by
the repeal of such second section.
It is contended for the collector that the tax provided for by
the 2d section of the act of 1862 is in the nature of a ground
rent, and of a right reserved by the Township of North Brunswick
out of the land conveyed by the deed of March, 1862; that the fee
of the poor farm belonged to the township in its private and
proprietary character; that the farm had been acquired by the
taxation of the inhabitants of the township; that the legislature
could not deprive them of it without their consent; that the
township was authorized by the legislature to convey the farm to
the corporation of the City of New Brunswick for the consideration,
in part, of the right of the Township of North Brunswick to tax it
so long as it should be embraced in the limits of that township;
that, in taking the title, the City of New Brunswick agreed to pay
to that township an annual sum to be determined in amount by the
annual tax rate of that township so long as the farm should remain
under and receive the benefit of the municipal government of that
township; that the right thus reserved of levying and collecting
such tax became thereby vested in that township, and the amount of
tax, when determined, became its private property, and that the
case involves the question of the authority of the legislature over
the private property and vested rights of the township, and not the
question of its authority over the public and governmental powers
of the township.
We concur in the views of the Court of Errors and Appeals of New
Jersey on this question. It is not the same question as that
involved in the principle recognized by this Court that a provision
in an act of a legislature exempting certain specified
Page 130 U. S. 198
property from taxation by the authorities of a state or a
municipality for all time or for a limited time constitutes a
contract in respect of such property the obligation of which cannot
be impaired by a subsequent legislature, and is therefore a
contract within the protection of the Constitution of the United
States.
It is to be observed in the present case that the Act of
February 18, 1862, does not assert or recognize the fact that the
privilege of taxing the poor farm in the future was a part of the
consideration for the conveyance of that farm by the Township of
North Brunswick. The act recites that the Townships of North
Brunswick and East Brunswick had agreed to convey and sell to the
corporation of the City of New Brunswick their interest in the poor
farm, and the personal property thereon, for the sum of $2,611.13,
"the value of the interest of those townships therein." It then
empowers the two townships to convey their interest in the poor
farm, and the personal property thereon, to the corporation of the
City of New Brunswick "for the sum aforesaid." It then enacts, in
the 2d section, which is a separate and independent section,
"that the said poor farm and the personal property thereon shall
be at all times hereafter liable and subject to taxation by the
said Township of North Brunswick so long as it is embraced in the
limits of the said Township of North Brunswick."
So also, the deed of March 27, 1862, recites as its
consideration the sum of $2,611.13, paid by the corporation of the
City of New Brunswick to the grantors. No other consideration is
expressed. The Act of February 18, 1862, is incorporated in the
deed as the authority by virtue of which the grantors convey the
property.
It is not intended to suggest that if the right of taxation had
been named in the act or in the deed as a part of the consideration
for the conveyance, it would have made a different case, but
reference is made to the actual provisions of the act and the deed
solely for the purpose of showing that they evince no idea on the
part of the legislature, or of the parties to the conveyance, that
the perpetual right of taxation now asserted formed any part of the
consideration of the transaction.
Page 130 U. S. 199
The true principle involved in the case is whether the power of
taxation on the part of a municipal corporation is private property
or a vested right of property in its hands which, when once
conferred upon it by an act of the legislature, cannot be
subsequently modified or repealed. Even without the special
provision of the second section of the Act of February 18, 1862, it
is to be presumed that the poor farm and the personal property
thereon would, while situated in the Township of North Brunswick,
be subject to taxation by that township unless exempted from such
taxation on the ground of a charitable use. The special question in
this case arises, therefore, solely out of the use of the words, in
the 2d section, "at all times hereafter." The provision of the 2d
section, and the contention here made on the part of the collector,
necessarily imply the authority of the legislature to confer the
power of taxation upon the township, and the nonexistence of such
power unless conferred by the legislature. The question arising is
therefore whether the legislature which passed the Act of February
18, 1862, could lawfully so grant the power of taxation to the
township in perpetuity that a subsequent legislature could not
repeal or modify such grant of power.
We are clearly of opinion that such a grant of the power of
taxation by the legislature of a state does not form such a
contract between the state and the township as is within the
protection of the provision of the Constitution of the United
States which forbids the passage by a State of a law impairing the
obligation of contracts. The conferring of such right of taxation
is an exercise by the legislature of a public and governmental
power. It is the imparting to the township of a portion of the
power belonging to the state, which it can lawfully impart to a
subordinate municipal corporation. But, from the very character of
the power, it cannot be imparted in perpetuity, and is always
subject to revocation, modification, and control by the legislative
authority of the state. The authorities to this effect are uniform.
1 Dillon on Mun.Corp., 3d ed., §§ 61, 63, and cases there
cited; Cooley on Const.Lim., 3d ed., *192, *193, *237, and cases
there cited;
East Hartford v. Bridge Co.,
10 How. 511, 51 U. S. 534;
State Bank
v.
Page 130 U. S. 200
Knoop, 16 How. 369, 380;
United
States v. Railroad Co., 17 Wall. 322,
84 U. S. 329;
Philadelphia v. Fox, 64 Penn.St. 169;
Mayor v. Jersey
City & Bergen Railroad, 20 N.J.Eq. 360;
Police Jury v.
Shreveport, 5 La.Ann. 661, 665;
State v. St. Louis County
Court, 34 Mo. 546, 552;
People v. Morris, 13 Wend.
325, 331;
Warner v. Beers, 23 Wend. 103, 126;
City of
Richmond v. Richmond & Danville Railroad, 21 Grattan 604,
613;
County of Richland v. County of Lawrence, 12 Ill. 8;
Trustees of Schools v. Tatman, 13 Ill. 27, 30;
Gutzweller v. People, 14 Ill. 142;
Sangamon County v.
City of Springfield, 63 Ill. 66, 71.
In the present case, the second section of the Act of February
18, 1862, has no more force than if the words "at all times
hereafter" had been omitted, and the section is to be construed as
if it only temporarily conferred the right of taxation on the
township, subject to be recalled at the pleasure of the
legislature. There is no element of private property in the right
of taxation conferred upon a municipal corporation. Property
acquired by paying for it with money raised by taxation is
property. The legislation in question does not affect or interfere
with any such property. The poor farm and the personal property
thereon are not the property of the Township of North Brunswick,
but are the property of the corporation of the City of New
Brunswick. Nor is there anything violative of any provision of the
Constitution of the United States in the enactment of the
Legislature of New Jersey that the property in question shall be
exempt from taxation because it is used exclusively for charitable
purposes. The long recognized and universally prevalent policy of
making such exemption is a warrant for saying that the second
section of the Act of February 18, 1862, is fairly to be regarded
as containing an implied reservation that such exemption might be
thereafter made, as being the exercise of a public and governmental
power, resting wholly in the discretion of the legislature, and not
the subject of contract.
Judgment affirmed.
*
"Deed from James C. Edmonds, William Dunham, Abm. L. Van Liew,
Ellsworth Farmer, and James H. Webb, Township Committee of the
Township of North Brunswick, and John Griggs, John Culver, Charles
P. Blew, and Joseph H. Bloodgood, Township Committee of the
Township of East Brunswick, to the corporation of the City of New
Brunswick."
"This indenture, made this 27th day of March, in the year of our
Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-two, between James C.
Edmonds, William Dunham, Abraham L. Van Liew, Ellsworth Farmer, and
James H. Webb, Township Committee of the Township of North
Brunswick, John Griggs, John Culver, Charles P. Blew, and Joseph H.
Bloodgood, a majority of the Township Committee of the Township of
East Brunswick, in the County of Middlesex and State of New Jersey,
of the first part, and the corporation of the City of New
Brunswick, in the State of New Jersey, of the second part,
witnesseth: that the said party of the first part, for and in
consideration of the sum of two thousand six hundred and eleven
dollars and thirteen cents, lawful money of the United States of
America, to them, the said party of the first part, in hand well
and truly paid by the said party of the second part at and before
the sealing and delivery of these presents, the receipt whereof is
hereby acknowledged, and the said parties of the first part, being
fully satisfied, contended, and paid, have granted, bargained, and
sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell, convey, and
confirm, to the said party of the second part and to their
successors and assigns forever, all that certain farm and tract of
land and premises known as the 'Poor Farm,' situate, lying, and
being in the Township of North Brunswick, in the County of
Middlesex, and State of New Jersey, 'butted and bounded as follows:
beginning at the southeasterly corner of a lot of land of Thomas
Van Deursen on George's road; thence running along said Van
Deursen's line north, seventy-one degrees and twenty-five minutes
west, twenty-three chains, to another corner of said Van Deursen's
land; thence along his land north, eighteen degrees and twenty-five
minutes east, five chains and ten links, to Mill Lane; thence along
Mill Lane north, seventy-one degrees and thirty minutes west, ten
chains and fifteen links; thence still along Mill Lane north,
sixty-two degrees thirty minutes west, two chains and sixty links,
to a corner of land formerly of David Freeman; thence along the
line of said land south, forty-four degrees twenty-five minutes
west, thirty chains and twenty-five links; thence south, sixty-two
degrees and five minutes east, thirty-one chains and fifty links,
to a corner of Belcher's land; thence north, forty-four degrees and
thirty minutes east, ninety-six links, to another corner of
Belcher's land; thence south, along the line of Belcher's land,
forty-three degrees and thirty minutes east, thirty chains to
George's Road; thence along said road north, twenty-six degrees
fifteen minutes east, three chains and eighty-five links; thence
still along said road north, three degrees thirty minutes east,
nine chains; thence still along said road north, five degrees east,
seven chains and sixty-five links; thence still along said road
north, two degrees thirty minutes west, six chains; thence still
along said road north, fifteen degrees thirty minutes west, seven
chains thirty-five links; thence still along said road north,
sixteen degrees east, two chains and eight links; thence still
along said road north, thirty degrees, forty-five minutes east, six
chains and eight links, to the place of beginning, containing one
hundred and forty-one acres."
"The above-described farm and premises are conveyed by the
parties of the first part aforesaid by virtue of the power and
authority in them vested by the act of the Legislature of the State
of New Jersey entitled"
"An act to authorize the township committees of the Township of
North Brunswick and East Brunswick, in the County of Middlesex, to
convey to the corporation of the City of New Brunswick the poor
farm in the Township of North Brunswick, together with all the
personal property on said farm,"
"passed 18th February, A.D. 1862, a copy of which is hereto
annexed, and taken as a part of this deed:"
" An act to authorize the township committees of the Township of
North Brunswick and East Brunswick, in the County of Middlesex, to
convey to the corporation of the City of New Brunswick the poor
farm in the Township of North Brunswick, together with all the
personal property on said farm."
" Whereas, by an act of the legislature passed February
twenty-eighth, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty,
the then Township of North Brunswick was divided into the Township
of North Brunswick, East Brunswick, and New Brunswick, and the town
committees of said townships were authorized and required to divide
the real and personal property of the Township of North Brunswick
between the new Townships of North Brunswick, East Brunswick, and
New Brunswick, and whereas, the poor farm, which is situate in the
limits of the present township of North Brunswick, and which
belonged to the former Township of North Brunswick, and the
personal property thereon, has never been divided, but is owned and
held in common by the said Townships of North Brunswick, East
Brunswick, and the corporation of the City of New Brunswick, which
said corporation has, by an act of the legislature, passed March
fifteenth, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one,
succeeded to, and become invested with, and entitled to, all the
rights and property of the said Township of New Brunswick, and
whereas, such ownership and holding in common is found inconvenient
and injurious, and whereas, the said Townships of North Brunswick
and East Brunswick have agreed with the corporation of the City of
New Brunswick to convey and sell to the said corporation of the
City of New Brunswick all their, and each of their, right, title,
interest, and estate in the said poor farm, and personal property
thereon, for the sum of two thousand six hundred and eleven dollars
and thirteen cents, the value of the interest of those townships
therein -- therefore"
" 1.
Be it enacted by the Senate and General Assembly of the
State of New Jersey that the Township Committees of the
Townships of North Brunswick and East Brunswick, or a majority of
each of the said town committees, be, and they are hereby,
authorized and empowered to convey all the right, title, interest,
and estate of the said townships in the said poor farm, and the
personal property thereon, to the said corporation of the City of
New Brunswick, for the sum aforesaid."
" 2.
And be it enacted that the said poor farm and the
personal property thereon shall be at all times hereafter liable
and subject to taxation by the said Township of North Brunswick so
long as it is embraced in the limits of the said Township of North
Brunswick."
" 3.
And be it enacted that any person sent from the
corporation of the City of New Brunswick or Township of East
Brunswick to the said poor farm or any person born upon the said
poor farm shall not, by reason of any residence or being born on
said farm, acquire a residence or settlement in the said Township
of North Brunswick, the place of settlement of any person sent as
aforesaid to the said poor farm, or born thereon, shall be
determined in all cases without reference to their residence or
being born on said poor farm."
" 4.
And be it enacted that this act shall take effect
immediately."
"Together with all and singular the buildings, improvements,
rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments, and appurtenances to
the same belonging or in anywise appertaining, and the reversion
and reversions, remainder and remainders, rents, issues, and
profits thereof, and every part and parcel thereof, and also all
the estate, right, title, interest, use, possession, property,
claim, and demand whatsoever, both in law and equity, of aforesaid
Townships of North Brunswick and East Brunswick, to the said
premises, and to every part and parcel thereof, to have and to hold
the same to the said party of the second part, their successors and
assigns, to the use of the party of the second part, their
successors and assigns."
"In witness whereof, the said parties of the first part have
hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above
written."