The members of the Court who concurred in the above named
judgments add a few observations to what has been already said.
It is well settled that no state can interfere with interstate
commerce through the imposition of a tax which is, in effect, a tax
for the privilege of transacting such commerce, and also that such
restriction upon the power of a state does not in the least degree
abridge its right to tax at their full value all the
instrumentalities used for such commerce.
The state statutes imposing taxes upon express companies which
form the subject of these suits grant no privilege of doing an
express business, and contemplate only the assessment and levy of
taxes upon the properties of the respective companies situated
within the respective states.
In the complex civilization of today, a large portion of the
wealth of a community consists of intangible property, and there is
nothing in the nature of things or in the limitations of the
federal Constitution which restrains a state from taxing such
intangible property at its real value.
Whenever separate articles of tangible property are joined
together not simply by a unity of ownership, but in a unity of use,
there is not unfrequently developed a property, intangible though
it may be, which in value exceeds the aggregate of the value of the
separate pieces of tangible property.
Page 166 U. S. 186
Whatever property is worth for the purposes of income and sale
it is worth for the purposes of taxation, and if the state
comprehends all property in its scheme of taxation, then the
goodwill of an organized and established industry must be
recognized as a thing of value, and taxable.
The capital stock of a corporation and the shares in a joint
stock company represent not only its tangible property, but also
its intangible property, including therein all corporate franchises
and all contracts, privileges, and goodwill of the concern, and
when, as in the case of the express company, the tangible property
of the corporation is scattered through different states by means
of which its business is transacted in each, the situs of this
intangible property is not simply where its home ofnce is, but is
distributed wherever its tangible property is located and its work
is done.
No fine-spun theories about situs should interfere to enable
these large corporations, whose business is of necessity carried on
through many states, from bearing in each state such burden of
taxation as a fair distribution of the actual value of their
property among those states requires.
[Text of Petition for Rehearing omitted.]
Page 166 U. S. 217
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
We have had before us at the present term several cases
involving the taxation of the property of express companies, some
coming from Ohio, some from Indiana, and one from Kentucky; also a
case from the latter state involving the taxation of the property
of the Henderson Bridge Company. The Ohio and Indiana cases were
decided on the 1st of February.
165 U. S. 165 U.S.
194. Petitions for rehearing of those cases have been presented,
and are now before us for consideration.
The importance of the questions involved, the close division
Page 166 U. S. 218
in this Court upon them, and the earnestness of counsel for the
express companies in their original arguments, as well as in their
briefs on this application, lead those of us who concurred in the
judgments to add a few observations to what has hitherto been
said.
Again and again has this Court affirmed the proposition that no
state can interfere with interstate commerce through the imposition
of a tax, by whatever name called, which is in effect a tax for the
privilege of transacting such commerce, and it has as often
affirmed that such restriction upon the power of a state to
interfere with interstate commerce does not in the least degree
abridge the right of a state to tax at their full value all the
instrumentalities used for such commerce.
Now the taxes imposed upon express companies by the statutes of
the three States of Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky are certainly not
in terms "privilege taxes." They purport to be upon the property of
the companies. They are therefore not, in form at least, subject to
any of the denunciations against privilege taxes which have so
often come from this Court. The statutes grant no privilege of
doing an express business, charge nothing for doing such a
business, and contemplate only the assessment and levy of taxes
upon the property of the express companies situated within the
respective states, and the only really substantial question is
whether, properly understood and administered, they subject to the
taxing power of the state property not within its territorial
limits. The burden of the contention of the express companies is
that they have within the limits of the state certain tangible
property, such as horses, wagons, etc.; that that tangible property
is their only property within the state; that it must be valued as
other like property, and upon such valuation alone can taxes be
assessed and levied against them.
But this contention practically ignores the existence of
intangible property, or at least, denies its liability for
taxation. In the complex civilization of today, a large portion of
the wealth of a community consists in intangible property, and
there is nothing in the nature of things or in the limitations of
the federal Constitution which restrains a state from taxing
Page 166 U. S. 219
at its real value such intangible property. Take the simplest
illustration: B, a solvent man, purchases from A certain property,
and gives to A his promise to pay, say, $100,000 therefor. Such
promise may or may not be evidenced by a note or other written
instrument. The property conveyed to B may or may not be of the
value of $100,000. If there be nothing in the way of fraud or
misrepresentation to invalidate that transaction, there exists a
legal promise on the part of B to pay A $100,000. That promise is a
part of A's property. It is something of value, something on which
he will receive cash, and which he can sell in the markets of the
community for cash. It is as certainly property, and property of
value, as if it were a building or a steamboat, and is an justly
subject to taxation. It matters not in what this intangible
property consists -- whether privileges, corporate franchises,
contracts, or obligations. It is enough that it is property which,
though intangible, exists, which has value, produces income, and
passes current in the markets of the world. To ignore this
intangible property, or to hold that it is not subject to taxation
at its accepted value, is to eliminate from the reach of the taxing
power a large portion of the wealth of the country. Now whenever
separate articles of tangible property are joined together not
simply by a unity of ownership, but in a unity of use, there is not
infrequently developed a property, intangible though it may be,
which in value exceeds the aggregate of the value of the separate
pieces of tangible property. Upon what theory of substantial right
can it be adjudged that the value of this intangible property must
be excluded from the tax lists, and the only property placed
thereon be the separate pieces of tangible property?
The first question to be considered, therefore, is whether there
is bolonging to these express companies intangible property --
property differing from the tangible property; a property created
by either the combined use or the manner or use of the separate
articles of tangible property or the grant or acquisition of
franchises or privileges, or all together. To say that there can be
no such intangible property, that it is
Page 166 U. S. 220
something of no value, is to insult the common intelligence of
every man. Take the Henderson Bridge Company's property, the
validity of the taxation of which is before us in another case. The
facts disclosed in that record show that the bridge company owns a
bridge over the Ohio, between the City of Henderson, in Kentucky,
and the Indiana shore, and also ten miles of railroad in Indiana;
that that tangible property -- that is, the bridge and railroad
track -- was assessed in the States of Indiana and Kentucky at
$1,277,695.54, such therefore being the adjudged value of the
tangible property. Thus, the physical property could presumably be
reproduced by an expenditure of that sum, and if placed elsewhere
on the Ohio River, and without its connections or the business
passing over it or the franchises connected with it, might not of
itself be worth any more. As mere bridge and tracks, that was its
value. If the state's power of taxation is limited to the tangible
property, the company should only be taxed in the two states for
that sum; but it also appears that it, as a corporation, had issued
bonds to the amount of $2,000,000, upon which its was paying
interest; that it had a capital stock of $1,000,000, and that the
shares of that stock were worth not less than $90 per share in the
market. The owners, therefore, of that stock had property which,
for purposes of income and purposes of sale, was worth $2,900,000.
What gives this excess of value? Obviously the franchises, the
privileges the company possesses -- its intangible property.
Now it is a cardinal rule which should never be forgotten that
whatever property is worth for the purposes of income and sale it
is also worth for purposes of taxation. Suppose such a bridge were
entirely within the territorial limits of a state, and it appeared
that the bridge itself cost only $1,277,000, could be reproduced
for that sum, and yet it was so situated with reference to railroad
or other connections, so used by the traveling public, that it was
worth to the holders of it, in the matter of income, $2,900,000,
could be sold in the markets for that sum, was therefore in the
eyes of practical business men of the value of $2,900,000 -- can
there be any doubt of the state's power to assess it at that
sum,
Page 166 U. S. 221
and to collect taxes from it upon that basis of value? Substance
of right demands that whatever be the real value of any property,
that value may be accepted by the state for purposes of taxation,
and this ought not to be evaded by any mere confusion of words.
Suppose an express company is incorporated to transact business
within the limits of a state, and does business only within such
limits, and, for the purpose of transacting that business,
purchases and holds a few thousands of dollars' worth of horses and
wagons, and yet it so meets the wants of the people dwelling in
that state, so uses the tangible property which it possesses, so
transacts business therein, that its stock becomes in the markets
of the state of the actual cash value of hundreds of thousands of
dollars. To the owners thereof, for the purposes of income and
sale, the corporate property is worth hundreds of thousands of
dollars. Does substance of right require that it shall pay taxes
only upon the thousands of dollars of tangible property which it
possesses? Accumulated wealth will laugh at the crudity of taxing
laws which reach only the one and ignore the other, while they who
own tangible property not organized into a single producing plant
will feel the injustice of a system which so misplaces the burden
of taxation.
A distinction must be noticed between the construction of a
state law and the power of a state. If a statute, properly
construed, contemplates only the taxation of horses and wagons,
then those belonging to an express company can be taxed at no
higher value than those belonging to a farmer. But if the state
comprehends all property in its scheme of taxation, then the
goodwill of an organized and established industry must be
recognized as a thing of value. The capital stock of a corporation
and the shares in a joint-stock company represent not only the
tangible property, but also the intangible, including therein all
corporate franchises and all contracts, privileges, and goodwill of
the concern.
Now the same reality of the value of its intangible property
exists when a company does not confine its work to the limits of a
single state. Take, for instance, the Adams Express Company.
According to the return filed by it with the Auditor
Page 166 U. S. 222
of the State of Ohio, as shown in the records of these cases,
its number of shares was 120,000, the market value of each $140 to
$150. Taking the smaller sum gives the value of the company's
property taken as an entirety as $16,800,000. In other words, it is
worth that for the purposes of income to the holders of the stock
and for purposes of sale in the markets of the land. But in the
same return it shows that the value of its real estate in Ohio was
only $25,170, of real estate owned outside of Ohio $3,005,157.52,
or a total of $3,030,327.52; the value of its personal property in
Ohio $42,065, of personal property outside of Ohio $1,117,426.25,
or a total of $1,159,491.05, making a total valuation of its
tangible property $4,189,818.57, and upon that basis it insists
that taxes shall be levied. But what a mockery of substantial
justice it would be for a corporation whose property is worth to
its stockholders, for the purposes of income and sale, $16,800,000,
to be adjudged liable for taxation upon only one-fourth of that
amount. The value which property bears in the market, the amount
for which its stock can be bought and sold, is the real value.
Businessmen do not pay cash for property in moonshine or dreamland.
They buy and pay for that which is of value in its power to produce
income or for purposes of sale.
It is suggested that the company may have bonds, stocks, or
other investments which produce a part of the value of its capital
stock, and which have a special situs in other states or are exempt
from taxation. If it has, let it show the fact. Courts deal with
things as they are, and do not determine rights upon mere
possibilities. If half of the property of the Adams Express
Company, which by its own showing is worth $16,000,000 and over, is
invested in United States bonds, and therefore exempt from
taxation, or invested in any way outside the business of the
company and so as to be subject to purely local taxation, let that
fact be disclosed, and then, if the State of Ohio attempts to
include within its taxing power such exempted property, or property
of a different situs, it will be time enough to consider and
determine the rights of the company. That, if such facts exist,
they must be taken into consideration by a state in its proceedings
under such
Page 166 U. S. 223
tax laws as are here presented has been heretofore recognized
and distinctly affirmed by this Court.
Railway Co. v.
Backus, 154 U. S. 421,
154 U. S. 443;
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Taggart, 163 U. S.
1,
163 U. S. 23;
Adams Express Co. v. Ohio, 165 U.
S. 194,
165 U. S. 227.
Presumably all that a corporation has is used in the transaction of
its business, and if it has accumulated assets which for any reason
affect the question of taxation, it should disclose them. It is
called upon to make return of its property, and if its return
admits that it is possessed of property of a certain value, and
does not disclose anything to show that any portion thereof is not
subject to taxation, it cannot complain if the state treats its
property as all taxable.
But where is the situs of this intangible property? The Adams
Express Company has, according to its showing, in round numbers
$4,000,000 of tangible property scattered through different states,
and, with that tangible property thus scattered, transacts its
business. By the business which it transacts, by combining into a
single use all these separate pieces and articles of tangible
property, by the contracts, franchises, and privileges which it has
acquired and possesses, it has created a corporate property of the
actual value of $16,000,000. Thus, according to its figures, this
intangible property, its franchises, privileges, etc., is of the
value of $12,000,000, and its tangible property of only $4,000,000.
Where is the situs of this intangible property? Is it simply where
its home office is, where is found the central directing thought
which controls the workings of the great machine, or in the state
which gave it its corporate franchise, or is that intangible
property distributed wherever its tangible property is located and
its work is done? Clearly, as we think, the latter. Every state
within which it is transacting business, and where it has it
property, more or less, may rightfully say that the $16,000,000 of
value which it possesses springs not merely from the original grant
of corporate power by the state which incorporated it, or from the
mere ownership of the tangible property, but it springs from the
fact that that tangible property it has combined with contracts,
franchises, and privileges into a single
Page 166 U. S. 224
unit of property, and this state contributes to that aggregate
value not merely the separate value of such tangible property as is
within its limits, but its proportionate share of the value of the
entire property. That this is true is obvious from the result that
would follow if all the states other than the one which created the
corporation could and should withhold from it the right to transact
express business within their limits. It might continue to own all
its tangibie property within each of those states, but, unable to
transact the express business within their limits, that $12,000,000
of value attributable to its intangible property would shrivel to a
mere trifle.
It may be true that the principal office of the corporation is
in New York, and that for certain purposes the maxim of the common
law was
mobilia personam sequuntur, but that maxim was
never of universal application, and seldom interfered with the
right of taxation.
Pullman's Palace Car Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 141 U. S. 18,
141 U. S. 22. It
would certainly seem a misapplication of the doctrine expressed in
that maxim to hold that, by merely transferring its principal
office across the river to Jersey City, the situs of $12,000,000 of
intangible property, for purposes of taxation, was changed from the
State of New York to that of New Jersey.
It is also true that a corporation is, for purposes of
jurisdiction in the federal courts, conclusively presumed to be a
citizen of the state which created it; but it does not follow
therefrom that its franchise to be is for all purposes to be
regarded as confined to that state. For the transaction of its
business, it goes into various states, and wherever it goes as a
corporation it carries with it that franchise to be. But the
franchise to be is only one of the franchises of a corporation. The
franchise to do is an independent franchise, or rather a
combination of franchises, embracing all things which the
corporation is given power to do, and this power to do is as much a
thing of value and a part of the intangible property of the
corporation as the franchise to be. Franchises to do go wherever
the work is done. The Southern Pacific Railway Company is a
corporation chartered by the State of Kentucky; yet, within the
limits of that state, it is said to have no tangible
Page 166 U. S. 225
property, and no office for the transaction of business. The
vast amount of tangible property which, by lease or otherwise, it
holds and operates, and all the franchises to do which it
exercises, exist and are exercised in the states and territories on
the Pacific slope. Do not these intangible properties -- these
franchises to do -- exercised in connection with the tangible
property which it holds, create a substantive matter of taxation to
be asserted by every state in which that tangible property is
found?
It is said that the views thus expressed open the door to
possibilities of gross injustice to these corporations through the
conflicting action of the different states in matters of taxation.
That may be so, and the courts may be called upon to relieve
against such abuses. But such possibilities do not equal the wrong
which sustaining the contention of the appellant would at once do.
In the City of New York are located the headquarters of a
corporation whose corporate property is confessedly of the value of
$16,000,000 -- a value which can be realized by its stockholders at
any moment they see fit. Its tangible property and its business are
scattered through many states, all whose powers are invoked to
protect its property from trespass and secure it in the peaceful
transaction of its widely dispersed business. Yet, because that
tangible property is only $4,000,000, we are told that that is the
limit of the taxing power of these states. In other words, it asks
these states to protect property which to it is of the value of
$16,000,000, but is willing to pay taxes only on the basis of a
valuation of $4,000,000. The injustice of this speaks for
itself.
In conclusion, let us say that this is eminently a practical
age; that courts must recognize things as they are, and as
possessing a value which is accorded to them in the markets of the
world, and that no fine-spun theories about situs should interfere
to enable these large corporations, whose business is carried on
through many states, to escape from bearing in each state such
burden of taxation as a fair distribution of the actual value of
their property among those states requires.
The petition for a rehearing is
Denied.