The Act of the Legislature of the Territory of Oklahoma of March
5, 1895, c. 43, which provided that
"when any cattle are kept or grazed or any other personal
property is situated in any unorganized country, district or
reservation of this territory, such property shall be subject to
taxation in the organized county to which said country, district,
or reservation is attached for judicial purposes"
was a legitimate exercise of the territory's power of taxation,
and, when enforced in the taxation of cattle belonging to persons
not resident in the territory grazing upon Indian reservations
therein, does not violate the Constitution of the United
States.
The Supreme Court of the territory in this case sustained the
authority of the board of equalization to increase the assessment
or valuation, and in a subsequent case decided the other way. In
view of the fact that the judgment in this case is reversed, and
the case remanded for further proceedings, this Court declines to
pass upon the question.
These are cross-appeals from the Supreme Court of the Territory
of Oklahoma. The facts, as stated in the opinion of the court
below, were as follows:
The appellants are nonresidents of the Territory of Oklahoma,
and owners of large herds of cattle that were kept and grazed,
during a portion of the year 1895, in parts of the Osage Indian
reservation in this territory
The appellees are the Board of County Commissioners, Treasurer,
and Sheriff of Kay County, Oklahoma Territory.
On the third Monday in February, 1894, the Supreme Court of the
Territory of Oklahoma, by an order entered on the journals of said
court, attached to said County of Kay, for judicial purposes, all
the Kaw or Kansas Indian reservation and all of the Osage Indian
reservation north of the township line dividing townships 25 and 26
north. All of said reservations so attached to said Kay County for
judicial purposes by such
Page 169 U. S. 265
order are without the boundaries of said Kay County as
established by the governor, and are not within the boundaries of
any organized county of this territory. Said territory so attached
to said County of Kay for judicial purposes is comprised wholly of
lands owned and occupied by Indian tribes, and consists principally
of wild, unimproved, and unallotted lands used for grazing
purposes. That plaintiffs in error during the year 1895, and during
the month of April of said year, drove, transported, and shipped to
the ranges and pastures in that part of said Osage Indian
reservation attached to said Kay County for judicial purposes, as
aforesaid, large herds and numbers of cattle, which were taken to
said reservation in pursuance and by virtue and authority of
certain leases to plaintiffs in error for grazing purposes made by
the Osage tribal government under the supervision of the agent in
charge of said tribe, and upon the ratification and approval of the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs and of the Secretary of the
Interior, and said cattle of said plaintiffs in error were on the
1st day of May kept and grazed on that part of said Indian
reservation attached to said Kay County for judicial purposes, as
aforesaid.
By an Act approved March 5, 1895, the Legislative Assembly of
the Territory of Oklahoma amended Section 13, article 2, c. 70, or
the statutes of the Oklahoma Statutes relating to revenue, so that
the same reads as follows:
"That when any cattle are kept or grazed or any other personal
property is situated in any unorganized county, district, or
reservation of this territory, such property shall be subject to
taxation in the organized county to which said county, district or
reservation is attached for judicial purposes,"
and authorized the board of county commissioners of the
organized county or counties to which such unorganized county,
district, or reservation is attached to appoint a special assessor
each year, whose duty it should be to assess such property, and
conferred upon such special assessor all the powers and required
him to perform all the duties of a township assessor. The assessor
so provided for was required to begin and perform his duties
between the first day of April and the 25th day of May of each
year, and
Page 169 U. S. 266
to complete his duties and return his tax lists on or before
June 1, and the property therein authorized to be assessed, it was
provided, should be valued as of May 1 each year.
In pursuance of the provisions of said act, the County
Commissioners of said Kay County did duly appoint a special
assessor for the year 1895 to assess such cattle as were kept and
grazed, and any other personal property situated in the unorganized
country and parts of Indian reservations attached to said Kay
County for judicial purposes, and said special assessor did, by
virtue of said appointment, assess all the personal property in the
territory so attached to the County of Kay for judicial purposes,
including all of the cattle of the said appellants kept and grazed
in said reservation on the first day of May, 1895. The said special
assessor assessed the property of these appellants so located on
said territory attached to said County of Kay for judicial
purposes, as aforesaid, and returned the same upon an assessment
roll at the total valuation of $760,469. That thereafter the said
sum was by the clerk of said county carried into the aggregate
assessment for said county and by him certified to the auditor of
the territory. That the territorial board of equalization, in
acting upon the various assessments of the various counties as
certified to said board, raised the aggregate valuation of the
property returned for taxation upon the tax rolls of said County of
Kay thirty-five percent, and the county clerk for said county
carried out the raised valuation so certified to him by said
territorial board of equalization against the property of these
appellants, and made the aggregate valuation of such property
$1,026,634. Thereafter the territorial board of equalization levied
and duly certified to the County Clerk of the County of Kay tax
levies for territorial purposes for the year 1895 as follows:
general revenue, three mills on the dollar; university fund,
one-half mill on the dollar; normal school fund, one-half mill on
the dollar; bond interest fund, one-half mill on the dollar; board
of education fund, one-half mill on the dollar.
That the Board of County Commissioners for the County of Kay
made the following levies for the year 1895: for salaries, five
Page 169 U. S. 267
mills on the dollar; for contingent expenses, three mills on the
dollar; for sinking fund, one and one-half mills on the dollar; for
court expenses, two and one-half mills on the dollar; for county
supplies, three mills on the dollar; for road and bridge fund, two
mills on the dollar; for poor fund of said county, one mill on the
dollar; for county school fund of said county, one mill on the
dollar.
The county clerk of said County of Kay carried the valuation of
the property of these plaintiffs in error upon the tax rolls of
said county, and against the same extended the levies as aforesaid,
and charged against the property of these plaintiffs in error in
the aggregate the sum of $26,174.16.
Before these taxes became delinquent, plaintiffs in error began
to remove or attempted to remove their respective property from the
territory attached to Kay County for judicial purposes and beyond
the limits of Oklahoma Territory. The Treasurer of said Kay County
issued tax warrants for the several amounts of taxes levied against
the property of each of said plaintiffs in error, and delivered the
same to the sheriff of said county for execution. Said sheriff
seized certain property of each of appellants by virtue of such tax
warrants. The appellants filed their several petitions in the
District Court of Kay County, and, on application, obtained
injunctions restraining the appellees from making any further
attempt to collect such taxes. Afterwards, on motion, the several
actions were consolidated into one. To the petition filed in such
consolidated action the defendants in error filed a general
demurrer. At the hearing, the district court sustained the demurrer
in part and overruled it in part, holding that all of the levies
made for territorial purposes and the county levy for court
expenses were valid, and as to those levies the injunction was
dissolved, and as to all of the other county levies such
injunctions were made perpetual. From that part of the order and
judgment of the court, dissolving the injunction as to the
territorial taxes and the one county fund levy, plaintiffs
appealed. From that part perpetuating the injunction as to all of
the county levies, except that for court expenses, the defendants
appealed and filed their cross-petitions
Page 169 U. S. 268
in error, and the case was taken to the supreme court of the
territory. In that court, the judgment of the district court was
affirmed. Three of the four judges who sat in the case agreed in
holding that the taxes levied for territorial and court expense
funds were valid; two were of opinion that the balance of the taxes
were unauthorized; one was of opinion that all the taxes were
validly levied, and the fourth judge dissented
in toto.
From that judgment of the supreme court of the territory both
parties appealed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is claimed that the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of
Oklahoma was without power to enact the law of March 5, 1895,
providing for the taxing of cattle grazing upon the Indian
reservations under leases granted by the Indians, because, both
before and since the creation of said territory, exclusive
jurisdiction over said Indians and their lands, and over all
matters in any way affecting them, or in which they are interested,
is in the United States.
It is, indeed, true that the lands in question, constituting the
reservations of the Osage and Kansas Indians, are portions of lands
previously granted by patent of the United States, in pursuance of
the Treaty of May 6, 1828, 7 Stat. 311, and of the Treaty of
December 29, 1835, 7 Stat. 478, to the Cherokee
Page 169 U. S. 269
Nation of Indians, and that it was provided in those treaties
that the lands so granted should not, without the consent of the
Indians at any future time, be "included within the territorial
limits or jurisdiction of any state or territory."
In the subsequent Treaty with the Cherokees of July 19, 1866, 14
Stat. 799, 804, it was stipulated that the United States might
"settle friendly Indians in any part of the Cherokee country
west of the 96th degree, to be taken in a compact form, in quantity
not exceeding 160 acres for each member of each of said tribes thus
to be settled, the boundaries of each of said districts to be
distinctly marked, and the land conveyed in fee simple to each of
said tribes, . . . said land to be paid for to the Cherokee Nation
at such price as may be agreed upon between the said parties in
interest, subject to the approval of the President."
On the 26th of June, 1866, a treaty was made with the Osage
Indians, 14 Stat. 687, wherein it was provided that a large part of
the reservation then occupied by that tribe in Kansas was sold
outright to the government for a certain sum of money, and by
article 16 of said treaty it was provided that
"if said Indians should agree to remove from the State of Kansas
and settle on land to be provided for them by the United States in
the Indian Territory, on such terms as may be agreed upon between
the United States and the Indian tribes now residing in said
territory, or any of them, then the diminished reservation shall be
disposed of by the United States in the same manner and for the
same purposes as hereinbefore provided in relation to said trust
lands, except that fifty percent of the proceeds of the sale of
said diminished reserve may be used by the United States in the
purchase of lands for a suitable home for said Indians in said
Indian Territory."
On July 15, 1870, 16 Stat. 335, Congress passed an act providing
in substance that whenever the Osages should agree thereto, in such
manner as the President should prescribe, said Indians should be
removed from their said diminished reservation in the State of
Kansas to the lands to be provided for them in the Indian
Territory,
"to consist of a tract of land
Page 169 U. S. 270
in compact form, equal in quantity to 160 acres for each member
of tribe, to be paid for out of the proceeds of the sales of their
lands in the State of Kansas,"
and subsequently the Osages were established upon their present
reservation, and the Cherokees were paid therefor the sum of
$1,650,600, and by an Act approved June 5, 1872, 17 Stat. 230,
Congress confirmed this reservation in said Cherokee country.
The history of the transfer of the so-called Kaw or Kansas
Indians from their reservation in the State of Kansas to lands
bought from the Cherokee Nation, constituting their present
reservation, was similar to that of the Osages, and calls for no
special narration.
In 1883, sufficient money having been realized from the sales to
pay for said lands, a deed was duly executed by the Cherokees
conveying all their rights and title in and to the same to the
United States for the use of the said Osage and Kansas Indians,
which deed is recorded in volume 6 of the Indian Deeds in the
office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs in the Department of
the Interior.
It is alleged that by no subsequent treaty have either the
Cherokee or the Osage or Kansas Indians consented that the lands
here in question should be included within the limits or
jurisdiction of the Territory of Oklahoma, and it is accordingly
now contended that under the provision contained in the Cherokee
treaties that the lands therein designated should never be embraced
within the limits of a territory or state without the consent of
said Indians, the exemption or right thereby created runs with the
land, subject to which said lands, or any part thereof, could be
conveyed to other Indians, and is not a right belonging solely to
the Cherokees, which ceased to exist when the ownership of the
Cherokees therein terminated.
Whether, without express stipulation to that effect, the right
granted by treaty to the Cherokee Nation to be exempt as to their
lands from inclusion within the limits of any territory or state
passed with the grant of a portion of such lands to the Osage and
Kansas Indians we need not consider, because even if such were the
law, it is conceded that the United States have, by the Act of May
2, 1890, 26 Stat. 81,
Page 169 U. S. 271
creating the Territory of Oklahoma, included these Osage and
Kansas Indian lands within the geographical limits of said
territory.
It is well settled that an act of Congress may supersede a prior
treaty, and that any questions that may arise are beyond the sphere
of judicial cognizance, and must be met by the political department
of the government.
"It need hardly be said that a treaty cannot change the
Constitution or be held valid if it be in violation of that
instrument. This results from the nature and fundamental principles
of our government. The effect of treaties and acts of Congress,
when in conflict, is not settled by the Constitution. But the
question is not involved in any doubt as to its proper solution. A
treaty may supersede a prior act of Congress, and an act of
Congress may supersede a prior treaty.
Foster v.
Neilson, 2 Pet. 314;
Taylor v. Morton, 2
Curtis 454."
"In the cases referred to, these principles were applied to
treaties with foreign nations. Treaties with Indian nations within
the jurisdiction of the United States, whatever considerations of
humanity and good faith may be involved and require their faithful
observance, cannot be more obligatory. . . . In the case under
consideration, the act of Congress must prevail as if the treaty
were not an element to be considered."
The Cherokee
Tobacco, 11 Wall. 616.
That was a case where an act of Congress extended the revenue
laws as respected tobacco over the Indian territories, regardless
of provisions in prior treaties that exempted tobacco raised by
Indians on their reservations.
The grant of legislative power to the Territory of Oklahoma
contained in the sixth section of the organic act, was as
follows:
"The legislative power of the territory shall extend to all
rightful subjects of legislation not inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States, but no law shall be
passed interfering with the primary disposal of the soil; no tax
shall be imposed on the property of the United States, nor shall
the lands or other property of nonresidents be taxed higher than
the lands or other property of residents, nor shall
Page 169 U. S. 272
any law be passed impairing the right to private property, nor
shall any unequal discrimination be made in taxing different kinds
of property, but all property subject to taxation shall be taxed in
proportion to its value."
With the Indian reservations brought by valid legislation within
the limits of the territory, and with the broad grant of
legislative power contained in the section just quoted, we are next
to consider objections urged to the validity of the Act of the
territorial assembly approved March 5, 1885, wherein it provides
that
"when any cattle are kept or grazed, or any other personal
property is situated in any unorganized county, district or
reservation of this territory, such property shall be subject to
taxation in the organized county to which said county, district or
reservation is attached for judicial purposes."
Our attention is called to the following provision contained in
the first section of the organic act:
"Nothing in this act shall be construed to impair any right now
pertaining to any Indians or Indian tribe in said territory under
the laws, agreements, and treaties of the United States, or to
impair the rights of persons or property pertaining to said
Indians, or to affect the authority of the United States to make
any regulation or to make any law respecting said Indians, their
lands, property or other rights, which it would have been competent
to make or enact if this act had not been passed."
And also to section 3 of the Act of February 28, 1891, c. 383,
26 Stat. 794, as follows:
"Where lands are occupied by Indians, who have bought and paid
for the same, and which lands are not needed for farming or
agricultural purposes, and are not desired for individual
allotments, the same may be leased by authority of the council,
speaking for such Indians, for a period not to exceed five years
for grazing or ten years for mining purposes, in such quantities
and upon such terms and conditions as the agent in charge of such
reservation may recommend, subject to the approval of the Secretary
of the Interior."
And the contention is that, irrespective of the question whether
said lands are by the treaties excluded from the
Page 169 U. S. 273
limits and jurisdiction of the Territory of Oklahoma, the
taxation of cattle located for grazing purposes upon the
reservations, under leases duly authorized by act of Congress, is a
violation of the rights of the Indians, and an invasion of the
jurisdiction and control of the United States over them and their
lands.
As to that portion of the argument which claims that, even if
the Indians were not interested in any way in the property taxed,
the territorial authorities would have no right to tax the property
to others than Indians located upon these reservations, it is
sufficient to cite the cases of
Utah & Northern Railway v.
Fisher, 116 U. S. 28, and
Maricopa & Phoenix Railroad v. Arizona, 156 U.
S. 347, in which it was held that the property of
railway companies traversing Indian reservations are subject to
taxation by the states and territories in which such reservations
are located.
But it is urged that the Indians are directly and vitally
interested in the property sought to be taxed, and that their
rights of property and person are seriously affected by the
legislation complained of; that the money contracted to be paid for
the privilege of grazing is paid to the Indians as a tribe, and is
used and expended by them for their own purposes, and that if by
reason of this taxation, the conditions existing at the time the
leases were executed were changed, or could be changed, by the
Legislature of Oklahoma at its pleasure, the value of the lands for
such purposes would fluctuate or be destroyed altogether, according
to such conditions.
But it is obvious that a tax put upon the cattle of the lessees
is too remote and indirect to be deemed a tax upon the lands or
privileges of the Indians. A similar contention was urged in the
case of
Erie Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 158 U.
S. 431. There, the State of Pennsylvania had imposed a
tax upon a railroad situated within the borders of that state but
leased to another railroad company engaged in carrying on
interstate commerce, and this tax was measured by a reference to
the amount of the tolls received by the lessor company from the
lessee company. It was claimed that the imposition of the tax on
tolls might lead to increasing them in an effort to throw
Page 169 U. S. 274
their burden on the carrying company, and thus, in effect,
become a tax or charge upon interstate commerce. But this Court
held that such a tax upon tolls was too indirect and remote to be
regarded as a tax or burden on interstate commerce. A similar view
was taken in the case of
Henderson Bridge Co. v. Kentucky,
166 U. S. 150,
where a tax imposed by the State of Kentucky on the intangible
property of a company which owned and maintained a bridge over a
river between two states was contended to be objectionable as
constituting a burden upon interstate commerce, but it was held
that the fact that the tax in question was to some extent affected
by the amount of the tolls received, and therefore might be
supposed to increase the rate of tolls and thus be a burden on
interstate commerce, was too remote and incidental to make it a tax
on the business transacted.
Adams Express Co. v. Ohio state
Auditor, 166 U. S. 185.
The suggestion that such a tax on the cattle constitutes a tax
on the lands within the reasoning in the case of
Pollock v.
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 157 U.
S. 429, is purely fanciful. The holding there was that a
tax on rents derived from lands was substantially a tax on the
lands. To make the present case a similar one, the tax should have
been levied on the rents received by the Indians, and not on the
cattle belonging to third parties.
It is further contended that this tax law of the Territory of
Oklahoma, insofar as it affects the Indian reservations, is in
conflict with the constitutional power of Congress to regulate
commerce with the Indian tribes. It is said to interfere with, or
impose a servitude upon, a lawful commercial intercourse with the
Indians, over which Congress has absolute control, and in the
exercise of which control it has enacted the statute authorizing
the leasing by the Indians of their unoccupied lands for grazing
purposes.
The unlimited power of Congress to deal with the Indians, their
property and commercial transactions, so long as they keep up their
tribal organizations, may be conceded, but it is not perceived that
local taxation, by a state or territory, of property of others than
Indians would be an interference with
Page 169 U. S. 275
congressional power. It was decided in
Utah & Northern
Railway v. Fisher, 116 U. S. 28, that
the lands and railroad of a railway company, within the limits of
the Fort Hill Indian reservation in the Territory of Idaho, was
lawfully subject to territorial taxation, which might be enforced
within the exterior boundaries of the reservation by proper
process. The question was similarly decided in
Maricopa &
Phoenix Railroad v. Arizona, 156 U. S. 347.
The taxes in question here were not imposed on the business of
grazing, or on the rents received by the Indians, but on the cattle
as property of the lessees, and, as we have heretofore said that
such a tax is too remote and indirect to be deemed a tax or burden
on interstate commerce, so is it too remote and indirect to be
regarded as an interference with the legislative power of
Congress.
These views sufficiently dispose of the objections urged against
the power of the legislative assembly of Oklahoma to pass laws
taxing property within the limits of the Indian reservations and
belonging to persons not Indians. We must now consider the
objections made to the mode in which that power was exercised in
the Act of March 5, 1895.
The most fundamental of these objections is found in the
assertion that, so far as nonresident owners of cattle grazing
within the Indian reservations are concerned, it is taxation
without representation, and that such persons derive no benefit
from the expenditure of the moneys accruing from the tax.
The organic act, as we have already seen, extends the exterior
boundary of the territory around these Indian reservations. It also
provides for the division of the territory into council and
representative districts, and for the election of a legislative
assembly and of a delegate to Congress. The Indian reservations
were not included within any of the council or representative
districts. The act provided that there should be seven counties,
and fixed the county seats, and, under the authority of the act,
the governor established the boundaries of these counties. The
legislature was authorized to change the boundaries of the original
counties, but were not given authority to include these Indian
reservations, or any lands not then
Page 169 U. S. 276
open to settlement in any of the counties. By section 9, it was
provided that the territory should be divided into three judicial
districts; that the supreme court should define such judicial
districts, and that the territory not embraced in organized
counties should be attached, for judicial purposes, to such
organized county or counties as the supreme court should determine.
In May, 1890, the supreme court made an order attaching the several
Indian reservations to certain organized counties for judicial
purposes, and by an order on February 3, 1894, attached the
reservations in question in this case to Kay County for judicial
purposes.
As already stated, by the Act of March 5, 1895, it was provided
that, when any cattle are kept or grazed, or any other personal
property is situated, in any unorganized county, district, or
reservation, such property shall be subject to taxation in the
organized county to which said county, district, or reservation is
attached for judicial purposes, and provision was made for the
appointment of a special assessor for such unorganized county,
district, or reservation. Under this condition of affairs, it is
contended that the taxing power cannot be lawfully exerted as
respects property within these reservations. It is said that those
to be affected by the tax have no voice in the election of the
legislature to make the laws by which they are to be governed; that
they have no school facilities for their children; that they cannot
organize towns, so as to have the benefit of the police and
sanitary laws of the territory; that the officers of Kay County
have no authority to expend any portion of the moneys raised by
this taxation in improving roads within the Indian reservation;
that they cannot participate in the election of the territorial
delegate, and that they are not benefited by the taxes appropriated
for salary fund, contingent expense fund, sinking fund, road and
bridge fund, poor fund, etc.
Undoubtedly there are general principles, familiar to our
systems of state and federal government, that the people who pay
taxes imposed by laws are entitled to have a voice in the election
of those who pass the laws, and that taxes must be assessed and
collected for public purposes, and that the duty
Page 169 U. S. 277
or obligation to pay taxes by the individual is founded in his
participation in the benefits arising from their expenditure. But
these principles, as practically administered, do not mean that no
person, man, woman, or child, resident or nonresident, shall be
taxed unless he was represented by some one for whom he had
actually voted, nor do they mean that no man's property can be
taxed unless some benefit to him personally can be pointed out.
Thus, it has been held that personal allegiance has no necessary
connection with the right of taxation; an alien may be taxed as
well as a citizen.
Mayer v.
Grima, 8 How. 494;
Witherspoon v.
Duncan, 4 Wall. 210. So, likewise, it is settled
law that the property, both real and personal, of nonresidents may
be lawfully subjected to the tax laws of the state in which they
are situated.
The specific objection made to the validity of these taxes as
imposed on personal property located in unorganized counties or in
the reservations does not seem to us to be well founded. We have
already cited the cases of
Utah & Northern Railway Company
v. Fisher, 116 U. S. 28, and
Maricopa & Phoenix Railroad v. Arizona, 156 U.
S. 347, wherein territorial tax laws were held to have a
valid operation over property lying within Indian reservations.
Union Pac. Railroad v.
Peniston, 18 Wall. 5, was a case where unorganized
country was attached by law to an organized county for judicial and
revenue purposes, and the law was sustained, as appears in the
decision delivered by Mr. Justice Strong, as follows:
"It remains only to notice one other position taken by the
complainants. It is that if the act of the state under which the
tax was laid be constitutional in its application to their property
within Lincoln County, the property outside of Lincoln County is
not lawful taxable by the authorities of that county under the laws
of the state. To this we are unable to give our assent. By the
statutes of Nebraska, the unorganized territory west of Lincoln
County, and the unorganized County of Cheyenne, are attached to the
County of Lincoln for judicial and revenue purposes. The
authorities of that county therefore were the proper authorities to
levy the tax upon the property thus placed under their charge for
revenue purposes. "
Page 169 U. S. 278
In
Llano Cattle Co. v. Faught, 5 S.W. 494 (Texas), the
case was that an unorganized county was attached by law to the
organized County of Scurry for judicial purposes. The officers of
Scurry County assessed and levied county taxes upon the cattle of
the plaintiff, a foreign corporation, kept in the unorganized
county, and it was held that, the unorganized county being in
effect a part of the county to which it was so attached, the
collection of taxes on such personalty of a nonresident may be
enforced by the tax collector of the latter county. We are referred
to similar decisions in Kansas,
Philpin v. McCarty, 24
Kan. 393; in Ohio,
Kemper v. McClelland, 19 Ohio 308; in
Iowa,
Hilliard v. Griffin, 33 N.W. 156; in Michigan,
Comins v. Township of Harrisville, 45 Mich. 442.
It is further contended that while the taxes assessed for
territorial and court expense funds may be valid, yet that the
balance of the taxes, levied for county purposes and expended
within the geographical limits of Kay County are unauthorized for
the reason that the people on these reservations are not interested
in such taxes, and receive no benefit from their expenditure. But
as it seems to us, it cannot be maintained that those plaintiffs
whose cattle are within the protection of the laws of Oklahoma
receive no benefit from the expenditures in Kay County. Certainly
they have some advantage in the improvement of the roads within
that county, when they journey to and from the towns and
settlements in the organized county. They are interested in the
prevalence of law and order in the communities adjacent to their
property, and in the provision made for the care of the poor and
insane. It is to be presumed that they have a right to send their
children to the schools in the organized county.
The cases, both state and federal, are numerous in which it has
been held that taxes, otherwise lawful, are not invalidated by the
allegation, or even the fact, that the resulting benefits are
unequally shared.
In
Kelly v. Pittsburg, 104 U. S.
78, the complaint was that certain water, street, gas,
school, and other taxes were unlawfully assessed against the
property of the plaintiff which,
Page 169 U. S. 279
though lying within city limits, was not benefited by such
taxes, but this Court, affirming the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,
said:
"We are unable to see that the taxes levied on this property
were not for a public use. Taxes for schools, for the support of
the poor, for protection against fire, and for waterworks are the
specific taxes found in the list complained of. We think it will
not be denied by anyone that these are public purposes in which the
whole community have an interest and for which, by common consent,
property owners everywhere in this country are taxed. There are
items styled city tax and city buildings which, in the absence of
any explanation, we must suppose to be for the good government of
the city, and for the construction of such buildings as are
necessary for municipal purposes. . . . It may be true that the
plaintiff does not receive the same amount of benefit from some or
any of these taxes as do citizens living in the heart of the city.
It is probably true, from the evidence found in this record, that
his tax bears a very unjust relation to the benefits received as
compared with its amount. But who can adjust with precise accuracy
the amount which each individual in an organized civil community
shall contribute to sustain it, or can insure in this respect
absolute equality of burdens and fairness in their distribution
among those who must bear them?"
"We cannot say judicially that the plaintiff received no benefit
from the city organization. These streets, if they do not penetrate
his farm, lead to it. The waterworks will probably reach him some
day, and may be near enough to him now to serve him on some
occasion. The schools may receive his children, and in this regard
he can be in no worse condition than those living in the city who
have no children, and yet who pay for the support of the schools.
Every man in a county, a town, a city, or a state is deeply
interested in the education of the children of the community,
because his peace and quiet, his happiness and prosperity, are
largely dependent upon the intelligence and moral training which it
is the object of public schools to supply to the children of his
neighbors and associates, if he has none himself. "
Page 169 U. S. 280
It is no objection to a tax that the party required to pay it
derives no benefit from the particular burden --
e.g., a
tax for school purposes levied upon a manufacturing corporation.
But in truth, benefits always flow from the appropriation of public
moneys to such purposes, which corporations in common with natural
persons receive in the additional security to their property and
profits.
Amesbury Nail Factory Co. v. Weed, 17 Mass.
52.
In Cooley on Taxation 16, the result of a wide examination of
the cases is thus stated:
"If it were practicable to do so, the taxes levied by any
government ought to be apportioned among the people according to
the benefit which each receives from the protection the government
affords him, but this is manifestly impossible. The value of life
and liberty, and of the social and family rights and privileges,
cannot be measured by any pecuniary standard; and, by the general
consent of civilized nations, income or the sources of income are
almost universally made the basis upon which the ordinary taxes are
estimated. This is upon the assumption, never wholly true in point
of fact, but sufficiently near the truth for the practical
operations of government, that the benefit received from the
government is in proportion to the property held, or the revenue
enjoyed under its protection, and though this can never be arrived
at with accuracy, through the operation of any general rule, and
would not be wholly just if it could be, experience has given us no
better standard, and it is applied in a great variety of forms, and
with more or less approximation to justice and equality. But, as
before stated, other considerations are always admissible. What is
aimed at is not taxes strictly just, but such taxes as will best
subserve the general welfare of the political society."
The fact that the taxes in question are levied on personal
property only, and thus exempts real property, is urged as an
objection to the validity of the act. It is claimed that such an
exemption operates as an unjust discrimination.
As the owners of the cattle taxed own no real estate within the
Indian reservation, this objection, if sound, would render
Page 169 U. S. 281
it impossible to tax the cattle at all. But it is the usual
course in tax laws to treat personal property as one class and real
estate as another, and it has never been supposed that such
classification created an illegal discrimination because there
might be some persons who owned only personal property, and others
who owned property of both classes. Again it is complained that
this law violates the principle of uniformity, and operates as an
unjust discrimination because it provides for an assessment of
cattle kept and grazed on the Indian reservations at a different
time from that provided for the assessment of personal property,
including cattle, in the organized country.
It is not unusual for tax laws to authorize the assessment of
different classes of property at different dates, and even of the
same classes of property in different localities at different
dates. Such matters of regulation must be supposed to be within the
power of the state or territory, and to have their reasons in
special facts known to the legislature. We are informed that the
revenue laws of Oklahoma provide that real estate shall be valued
for taxation on the first day of January, and personal property in
the organized counties on the first day of February, of each year,
and the personal property upon the reservations on May first. The
gravamen of the complaint is that cattle are fatter and more
valuable on May first than on February first, and hence there is an
inequality in the assessments. On the other hand, it is claimed
that, if the cattle on the reservations were to be valued for
taxation in February, the larger part would escape taxation, as
they are not driven to the reservations till April.
A similar objection was urged against the validity of a tax law
of the State of Wisconsin, wherein April first was fixed as the
date for assessing saw logs belonging to nonresidents, and May
first for assessing saw logs of residents. The court said:
"It is claimed that this law violates the principle of
uniformity in providing for an assessment of the logs of a
nonresident at a different time than that provided in the case of
residents, and that, for the same reason it discriminates unjustly
against nonresidents. But the court is of opinion that the case
Page 169 U. S. 282
does not come within either of these principles. . . . The
legislature was aware that the logs of nonresidents were liable to
be floated out of the state during the month of April."
Nelson Lumber Co. v. Loraine, 22 F. 54.
In Missouri, a statute was held valid which provided that real
property should be assessed every two years in all Counties outside
of St. Louis, and that all property in the City of St. Louis should
be assessed every year for state and municipal taxes, and this
although in the particular case it was shown that this difference
in the time of the assessments made a considerable difference in
the amount of the taxes.
State v. Lindell Hotel Co., 9
Mo.App. 450.
A law providing different times for assessments for state taxes
in the State of New York was held to be legal.
People v.
Commissioners of Taxes, 91 N.Y. 593.
Several other provisions of the act in question are pointed to
as creating discriminations against taxpayers whose property is in
the unorganized districts and reservations, such as these; that
city and township assessors are required to be residents and
qualified voters in the township or city where elected, but there
is no such requirement imposed on the special assessor appointed by
the board of county commissioners to assess the personal property
in the reservations and unorganized districts; that the several
township and city assessors are required to meet at the county seat
and agree upon an equal cash basis of valuation of all property
that they may be called upon to assess, but in this matter the
special assessors do not participate; that the township assessor,
clerk, and treasurer are a township board of equalization, and the
mayor, city clerk, and city assessor are a city board of
equalization, but that, in the case of the unorganized districts
and reservations, the board of county commissioners act as a board
of equalization, etc.
Without undertaking to enumerate all the instances in which
there is some difference of procedure in respect to property
assessed within the organized counties and property assessed in the
unorganized districts and reservations, or to
Page 169 U. S. 283
consider minutely the several objections that are urged to such
differences, we do not perceive that the questions suggested are
for the courts. Clearly these are matters of detail, within the
legislative discretion. It is the lawmaking power which is to
determine all questions of discretion or policy in ordering and
apportioning taxes, which must make all the necessary rules and
regulations and decide upon the agencies by means of which the
taxes shall be collected. When, as may sometimes happen, the
legislature transcends its functions and enacts, in the guise of a
tax law, a law whereby the property of the citizen is confiscated
or taken for private purposes, the judiciary has the right and duty
to interpose. But such a case is not presented by this record.
These views dispose of the objections urged against the validity
of the Act of March 5, 1895, and leave only for consideration error
assigned to the action of the territorial board of equalization in
adding thirty-five percent to the assessment or valuation made by
the officer or officers to whom the duty to make the assessment is
by the statute expressly committed. It is alleged that this order
by the board of equalization was unauthorized and void.
We learn from the opinion of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in
the present case that this question of the power of the territorial
board of equalization to raise the valuation of the properties to
be taxed had been, in the previous case of
Wallace v.
Bullen, decided affirmatively, and that such decision was
followed in the present case.
We are informed, however, by the brief filed in behalf of the
petitioners, that subsequently, on September 3, 1897, in the case
of
Gray v. Stiles, 49 P. 1083, the subject was again
considered and an opposite conclusion reached. It is also asserted
in said brief that the question is one of general importance, and
that a final decision of it may affect the validity of municipal
obligations heretofore issued in the territory.
Such allegations disclose that there are parties not represented
before us whose interests are involved in the inquiry. The case was
heard in the trial court on a demurrer to the
Page 169 U. S. 284
petition, and the question of the validity of the action of the
board of equalization in raising the assessed values throughout the
territory was put by the supreme court, without discussion, on its
previous decision in the case of
Wallace v. Bullen. We are
also informed by the briefs that the case just mentioned is now
pending before the supreme court on an order for a rehearing.
Whether the facts pertaining to the action of the board of
equalization in this particular were the same in
Gray v.
Stiles as those in this case we cannot say from this
record.
In such circumstances, we think it would be premature for this
Court to determine the question.
As, for the reasons before given, the judgment of the supreme
court must be reversed, that court will have an opportunity to deal
with this question, if it think fit, upon a rehearing.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma is accordingly
reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions to proceed in
conformity with this opinion.