In the absence of an adequate remedy at law plainly allowed
against the state, equity has jurisdiction to restrain state
officials from enforcing an illegal tax, the effect of which, if
not paid, would be to cloud plaintiff's title and subject him to
pecuniary penalties. P.
253 U. S.
67.
Held that the law of North Dakota permitting actions
respecting title to property or arising upon contract to be brought
against the state as against a private person does not clearly
allow such an adequate remedy, since an action to recover money
wrongfully extorted is a case in contract only in an artificial
sense.
Id.
The method of taxing an interstate railroad company by assessing
the value of its property within the state at that proportion of
the total value of its stocks and bonds that the main track mileage
within the state bears to the main track mileage of the entire line
is indefensible when it is shown that the cost of construction per
mile was much less within than without the taxing state, and that
the large and valuable terminals are elsewhere. P.
253 U. S.
68.
No property of such an interstate railroad situate beyond the
state can be taken into account in taxation unless it can be seen
in some plain, intelligible way that it adds to the value of the
road and of the rights exercised within the taxing state. P.
253 U. S.
69.
Hence, the possession of bonds secured by mortgage of lands in
other states, or of a land grant or other property elsewhere,
adding to the riches of the corporation but not affecting the road
in the taxing state, can afford no ground for increasing the tax
there, whatever the tax may be, on property or an excise on doing
business. P.
253 U. S.
70.
North Dakota law of March 7, 1919, c. 222, as administered,
held an unwarrantable interference with interstate
commerce and a taking of property without due process of law.
Id.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 253 U. S. 67
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from an order of three judges restraining the
defendants, the appellants, from taking steps to enforce taxes
imposed by an act of North Dakota, approved March 7, 1919, (c. 222)
until the further order of the court. The plaintiff railroads are
corporations of other states with lines extending into North
Dakota. The defendants are the State Tax Commissioner, the State
Treasurer, the State Auditor, the Attorney General and the
Secretary of State for North Dakota. As the tax is made a first
lien upon all the property of the plaintiff railroads in the state,
and thus puts a cloud upon their title, and as delay in payment is
visited with considerable penalties, there is jurisdiction in
equity unless there is an adequate remedy at law against the state,
to which the tax is to be paid.
Shaffer v. Carter,
252 U. S. 37;
Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Shannon, 223 U.
S. 468,
223 U. S. 472.
The only ground for supposing that there is such a remedy is a
provision that "an action respecting the title to property, or
arising upon contract may be brought in the district court against
the
Page 253 U. S. 68
state the same as against a private person." Compiled Laws, N.D.
1913, § 8175. This case does not arise upon contract except in
the purely artificial sense that some claims for money alleged to
have been obtained wrongfully might have been enforced at common
law by an action of assumpsit. Nothing could be more remote from an
actual contract than the wrongful extortion of money by threats,
and we ought not to leave the plaintiffs to a speculation upon what
the state court might say if an action at law were brought.
Union Pacific R. Co. v. Weld County, 247 U.
S. 282.
We quote the tax law in full.
* It will be seen
that it
Page 253 U. S. 69
purports to be a special excise tax upon doing business in the
state. As the law is administered, the tax commissioner fixes the
value of the total property of each railroad by the total value of
its stocks and bonds, and assesses the proportion of this value
that the main track mileage in North Dakota bears to the main track
of the whole line. But, on the allegations of the bill, which is
all that we have before us, the circumstances are such as to make
that mode of assessment indefensible. North Dakota is a state of
plains, very different from the other states, and the cost of the
roads there was much less than it was in mountainous regions that
the roads had to traverse. The state is mainly agricultural. Its
markets are outside its boundaries, and most of the distributing
centers from which it purchases also are outside. It naturally
follows that the great and very valuable terminals of the roads are
in other states. So looking only to the physical track, the
injustice of assuming the value to be evenly distributed according
to main track mileage is plain. But that is not all.
The only reason for allowing a state to look beyond its borders
when it taxes the property of foreign corporations is that it may
get the true value of the things within it, when they are part of
an organic system of wide extent, that gives them a value above
what they otherwise would possess. The purpose is not to expose the
heel of the system to a mortal dart -- not, in other words, to open
to taxation what is not within the state. Therefore no property of
such an interstate road situated elsewhere can be taken into
account unless it can be seen in some plain and fairly intelligible
way that it adds to the value of the road and the rights exercised
in the state. Hence, the
Page 253 U. S. 70
possession of bonds secured by mortgage of lands in other
states, or of a land-grant in another state, or of other property
that adds to the riches of the corporation but does not affect the
North Dakota part of the road is no sufficient ground for the
increase of the tax, whatever it may be -- whether a tax on
property or, as here, an excise upon doing business in the state.
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Arkansas, 235 U.
S. 350,
235 U. S. 364.
In this case, it is alleged, the tax commissioner's valuation
included items of the kind described to very large amounts. The
foregoing considerations justify the preliminary injunction that
was granted against what would appear to be an unwarranted
interference with interstate commerce and a taking of property
without due process of law.
Fargo v. Hart, 193 U.
S. 490;
Union Tank Line Co. v. Wright,
249 U. S. 275,
249 U. S.
282.
The Attorney General of the state, in his very candid argument,
suggested that, if the mode adopted by the tax commissioner were
open to objections, the statute might be construed to give him an
election as to the method of distribution, and that he should take
gross earnings, or, if more easily ascertainable, the property or
mileage basis of distribution. As we are dealing only with a
preliminary injunction, we confine our consideration to a general
view of the mode actually followed, and upon that we are of opinion
that the decree should be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
*
"(2) Every corporation, joint-stock company, or association, now
or hereafter organized under the law of any other state, the United
States, or a foreign country and engaged in business in the state
during the previous calendar year shall pay annually a special
excise tax with respect to the carrying on or doing business in the
state by such corporation, joint-stock company, or association
equivalent to 50 cents for each $1,000.00 of the capital actually
invested in the transaction of business in the state, provided
that, in the case of a corporation engaged in business partly
within and partly without the state, investment within the state
shall be held to mean that proportion of its entire stock and bond
issues which its business within the state bears to its total
business within and without the state, and where such business
within the state is not otherwise more easily and certainly
separable from such entire business within and without the state,
business within the state shall be held to mean such proportion of
the entire business within and without the state as the property of
such corporation within the state bears to its entire property
employed in such business both within and without the state;
provided that, in the case of a railroad, telephone, telegraph, car
or freight-line, express company, or other common carrier, or a
gas, light, power, or heating company having lines that enter into,
extend out of, or across the state, property within the state shall
be held to mean that proportion of the entire property of such
corporation engaged in such business which its mileage within the
state bears to its entire mileage within and without the state. The
amount of such annual tax shall in all cases be computed on the
basis of the average amount of capital so invested during the
preceding calendar year, provided that, for the purpose of this
tax, an exemption of $10,000.00 from the amount of capital invested
in the state shall be allowed; provided further that this exemption
shall be allowed only if such corporation, joint-stock company, or
association furnish to the Tax Commissioner all the information
necessary to its computation."