1. Hearing of an interlocutory appeal from an order refusing a
temporary injunction to restrain a tax but leaving a restraining
order effective pending appeal should not be delayed to await the
coming of a second appeal on the merits where the effect will be an
undue delay of state action, contrary to the intent of Jud.Code
§ 266. P.
266 U. S.
96.
2. When the jurisdiction of the district court rests upon a
substantial controversy under the federal constitution properly
alleged by the bill, but the same relief would be afforded by the
state constitution and laws, the case may be determined by the
state rules, without deciding the federal question. P.
266 U. S.
97.
3. Unjust discrimination through intentional, systematic
undervaluation by state officials of other taxable property of the
same class when plaintiff's property is assessed and taxed much
higher is ground for an injunction preventing the taxation of his
property at a higher rate than the property so favored. P.
266 U. S.
98.
4. It is not enough, however, that taxing officials have made a
mistake, or that the court, were its judgment properly invoked,
might reach a different conclusion as to the taxes; there must be a
clear, affirmative showing that the difference is an intentional
discrimination adopted as a practice.
Id.
5. Such discrimination being shown, the fact that the
discriminating tax is imposed directly by a state board which deals
with the other taxes only as a tribunal equalizing assessments
between counties does not prevent equitable relief. P.
266 U. S.
99.
6. A judgment of the district court consisting of three judges
under Jud.Code § 266, refusing a temporary injunction to
restrain a state tax, and based on a finding that in fact the tax
is not shown
Page 266 U. S. 95
to result from arbitrary and intentional discrimination as
alleged, and upon an exercise of that court's sound discretion in
the granting or withholding of such injunctions, will not be
disturbed by this Court in the absence of a very clear case against
it. P.
266 U. S.
100.
Affirmed.
Appeals by the two railroad companies from orders of the
district court denying motions for temporary injunctions.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two bills in equity, one by the Chicago Great Western
Railway Company, a corporation of Illinois, and the other by the
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, a corporation
of Illinois and Iowa, were brought against the Governor, the
Secretary of State, the Auditor, and the Treasurer of Iowa, and
another, constituting the Executive Council of the state, to enjoin
the assessments for taxation of the railway properties of the
complainants in Iowa as fixed by the Council. The injunction was
sought on the ground that, although under the laws and constitution
of Iowa, all property, real and personal, including railways must
be assessed at its actual value, there was an intentional
discrimination by the Executive Council against complainants, in
that farm lands in the state were assessed at slightly over 38
Page 266 U. S. 96
per cent. of their actual value, while the railway of the Great
Western Railway Company in the state was intentionally assessed at
111.5 percent of its actual value, and that of the Rock Island at
75 percent. There were averments that the amounts involved in the
cases were more than $3,000 in each. It was charged that such
action was a denial to the railroad companies of the equal
protection of the laws, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The complainants asserted their right to relief in equity by
injunction, because if the Executive Council certified their
assessments and distributed them to all the counties through which
the railways ran, it would entail on the companies a multiplicity
of suits to vindicate their constitutional rights. Complainants
moved for temporary injunctions under § 266 of the Judicial
Code. The court, consisting of a circuit judge and two district
judges, on the evidence adduced, found that it did not disclose
intentional discrimination by the state taxing tribunals, and
denied the motions. Appeal was taken in both cases to this Court
under § 266, and a continuance of the restraining orders
originally granted on the filing of the bill was asked pending a
hearing of the appeal. This was resisted, but was finally allowed
to the extent of enjoining, upon a proper bond, the Executive
Council from certifying for collection, to the taxing officials of
the counties through which the railways ran, assessments more than
92 percent in value of the assessments the subject of complaint.
When these causes were called for hearing in this Court,
application was made for a continuance on the plea that, since
November, 1922, when this appeal was allowed, the issue on the
complete pleadings in the district court had been referred to a
master, who had found that there was intentional discrimination,
and an early final hearing on the merits was probable. It was
suggested that this Court would save time by awaiting the coming of
a second
Page 266 U. S. 97
appeal on the merits. The counsel for the state resisted
continuance, and insisted that the state was embarrassed by
withholding taxes due it, and that it should not be delayed longer.
Considering the fact that the railroad companies had succeeded in
stopping the state from collecting part of the taxes for now more
than two years in the face of a full preliminary hearing and
adverse ruling by three judges, and noting the evident purpose of
Congress in the enactment of § 266 to prevent undue delay in
enforcing state legislation and action through federal judicial
intervention, this Court has denied this request for a continuance,
and has heard the case.
In the cases before us, we are relieved from considering and
deciding the alleged infringement of the federal Constitution
because, in view of the basis for jurisdiction of the district
court, the cases can be disposed of as a question of state law.
Jurisdiction of the bill in the Great Western case exists
because of the diverse citizenship of the parties. The district
court therefore has jurisdiction to enforce the rights of the
complainant under the state constitution and laws, and prevent
their violation.
Jurisdiction of the bill in the Rock Island case depends on the
averment that the attempted assessment of complainant's railroad
property in Iowa complained of was at a rate and upon a basis
greater than the assessment of other property of the same class
subjected to taxation in Iowa, and that the suit arises under the
Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution forbidding any
state to deprive any person of his property without due process of
law or to deny him the equal protection of the laws. We think this
averment in view of the allegations of the bill invoked a
substantial controversy under the federal Constitution, and gave
the district court jurisdiction. Its jurisdiction, thus
established, gave the district court the authority to determine all
questions involved,
Page 266 U. S. 98
including questions of state law, irrespective of the
disposition of the federal question, and, as the relief to which
the complainant might be entitled would be the same as that which
should be allowed him by the federal court upon a construction of
the state constitution and laws such as he contends for, the
question whether the acts complained of violated the federal
Constitution need not be decided.
Greene v. Louisville &
Interurban R. Co., 244 U. S. 499,
244 U. S. 508;
Ohio Tax Cases, 232 U. S. 576,
232 U. S. 586;
Siler v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 213 U.
S. 175,
213 U. S. 191.
It follows therefore that, in both the cases under consideration,
the district court has jurisdiction to consider and decide whether
the complainants in these cases are so injured by a violation of
the state constitution and laws in the taxation of their property
as to entitle them to the equitable remedy of injunction against
the taxing officials made defendants. The averments of both bills
make a case of unjust discrimination against complainants' property
in that there is an intentional systematic undervaluation by state
officials of Iowa of other taxable property of the same class, when
the complainant's property is assessed and taxed at a much higher
rate. In such cases, the federal authorities render it clear that
the complainants may have the remedy by injunction in equity to
prevent the taxation of their property at any higher rate than that
imposed upon the property of those in whose favor the
discrimination exists.
Cummings v. National Bank,
101 U. S. 153,
101 U. S. 160;
Greene v. Louisville & Interurban R. Company,
244 U. S. 499,
244 U. S. 516;
Taylor v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 88 F. 350.
See also Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Dakota County, Nebraska,
260 U. S. 441,
260 U. S. 445;
Sunday Lake Iron Co. v. Wakefield Tp., 247 U.
S. 350,
247 U. S. 352.
It is not enough, in these cases, that the taxing officials have
merely made a mistake. It is not enough that the court, if its
judgment were properly invoked, would reach a different conclusion
as to the taxes
Page 266 U. S. 99
imposed. There must be clear and affirmative showing that the
difference is an intentional discrimination, and one adopted as a
practice.
In Iowa, the value of farm lands is assessed by local assessors,
who fix the value of the properties under § 1305 of the Code
Supplement of 1913 in the various taxing districts. Their
assessments are submitted to the local board of review of the
taxing district, and that board hears the complaints on the part of
the property owner or the part of the public, and makes its
findings. This action is submitted to the county board of
supervisors, which, as a board of equalization, adjusts and
equalizes the findings between the taxing districts of the county.
The results of action by the county supervisors are sent to the
State Auditor, and by him are laid before the Executive Council
sitting as a state board of equalization, which equalizes them so
that there may be as nearly as possible uniformity as between the
counties. By § 1350 of the Code, real estate is listed and
valued each odd numbered year. Railway properties are valued for
assessment in a different way from real estate under the provisions
of § 1336 of the Code of 1897. They are made upon the taxable
value of the entire railway within the state, and are made every
year, and are distributed proportionately to the counties. In case
a railway lies partly in the state and partly without it, the
estimate of the value of its entire rolling stock and movable
property is made after taking into consideration the proportion
which the business of that part of the railway lying within the
state bears to the business of the railway without the state. By
§ 1334 of the Code Supplement of 1913, a railway is obliged to
submit to the Council for its information many details concerning
its property, tangible and intangible, upon which to base an
estimate of the value of the total property. These include the par
and market values of the stocks and bonds, its net income, and many
other circumstances.
Page 266 U. S. 100
Thus, the Executive Council assesses the value of railways in
the state directly. It acts only as an equalizing tribunal,
however, upon assessments on farm lands as between counties. This
distinction does not prevent equitable relief. Even if the taxing
tribunals were different boards, and if the complaining taxpayers
were intentionally discriminated against by the united action of
two parts of the taxing machinery of the state, relief could be
granted as shown in the authorities above cited.
It was agreed between the parties that the average value for
assessing farm lands was 61 percent. The railway companies
contended that the rate as fixed by the Council was very much
higher than this for them. The three judges in the district court
found that the Executive Council might reasonably and without
arbitrary or intentional discrimination reach the conclusion that
the properties of the two companies in Iowa, tangible and
intangible, were not assessed by the Executive Council in
proportion to their actual value substantially more than the 61
percent imposed on farm lands. The court pointed out that railroad
values were very difficult to fix, and there was a wide range
within which reasonable men might differ, and, after an examination
of the evidence, concluded they could not find that there was any
arbitrary and unconscionable difference between the values assessed
upon the two kinds of property. One circumstance to which the
judges below gave weight was the value ascribed to the properties
of these two railway companies in Iowa by their own admissions in
what is known as Ex parte 74, an investigation by the Interstate
Commerce Commission under the Transportation Act of 1920.
It would take a very clear case upon the record to justify this
Court in setting aside the conclusion of a court of three judges
under § 266 upon what is solely a
Page 266 U. S. 101
question of fact and an exercise of sound judicial discretion as
to the just balance of convenience in granting or withholding a
temporary suspension of the operation of a state law in the
collection of taxes. This Court must respect in the fullest degree
the sensitiveness of Congress in hedging about the sovereign power
of taxation by the states and precluding temporary federal judicial
interference with it save in clear cases. The present cases are not
of that character.
Affirmed.