1. The full and fair value of property for the purpose of a tax
assessment is the equivalent of the property in money paid at the
time of assessment. P.
297 U. S.
139.
2. In assessing railway property for taxation, the assessor is
not bound by any rule or formula, but is free to consider all
pertinent facts, estimates and forecasts and to give them their
reasonable weight. P.
297 U. S.
139.
3. Courts will not disturb tax assessments unless clearly
unreasonable. To warrant an injunction, overvaluation due to mere
error of judgment is not enough; there must have been that which
in
Page 297 U. S. 136
legal effect is the equivalent of intention or fraudulent
purpose to overvalue, and so to set at naught fundamental
principles that safeguard the taxpayer's rights and property. P.
297 U. S.
139.
4. An assessment of property for taxation is presumed to have
been rightly made on the basis of actual value. P.
297 U. S.
139.
5. In apportioning value of an interstate railway system to a
State for taxation, there were used as factors the percentages in
the State (a) of total track mileage; (b) of physical property,
measured by cost of reproduction less depreciation; (c) of car and
locomotive miles, average of five years, and (d) of gross earnings,
average for five years, the amount of such earnings assigned to the
State being found by adding to the intrastate revenue earned in the
State the mileage proportion of revenue from traffic moving partly
within and partly outside of her boundaries. Though percentages
thus used were not higher than those submitted to the taxing board
by the Railway Company, the Company contended in this suit that the
apportionment operated to tax property outside of the State.
Held that, having regard to the size of the entire railway
system and the variety of things that affect values to be
attributed to its railroad in different States, and the numerous
matters as to which there may be wide difference of opinion, the
use of the percentages was not shown to be confiscatory or
arbitrary. P.
297 U. S.
143.
6. In determining whether a tax assessment was arbitrarily made
and grossly excessive, the assessors may not be compelled to submit
to examination as to the operation of their minds in making it. P.
297 U. S.
145.
7. Judicial notice must be taken of the fact that, late in 1929,
there occurred a great collapse of values of all classes of
property -- railroads, other utilities, commodities and securities
-- and that the depression then commenced progressively became
greater. P.
297 U. S.
149.
8. In assessing railroad property during the depression, a
taxing board was bound to take into account and give due weight to
the sudden, progressive, and enormous declines of value. P.
297 U. S.
149.
9. In a suit by an interstate railway company to enjoin in part
the collection of taxes levied on its property in North Dakota for
the year 1933, the allegations and evidence on behalf of the state
authorities showed that, for a series of years, including the
depression years 1929-1932, the basis adopted by them and approved
by them as the best available for computing the value of the entire
railway system was the five-year average value of the stocks and
bonds and capitalized income; that, if this basis had been used in
1933, the system valuation for that year and the part of it
assignable to and assessed in North Dakota would have been vastly
less
Page 297 U. S. 137
than in 1932, owing to the effects of the economic depression
upon property values, prices, and earnings; but that, in assessing
for 1933, they had arbitrarily repeated the assessment for 1932,
without making a fresh computation of value or paying heed to
economic changes. Resolving all doubts in favor of validity, the
evidence conclusively showed that the challenged (1933) assessment
exceeded the true full value of the railway's property in North
Dakota in 1933 by $10,000,000.
Held:
(1) That the taxing board's failure to consider the enormous
diminution in value of the railway's property caused by the 1929
collapse and the progress of the depression was equivalent in law
to intention to make the grossly excessive assessment and deprived
the railway of rights under the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
297 U. S. 145,
297 U. S.
151.
(2) The railway's right to relief was not prejudiced by
overassessment and submission to overtaxation in any prior year. P.
297 U. S.
152.
77 F.2d 405 reversed.
Certiorari, 296 U.S. 558, to review the affirmance of a decree
dismissing the bill in a suit to enjoin collection of taxes.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the federal District Court for North
Dakota by petitioner against the state tax commissioner and the
auditors and treasurers of thirty counties to enjoin collection of
about 40 percent of 1933 taxes laid upon its railroad properties in
each county. The assessed value of all petitioner's railroad
property in the state is $78,832,888. The total of the tax is
$1,508,352.34, of which petitioner has paid about 60 percent The
suit is grounded upon the claim that the taxes are based on a
valuation that
Page 297 U. S. 138
includes properties located outside the State and in other
respects are so excessive and arbitrary as to be repugnant to the
due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth
Amendment to, and the commerce clause of, the Federal Constitution.
Issues were joined, the case was tried, the court made findings of
fact, concluded that petitioner was not entitled to relief, and
dismissed the bill. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 77 F.2d
405.
The state law requires that all property subject to taxation be
assessed at its true and full value in money. Comp.Laws 1913,
§ 2122, as amended by Laws 1925, c. 206, § 2. The state
board of equalization is required in August of each year to assess
at its actual value every railroad within the state, and it is
governed by the rules that apply to township assessors in valuing
other property. Section 2242. 1925 Supp. § 2141a3. The average
values per mile of main and branch lines, respectively, constitute
the bases for assignment of value to counties. § 2243. And, on
like mileage bases, the value given to each county is distributed
to its cities, towns, townships, and districts through which the
railroad extends. § 2244. The railroad property is taxed, as
is personal property, by applying the local rate to 50 percent of
the assessed value. [
Footnote
1] Petitioner did not allege that other property was not
assessed at its full and true value as required by state law, and
does not seek relief on the ground of discrimination.
Petitioner claims that the board made the assessment by
attributing to North Dakota too great a proportion of a grossly
excessive system valuation. More specifically, its contentions are:
(1) that, by reason of the methods employed for the ascertainment
of the percentage of system value to be assigned to North Dakota,
the assessment
Page 297 U. S. 139
includes the value of property located in other states to the
extent of approximately $20,000,000, and (2) that, even if the
factors used to make the allocation be not condemned, the
assessment must nevertheless be held arbitrary and excessive to the
extent of $15,000,000.
The full and true value of the property is the amount that the
owner would be entitled to receive as just compensation upon a
taking of that property by the state or the United States in the
exertion of the power of eminent domain. That value is the
equivalent of the property, in money paid at the time of the
taking.
Olson v. United States, 292 U.
S. 246,
292 U. S. 254.
The principles governing the ascertainment of value for the
purposes of taxation are the same as those that control in
condemnation cases, confiscation cases, and generally in
controversies involving the ascertainment of just compensation.
West v. C. & P. Tel. Co., 295 U.
S. 662,
295 U. S.
671.
In determining the amount of the assessment, the board was not
bound by any formula, rule, or method, but for guidance to right
judgment it was free to consider all pertinent facts, estimates,
and forecasts, and to give to them such weight as reasonably they
might be deemed to have. Courts decline to disturb assessments for
taxation unless shown clearly to transgress reasonable limits.
Overvaluation is not, of itself, sufficient to warrant injunction
against any part of the taxes based on the challenged assessment;
mere error of judgment is not enough; there must be something that
in legal effect is the equivalent of intention or fraudulent
purpose to overvalue the property and so to set at naught
fundamental principles that safeguard the taxpayer's rights and
property.
Rowley v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co.,
293 U. S. 102,
293 U. S.
109-111. The assessment is presumed to have been rightly
made on the basis of actual value. Its validity must be tested upon
consideration of the facts established by the evidence and of those
of which judicial notice may be taken.
Page 297 U. S. 140
There is controversy between the parties as to whether the
evidence discloses how the assessment was made. Petitioner
maintains that the record shows that the board found system value
and apportioned it to North Dakota, and also shows the methods by
which these determinations were made. The District Court refused to
find, and the Circuit Court of Appeals held that petitioner failed
to prove, that the board made the valuation by methods which
petitioner claims that it employed.
1. As to methods employed by the board. Respondents called as a
witness Mr. Lyman A. Baker, who had been with the North Dakota tax
commissioner for nineteen years and, during the last thirteen
years, ending January 1, 1933, had been deputy commissioner in
charge of the valuation of railroads and other utilities. He was
engaged in this litigation in behalf of respondents, and spent much
time in making computations and in the preparation of exhibits that
were put in evidence by respondents. In substance, he
testified:
The first step in the valuation of railroad property within a
state is to determine the value of the entire system. There are two
cases of evidence ordinarily considered: the average market price
of stock and bonds, and the past earnings over a period of years.
As the stock and bond prices reflect value of the entire railroad,
it is necessary to eliminate the value of nonoperating property.
The method requires a definite period over which to average price
quotations, and that must of necessity be somewhat arbitrarily
fixed. It assumes that the average price reflects value, but rarely
is controlling interest bought or sold on the exchange. Where
control is sought, prices advance sharply. The method also assumes
that purchasers act on accurate knowledge of conditions; it ignores
the influence of pure speculation. In applying the method, taxing
boards, economists, and railroad men have always adopted five-year
periods immediately preceding
Page 297 U. S. 141
the assessment in order to give stability to the tax value. The
depression resulted in a collapse in the stock and bond market.
Forced selling brought prices down to a figure that did not fairly
represent the value of the property. "Despite all these objections
to the stock and bond method of valuation, I still consider it as
one of the best indices of value obtainable."
He further testified: capitalization of net railroad operating
income is generally recognized as an important element in
estimating the value of railroad operating property. The average
net income, usually for five years, is capitalized at a reasonable
rate of return. The method assumes the amount so ascertained to be
the value of the property. The income of a single year is seldom,
if ever, used. As 1931 and 1932 were the worst years in railroad
history since the panic of 1893, the use of the three-year period
ending in 1932 has but little justification. The five-year period
has been given the same weight by the state board for a good many
years. It is generally considered that the rate of return that a
company is allowed to earn under state and federal law is a fair
rate to use. A rate of 6 percent is justifiable under present
conditions. Economic return from farm property, being about 65
percent of all that is taxable in North Dakota, decreased about 75
percent from the 1924-1928 average. Assessments on values indicated
by capitalization of average net income for the five years ending
in 1932 would result in giving preferential treatment to railroads
as compared with other properties. Where properties have been
operated at a loss over a period of years, there are no earnings to
capitalize. Yet they have present and prospective value which would
be reflected by use of the stock and bond valuation method. The
criticisms made of these methods are not sufficient to render them
valueless. "On the contrary, the two methods are universally
approved as the two best evidences of the value of a railroad which
are available."
Page 297 U. S. 142
The answer alleges: in 1932, the tax commissioner made and
presented to the board computations based upon a determination of
system value by the use of a composite of the average stock and
bond values of the petitioner for a period of five years preceding
the assessment and the average value ascertained by capitalizing
net earnings for the same period; by apportioning the system value
to North Dakota upon the basis of the average of five factors: (1)
miles of all track, (2) physical property, (3) car and locomotive
miles, (4) ton and passenger miles, (5) gross earnings, there was
produced a value of $76, 115,715; another apportionment on the
basis of the three use factors,
viz., car and locomotive
miles, ton and passenger miles, and gross earnings, produced
$79,417,825, and a third apportionment by the average of track
miles and the three use factors produced $80,671,790. The answer
further alleged that,
"upon this evidence and upon all other evidence and matters of
common knowledge before it, the Board did, in the year 1932, fix
the valuation of plaintiff's property in North Dakota at
$78,850,024;"
that, in 1933, the commissioner and the railway company
presented to the board the financial and operating statistics of
the plaintiff's railroad and reports and computations based upon
the formulas used in 1932 and other evidence of value, and that the
board, after full consideration of them and all other evidence of
value and matters of common knowledge, fixed the assessment for
1933 at $78,832,888, "which said amount represented the honest
judgment" of the board "and the full and true value of the
plaintiff's North Dakota property in money."
The average of the valuations computed for 1932 as alleged in
the answer is $78,735,110; the assessment was $78,850,024. The
difference is less than one-sixth of 1 percent. The trial court
found that, for 1933, the board assessed the property at
"the sum of $78,832,888, which sum was the same as the 1932
assessment except for a
Page 297 U. S. 143
deduction of $17,136 for certain trackage of the plaintiff which
had been removed."
It is clear that the computations prepared by the tax
commissioner for the use of the board served as guides to, if
indeed they were not used as the measure of, value for the
assessments made by the board for 1932 and 1933. Respondents'
answer and evidence require a finding that these computations were
in fact the controlling bases, and constituted the very foundation
of the 1932 and 1933 assessments. In view of the relatively small
differences between the 1933 assessment and the figures produced by
the methods approved by respondents and universally as the best
available evidence of value of a railroad, the latter rightly may
be used in testing the validity of the former.
2. Petitioner's claim that the board's apportionment of system
value to North Dakota operated to assess and tax property in other
states cannot be upheld.
Petitioner maintains that the amount attributed to that State
was found by the use of the factors above referred to. More fully
described, they are: (1) miles of all track (as of December 31,
1931) -- 20.19 percent; (2) physical property as measured by cost
of reproduction less depreciation (as of December 31, 1931) --
13.84 percent; (3) car and locomotive miles (average for five years
ending with 1931) -- 19.90 percent; (4) ton and passenger miles
(average for five years ending with 1931) -- 18.65 percent; (5)
Gross earnings (average for five years ending with 1931) -- 18.45
percent; the amount assigned to North Dakota was found by adding to
the intrastate revenue earned in that State its mileage proportion
of revenue derived from traffic moving partly within and partly
outside her boundaries. The average of these percentages is 18.206
percent
The principal grounds on which petitioner assails the board's
apportionment are: petitioner's railroad in North Dakota consists
largely of relatively cheaper branch lines.
Page 297 U. S. 144
The most valuable terminals and costly construction are in other
States, and, while these include little mileage, they contribute as
much to system value in proportion to cost as do the cheaper
stretches of the road where the same investment is spread over much
greater mileage.
The problem of apportionment is a difficult one. It is
impossible to formulate a rule generally applicable. Controlling
conditions vary greatly from time to time. Allocations, to be
sufficiently accurate for practical purposes, must be arrived at by
the exercise of sound judgment based on facts that fairly reflect
the relation between value of the system as a whole and value of
the part within a state.
Rowley v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co.,
supra, 293 U. S.
109-110.
The methods proposed by petitioner discredit its objections to
the apportionment made by the board. While the board had the 1933
assessment under consideration, petitioner submitted to it a brief
in which it proposed two methods of apportionment. One was by use
of the above described factors 1, 3, 4, and 5, and the other by use
of 3, 4, and 5, producing, respectively, as calculated by
petitioner, 19.35 percent and 19.14 percent. These percentages are
higher than the average of those that petitioner says the board
used. There is no evidence that the assessment was arrived at by
use of apportioning percentages higher than those then used by
petitioner.
Petitioner's bill suggests a method of apportionment that would
assign to North Dakota less than 12 1/2 percent of system value.
Briefly, the method is this: to the revenue derived from North
Dakota intrastate traffic add a part of the revenue received from
the interstate moving in North Dakota that is equal to its
proportion of the property used in, and the cost of, carrying that
traffic; deduct the operating expenses incurred in moving it from
the total revenue. The relation of the state net earnings
Page 297 U. S. 145
so found to the net for the system will be the same as that
existing between North Dakota value and system value. As petitioner
gives this method scant, if any, support here, and as it was
rejected by the lower courts, we need not consider it.
United
States v. State Investment Co., 264 U.
S. 206,
264 U. S. 211;
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Railway Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548,
281 U. S. 558;
United States v. Commercial Credit Co., 286 U. S.
63,
286 U. S. 67.
And here petitioner argues that the apportionment should be made
on the basis of physical property --
i.e., factor 2 above
described. That would assign to North Dakota less than 15 percent
of the system value. Petitioner did not submit it to the board as
the measure, or even include it in the group of factors upon which
it based the calculations included in its brief. It is not
sustained by evidence.
When regard is had to the size of the Great Northern system and
the variety of things that affect values to be attributed to its
railroad in different States and the numerous matters as to which
there may be wide difference of opinion, it must be held that
percentages lower than, or substantially the same as, those
petitioner itself used and submitted to the board are not
confiscatory or arbitrary.
Helvering v. Taylor,
293 U. S. 507, has
no bearing.
3. There remains to consider whether the assessment may be
sustained against petitioner's claim that, assuming validity of
apportionment, the valuation was arbitrarily made, and is grossly
excessive.
No testimony was given by the tax commissioner or any other
member of the board. They could not be compelled to submit to
examination as to the operation of their minds in making the
challenged assessment.
Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. Co. v.
Babcock, 204 U. S. 585,
204 U. S. 593;
Bohler v. Callaway, 267 U. S. 479,
267 U. S. 491.
It results that resort must be had to determinations of the board,
findings
Page 297 U. S. 146
of the lower courts, the evidence, and the facts judicially
known.
From the answer and evidence, it unquestionably appears that the
board valued petitioner's system and made apportionment to North
Dakota. The assessments for the years 1929-1933 are: $83,294,677,
$83,294,688, $82,999,997, $78,850,024, and $78,832,888. The trial
judge found no overassessment for 1932, but refused to find the
value of the property in 1933 or whether the assessment for that
year was excessive, and he found that there is no evidence, other
than that offered to show overvaluation, that the assessment was
fraudulent, or made with intent to defraud petitioner. The Circuit
Court of Appeals held that petitioner failed to prove the method
employed by the board to make the assessment or that it was grossly
excessive and arbitrary.
Respondents' witness prepared tabulations which were put in
evidence as Exhibit P. It shows: (1) the value for each year, based
on averages for preceding five years, from 1929 to 1933, inclusive,
of the system operating property as indicated by: (a) stock and
bond value less value of nonoperating property; (b) net operating
income capitalized at 6 percent; (c) the average of (a) and (b);
(2) apportionment of system value to North Dakota by percentages
reflected by average of: (a) three use factors --
i.e.,
transportation service, traffic units, and gross operating revenue;
(b) mileage of tracks operated and the three use factors; (c)
mileage of tracks owned and operated and leased and operated and
the three use factors; (d) mileage of track operated, physical
property, and the three use factors; (e) mileage of track operated,
physical property, the three use factors, and net revenue; (3)
apportionment to North Dakota of: (a) stock and bond value; (b)
capitalized value; (c) average of (a) and (b); 4. the North Dakota
assessments. Ratio of assessments to apportionments made on (a)
stock and
Page 297 U. S. 147
bond value; (b) capitalized value; (c) average of (a) and (b).
[
Footnote 2]
The composite of the five-year average of stock and bond value
and of net operating income capitalized for 1932 was $415,278,961;
admittedly, that was produced by the use of the two methods shown
by respondents' witness to be universally approved as the best
methods for finding system value. The 1932 assessment is 99.93
percent of that figure apportioned on the basis of the three use
factors,
Page 297 U. S. 148
98.39 percent apportioned on the basis of track mileage operated
and three use factors; 96.02 percent apportioned on tracks owned
and operated and leased and operated and the three use factors,
104.29 percent apportioned on track mileage, physical property, and
the three use factors; 101.40 percent apportioned on track
operated, physical property, three use factors, and net
revenue.
If the system value for 1933 had been computed on the basis of
the stock and bond and capitalized income methods used for 1932, it
would have been $345,188,820, about 83 percent of the corresponding
figure for 1932, less than 76 percent of like figures for 1932 and
1930, and about 79 percent of that for 1929.
See footnote 2 The 1933 assessment exceeds
what would have been made on system valuation based on the
five-year average of stock and bond values, apportioned by use of
the five factors above described (advocated by the state as "the
fairest basis of allocation") by 19.97 percent, exceeds that based
on net operating income capitalized by 29.44 percent, on the
composite of both by 24.52 percent. The testimony and computations
made by respondents' witness show that the 1933 assessment could
not have
Page 297 U. S. 149
been arrived at by any calculation based on the principles and
methods governing the tax commissioner in his computations
submitted to the board through a period of years and constituting
the controlling bases of the assessments made by it. The five-year
average of the composite of the stock and bond and capitalized
income values, held by all to be the best method, produced for 1932
a valuation within one-sixth of 1 percent of the assessment for
that year. The board arbitrarily adopted that assessment, less
value of a short stretch of track removed, as the assessment for
1933. If the assessment for that year had been based on the
principles governing in 1932 and preceding years, it would have
been less by about $13,000,000 than the amount fixed by the board
and here in controversy.
The long period through which, even in 1933, the depression had
extended compelled the conclusion that it was not temporary.
Judicial notice must be taken of the fact that, late in 1929, there
occurred a great collapse of values of all classes of property --
railroads, other utilities, commodities, and securities, and that
the depression then commenced progressively became greater. In
making assessments in that period, the board was bound to take into
account and give due weight to the sudden, progressive, and
enormous declines of value.
Respondents' witness testified: the purchasing power of money
greatly increased, and, correspondingly, values decreased, from
1929 to 1933. The Dow-Jones & Co. average of 30 industrial
stocks fell from 383.17 in September, 1929, to 41.22 in July, 1932.
The average of 20 railroad stocks fell between the same dates from
189.11 to 13.23; total market value of all common and preferred
stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange fell from eighty-nine
and one-half billion to fifteen and one-half billion dollars.
Assessing officials and equalizing boards were confronted with a
very difficult situation.
Page 297 U. S. 150
"Values which had been more or less stable for a generation have
melted rapidly away. If all assessments had been reduced to conform
to actual market value, the State and its subdivisions would have
ceased to function, as the revenue would not even approximate
necessary expenses."
Changed business conditions affecting petitioner's traffic,
coupled with competition from new methods of transportation,
precluded belief that prospective improvement in petitioner's
business and earnings would within a reasonable time, if ever, be
sufficient to justify the assessment in question.
Cf.
Nashville, C. & St.L. Ry. v. Walters, 294 U.
S. 405,
294 U. S. 423.
But from 1929 to and including 1933, the board reduced assessments
of petitioner's North Dakota railroad properties by less than 6
percent. It is everywhere known that the general decline in values
in that period was very much greater than that. The evidence
conclusively shows that the value of petitioner's system and of its
North Dakota railroad properties declined several times 6 percent.
Its traffic, gross earnings, and net income from operation fell off
enormously. [
Footnote 3] The
1929 collapse and the decline progressively following it resulted
in much lower levels of prices and values which, at least as early
as 1933, were to be regarded
Page 297 U. S. 151
not as temporary, but as at least relatively permanent.
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
284 U. S. 248,
284 U. S.
260-261;
Los Angeles Gas Co. v. Railroad
Comm'n, 289 U. S. 287,
289 U. S.
311-312.
In cases such as this, courts are not permitted to weigh
evidence of value. They may not substitute their opinions for the
findings of assessing officers or boards. But, when the
jurisdiction of the District Court is appropriately invoked, it is
its duty to decide upon the merits of the taxpayer's claim that the
assessment of his property was arbitrarily made and is grossly
excessive. It clearly appears that the board failed to give
reasonable weight to the falling off of petitioner's traffic, gross
earnings, operating income, the extraordinary shrinkage in values
of railroad properties, the prices of commodities, and securities
generally. The value of petitioner's property varied with the
profitableness of its use, present and prospective.
Cleveland,
C., C. & St.L. Railway Co. v. Backus, 154 U.
S. 439,
154 U. S. 445;
Southern Ry. Co. v. Kentucky, 274 U. S.
76,
274 U. S. 81-82.
Petitioner's system net operating income was for 1929 in round
figures $32,457,000; in the following years $21,912,000,
$12,669,000, $1,290,000. The board persistently disregarded known
conditions essential to the just ascertainment of value. While the
vanishing of values described by respondents' witness, the
reduction of the tax base from 75 percent to 50 percent, and the
established limitations upon rates of taxation justify diligence on
the part of the assessing authorities that taxable property be
assessed at full value, neither these nor any other conditions
warrant or excuse arbitrary or excessive valuations.
The facts alleged in respondents' answer and those shown by the
testimony of their witness and his computations above described
compel the conclusion that, by reason of changed conditions
affecting value, the methods or system by which the board arrived
at the 1933 value of petitioner's railway as a whole were plainly
calculated
Page 297 U. S. 152
to produce a grossly excessive assessment of its North Dakota
property for that year. That assessment being shown to have been
arbitrarily made and grossly excessive, petitioner's right to
relief was not conditioned upon overassessment or upon its
submission to overtaxation in 1932 or any prior year. It follows
that the lower courts erred in holding that petitioner was not
entitled to any relief. The evidence persuasively supports
petitioner's claim that, by reason of system overvaluation, the
North Dakota assessment was too high by $15,000,000. And, resolving
all doubts in favor of validity, the evidence must be held
conclusively to show that the challenged assessment exceeds the
true and full value of petitioner's North Dakota railroad
properties in 1933 by $10,000,000.
See footnote 2 The board's failure to consider the
enormous diminution in value of petitioner's property caused by the
1929 collapse and the progress of the depression is, within the
principles of our decisions, the equivalent in law of intention to
make a grossly excessive assessment for 1933 in disregard of
petitioner's rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. We need not consider whether the assessment is repugnant
to the equal protection or commerce clause. Unquestionably, the
assessment was made in plain violation of established principles
that govern property valuation.
Fargo v. Hart,
193 U. S. 490,
193 U. S. 502;
Rowley v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., supra, 293 U. S.
109-110;
Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Public
Service Comm'n, 262 U. S. 276,
262 U. S.
287-28;
Bluefield Water Works & Imp. Co. v.
Public Service Comm'n, 262 U. S. 679,
262 U. S. 692;
McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U.
S. 400,
272 U. S.
408-412;
Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United
States, 148 U. S. 312.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals will be reversed.
The case will be remanded to the District Court with directions to
enter a decree for petitioner, the plaintiff below, that
respondents the defendants below, be
Page 297 U. S. 153
enjoined from collecting on account of the taxes levied against
petitioner on the basis or because of the challenged assessment any
amount in excess of such proportion of the taxes levied as the
value above indicated, $68,832,888, is to the assessment,
$78,832,888, being 87.3149 percent; the injunction will be
conditioned upon payment by petitioner of that proportion of the
taxes. And the decree shall declare that it is without prejudice to
the authority of the state board of equalization, if any it has,
again to assess petitioner's properties for 1933.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Comp.Laws 1913, § 2244. Initiated measure approved June 29,
1932, Laws 1933, p. 493, amending 1925 Supp. § 2122a, reduced
the percentage of assessed value to be used in calculating the tax
from 75 percent to 50 percent.
[
Footnote 2]
Exhibit P need not be given in full. The following statement
shows by years, 1929-1933, inclusive:
Column 1, system value according to average of stock and bond
value and capitalized value.
Column 2, percentage of system value in North Dakota as
reflected by the apportionment factors used in the exhibit.
Column 3, values apportioned to North Dakota according to
average of stock and bond values and capitalized values.
Column 4, the North Dakota assessments.
Column 5, ratio of assessments to assigned values on the basis
of stock and bond values.
Column 6, ratio of assessments to assigned values on the basis
of capitalized values.
Column 7, ratio of assessments to assigned values on the basis
of composite of both.
bwm:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Apportionment to North Dakota on basis of three use factors,
i.e., transportation service,
traffic units, and gross operating revenue.
1929 $437,789,980 18.826% $82,418,342 $83,294,677 112.09% 92.01%
101.06%
1930 460,989,128 18.80 86,665,956 83,294,688 107.12% 87.15
96.11
1931 455,777,674 18.853 85,927,765 82,999,997 103.73 90.37
96.59
1932 415,278,961 19.00 78,903,003 78,850,024 102.36 97.62
99.93
1933 345,188,820 19.14 66,069,140 78,832,888 114.95 124.03
119.32
Apportionment to North Dakota on basis of trackage operated and
the three use factors.
1929 437,789,980 19.113 83,674,799 83,294,677 110.40 90.63
99.55
1930 460,989,128 19.148 88,270, 198 83,294,688 105.17 85.57
94.36
1931 455,777,674 19.185 87,440,947 82,999,997 101.94 88.81
94.92
1932 415,278,961 19.298 80,140,534 78,850,024 100.78 96.11
98.39
1933 345,188,820 19.345 66,776,777 78,832,888 113.73 122.71
118.05
Apportionment to North Dakota on basis of mileage of tracks
owned and operated and leased
and operated and the three use factors.
1929 437,789,980 19.59 85,763,057 83,294,677 107.72 88.42
97.12
1930 460,989,128 19.632 90,501,386 83,294,688 102.58 83.46
92.04
1931 455,777,674 19.673 89,655,142 82,999,997 99.41 86.60
92.57
1932 415,278,961 19.775 82,121,415 78,850,024 98.35 93.79
96.02
1933 345,188,820 19.812 68,388,809 78,832,888 111.05 119.82
115.27
Apportionment to North Dakota on basis of trackage operated,
physical property and the
three use factors.
1929 437,789,980 18.05 79,021,091 83,294,677 116.91 95.97
105.41
1930 460,989,128 18.102 83,448,252 83,294,688 111.25 90.51
99.82
1931 455,777,674 18.136 82,659,839 82,999,997 107.84 93.94
100.41
1932 415,278,961 18.206 75,605,688 78,850,024 106.82 101.88
104.29
1933 345,188,820 18.34 63,307,629 78,832,888 119.97 129.44
124.52
Apportionment to North Dakota on basis of trackage operated,
physical property, the three
use factors and net revenue.
1929 437,789,980 18.783 82,230,092 83,294,677 112.34 92.22
101.29
1930 460,989,128 18.773 86,541,489 83,294,688 107.27 87.28
96.25
1931 455,777,674 18.710 85,276,003 82,999,997 104.53 91.06
97.33
1932 415,278,961 18.725 77,760,985 78,850,024 103.86 99.05
101.40
1933 345,188,820 18.763 64,767,778 78,832,888 117.26 126.52
121.72
ewm:
[
Footnote 3]
The tabulation follows:
Railway Net Railway
Year Operating Revenue Operating Income
1922 $103,542,937 $17,276,598
1923 120,077,771 24,731,992
1924 110,243,104 24,201,287
1925 114,924,960 28,276,183
1926 117,383,909 31,280,429
1927 117,904,005 29,202,540
1928 126,737,091 31,294,069
1929 125,932,808 32,457,523
1930 104,996,076 21,912,508
1931 77,087,454 12,669,420
1932 55,549,247 1,290,551
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting*
I think the judgment should be affirmed.
The decision of the Court turns on the constitutionality of the
valuation, for 1933 taxation, of so much of petitioner's railroad
as is located in North Dakota.
The Court finds that the valuation of the railroad within the
state is not so disproportionate to the value of petitioner's
entire railroad system as to transcend due process.
See Fargo
v. Hart, 193 U. S. 490,
193 U. S. 500;
compare Rowley v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co.,
293 U. S. 102,
293 U. S.
109-111. It does not find, and there is no contention,
that there has been any discrimination in the valuation of
petitioner's property as compared with that of other property in
the state. Its decision that the tax is invalid rests on the single
ground that the valuation is excessive.
This conclusion is based on an elaborate examination of the
evidence produced before the trial court, evidence which it is
assumed affords the only basis for the valuation of the Board of
Equalization. Emphasizing as the important, if not controlling,
factors in determining taxable value the depressed market value of
the securities of the entire railroad, representing its property in
many states, its diminished earnings, its capitalized value
based
Page 297 U. S. 154
on what it considers, for this purpose, a fair rate of return,
the Court concludes that, as prices of securities and earnings were
much lower in 1933 than in 1932 and earlier years, the valuation of
the railroad property in North Dakota for that year should have
been correspondingly reduced. And, because the decline in value
found by this formula is substantial, something like 20 percent,
and as the Board placed the same valuation on the property in 1933
as in 1932, it is declared that the valuation is so arbitrary as to
make any tax based upon it a violation of due process.
We may lay aside any consideration of the numerous uncertain and
imponderable elements involved in valuation of a railroad which may
well make the use of such a formula untrustworthy in times like the
present,
see Rowley v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co.,
supra, 293 U. S. 109;
which would seem to make it impossible for a court to say that the
rejection of the results of such a formula by the taxing officials
involved anything more than the exercise of an authorized judgment,
which courts cannot pronounce arbitrary merely because it does not
conform to their own.
The feature of the decision which is especially a matter of
concern is that, for the first time, this Court is setting aside a
tax as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment on the ground that
the assessment on which it is computed is too high, without any
showing that the assessment is discriminatory or that petitioner is
in any way bearing an undue share of the tax burden imposed on all
property owners in the state.
Assessment for taxation is a
quasi-judicial act, and
the tax assessment has the quality of a judgment.
Hagar v.
Reclamation District, 111 U. S. 701,
111 U. S. 709;
Gallup v. Schmidt, 183 U. S. 300;
Londoner v. City & County of Denver, 210 U.
S. 373,
210 U. S. 386;
Turner v. Wade, 254 U. S. 64. Even
if the valuation of the Board be erroneous, the errors of a
state
Page 297 U. S. 155
judicial officer, however gross, whether of law or of fact, are
not violations of the Constitution, and are not open to review in
the federal courts merely because they are errors. If
overvaluation, even though gross or intentional, were, without
more, held to infringe the Fourteenth Amendment, every taxpayer
would be at liberty to ask the federal courts to review a state tax
assessment upon the bare allegation that it is grossly excessive,
and without showing that it does more than subject him to taxation
on the same basis as every other taxpayer.
It has long been recognized that discrimination between
taxpayers, if intentional or so persistent as to be systematic, is
a denial of equal protection, whether the discrimination is in the
application of different rates to property in the same class or in
inequality in its valuation.
Iowa-Des Moines Nat. Bank v.
Bennett, 284 U. S. 239,
284 U. S. 245;
Cumberland Coal Co. v. Board of Revision, 284 U. S.
23,
284 U. S. 25ff;
Chicago G.W. Ry. Co. v. Kendall, 266 U. S.
94,
266 U. S. 98-99;
Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Dakota County, 260 U.
S. 441,
260 U. S. 445;
Raymond v. Chicago Union Traction Co., 207 U. S.
20,
207 U. S. 37.
But to hold that a tax is unconstitutional because based upon an
assessment which is too high as compared with the value of the same
property for purposes of condemnation overlooks the principle upon
which property taxes are laid and collected. Taxation is but a
method of raising revenue to defray the expenses of government, and
of distributing the burden among those who must bear it. The
taxpayer cannot complain of the tax burden which he has to bear who
shows no inequality in the application of it. And plainly he does
not show inequality merely by proving that the valuation of his
property for taxation is much higher than its market or its
condemnation value.
The burden of a property tax like the present is distributed by
applying a rate of tax to the assessed valuation of all taxable
property. Variation of either, without
Page 297 U. S. 156
discrimination, affects the amount of the tax, but not the
equality of its distribution. The activities and expenses of
government, over which the state has plenary control, do not cease
in time of depression. They may increase. The state may meet those
expenses by raising the valuation of taxable property or by raising
tax rates, or both, without infringing any constitutional immunity.
Here, the state, so far as appears, is raising the needed revenue
and distributing the burden as in previous years, by continuing old
valuations. However high those valuations may be, if not
discriminatory, they impose no unequal share of the tax burden on
petitioner, and cannot be said to be arbitrary or oppressive in the
constitutional sense.
Recently we held that a claim that the rate of a
nondiscriminatory tax is excessively high presents no
constitutional question.
Magnano Co. v. Hamilton,
292 U. S. 40,
292 U. S. 44. No
reason has been advanced at the bar or given in the opinion of the
Court why a tax valuation, excessive when compared with
condemnation or market value, should have any different legal
consequences. In neither case is inequality of the tax burden
established. It is for that reason that this Court has held,
without exception, that valuation of property for tax purposes,
however excessive, not shown to be discriminatory, infringes no
constitutional immunity.
Rowley v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co.,
supra, 293 U. S. 111;
Southern Ry. Co. v. Watts, 260 U.
S. 519,
260 U. S. 526,
and see Cumberland Coal Co. v. Board of Revision,
284 U. S. 23,
284 U. S. 25ff;
Sunday Lake Iron Co. v. Wakefield, 247 U.
S. 350.
Cases setting aside an excessive allocation of railroad system
value to the taxing state,
Fargo v. Hart, supra; Rowley v.
Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., supra, or setting aside
improper valuation made for purposes of condemning property,
Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States, 148 U.
S. 312, or for determining whether public utility rates
are confiscatory,
Missouri ex rel. Southwestern
Bell Telephone
Page 297 U. S. 157
Co. v. Public Service Comm'n, 262 U.
S. 276,
262 U. S.
287-288;
Bluefield, etc., Co. v. Public Service
Comm'n, 262 U. S. 679,
262 U. S. 692;
McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U.
S. 400,
272 U. S. 408,
272 U. S. 412,
do not support the decision now made. In such cases, the
complainant, because the valuation is too high or too low, suffers
a harm from which the Constitution guarantees immunity. But the
Constitution guarantees no immunity from taxation even though the
tax, because of its amount, may be burdensome,
see Magnano Co.
v. Hamilton, supra, or because it is as high in a year of
depression and falling property values as in years of prosperity.
Beyond this, petitioner does not show that it is harmed, or present
any case for invoking the protection of the Constitution.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO join in this
opinion.