1. Questions not decided in the state court because not raised
and presented by the complaining party will not be reexamined in
this Court on a writ of error under the twenty-fifth section of the
Judiciary Act.
2. It is not sufficient that such a question might have arisen
and been applicable to the case unless it appears in the record
that it did arise and was applied by the state court in disposing
of the controversy.
3. A statute of Massachusetts which requires corporations having
a capital stock divided into shares, to pay a tax of a certain
percentage (one-sixth of one percent) upon "the excess of the
market value" of all such stock over the value of its real estate
and machinery is, under the settled course of decision in the State
of Massachusetts on its constitution and laws, a statute which
imposes a franchise tax.
4. The tax is lawful.
5.
Provident Institution v.
Massachusetts (last preceding case) affirmed.
This case, which was one agreed on and stated in the court
Page 73 U. S. 633
below, raised, under some circumstantial variety -- the
defendant in it there being a manufacturing company having capital
stock -- the same substantial question raised in the two preceding
cases of saving fund societies. It was thus:
A statute of Massachusetts provides:
"SEC. 1. That the assessors of the several towns shall annually
return to the treasurer of the commonwealth the names of all
corporations 'having a capital stock divided into shares,' &c.,
and the value of the
real estate and
machinery
for which each is taxed in such towns."
"SEC. 2. That every such corporation shall annually return of
the same officer 'the amount of the capital stock of the
corporation, and the par value and the cash market value of the
shares, on the 1st day of May.'"
"SEC. 5. That a board of commissioners shall ascertain the
excess of the market value of all the capital stock of
each corporation over the value of its real estate and machinery,
and that the corporation shall annually pay to the commonwealth
'
a tax of one and one-sixth percent upon such
excess.'"
With this statute in force, a return from the Hamilton
Manufacturing Company, a corporation of the sort described, and
incorporated by Massachusetts, showed that the cash market value of
its capital stock did not exceed by more than $263,997 the value of
its real estate, machinery, and of its other property,
provided that from this last were excluded securities of
the United States held by the company, and which, by the act of
Congress authorizing their issue, were declared to be exempt from
taxation by state authority, "whether held by individuals,
corporations, or associations." But that with those securities
included, the capital stock did exceed by a greater sum than that
named the value of such real estate and machinery.
A tax being demanded by the State of Massachusetts on more than
the $263,997 (supposing that the tax was laid at the rate
prescribed), it necessarily fell -- and of course unlawfully -- on
the exempted federal securities
if the tax laid by the
statute was one on
property.
Page 73 U. S. 634
If, on the other hand, the tax was one on the franchise and
privileges of the corporation, and such a tax, when operating as in
this case, was lawful, then it was rightly demanded, even insofar
as it might affect the securities of the United States. The
Hamilton Company refused to pay the tax demanded, and suit was
brought accordingly. The court below gave judgment for the whole
sum demanded. The case was now here under the twenty-fifth section
of the Judiciary Act.
Excepting therefore a matter apparently suggested in that court
but not pressed there or here, as to whether the company could,
under its charter, rightly hold federal securities, the questions
now were:
1. Whether the tax imposed by the state was to be regarded as a
tax on property or as a tax on the franchise and privileges of the
corporation?
2. Whether, if the last and when operating as it did here, it
was lawful so far as affecting the federal securities?
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Corporations as well as individuals are subject to taxation in
Massachusetts, and with that view the assessors of cities and towns
are required annually to return, on or before the first Monday of
August, to the treasurer of the state, the names of all chartered
corporations having a capital stock divided into shares,
established in their respective cities or towns, or owning real
estate therein, and the value of their real estate and machinery,
for which they were taxed in such cities or towns, on the first day
of May preceding such returns. Such corporations, if their stock is
not exempted from taxation, state and municipal, by the laws of the
United States, are also required annually, between the first and
tenth days of May, to return to the state treasurer, under the oath
of their treasurer, a complete list of their shareholders, with
their places of residence, the number of
Page 73 U. S. 635
shares belonging to each, the amount of their capital stock, the
corporation's place of business, and the par value and the cash
market value of the shares on the first day of May. [
Footnote 1]
Commissioners are also constituted by the fifth section of the
act, and they are required to ascertain from the returns or
otherwise the excess of the market value of all the capital stock
of every such corporation, not exempted as aforesaid, over the
value of their real estate and machinery, if any, as returned by
the assessors of the cities and towns, and having ascertained such
excess, as required, it is made their duty, on or before the first
Monday of October following, to notify the corporation treasurer of
the result of their doings, and the provision is that every such
corporation shall annually, on or before the first Monday of
November succeeding, pay to the treasurer of the state a tax of one
and one-sixth percent upon such excess.
Proper steps were taken by the commissioners, and the agreed
statement shows that they duly ascertained the excess of the market
value of all the capital stock of the defendant corporation over
the value of their real estate and machinery, as returned by the
local assessors, and that within the time required they notified
the treasurer of the corporation of the ascertained result.
Cash market value of the capital stock, as ascertained, was
twelve hundred and thirty thousand dollars, as appears by the
agreed statement, and the value of the real estate and machinery,
as actually returned by the local assessors, was nine hundred and
fifty-nine thousand four hundred dollars, and the agreed statement
also shows that the taxes upon that valuation as assessed to the
corporation by the local assessors were duly paid. Excess of the
cash market value of the capital stock over their real estate and
machinery, as ascertained by the commissioners, was two hundred and
seventy thousand six hundred dollars, as agreed by the parties.
In addition to their real estate and machinery, the corporation
defendants owned personal property standing on their
Page 73 U. S. 636
books as valued at two hundred and sixty-three thousand nine
hundred and ninety-seven dollars and seventy-five cents, and also
bonds of the United States to the amount of three hundred thousand
dollars, which, it is conceded, were exempt from state
taxation.
Amount for which they were taxed was two hundred and seventy
thousand six hundred dollars, but they had on their books a balance
of untaxed property, besides the bonds, of two hundred and
sixty-three thousand nine hundred and ninety-seven dollars and
seventy-five cents. They refused to pay the tax, and the state
brought suit to recover the amount. Judgment was rendered in favor
of the state for the sum of three thousand six hundred and fifteen
dollars and seventy-six cents, which is the amount of the tax of
one and one-sixth percent upon the whole excess of the cash market
value of their capital stock, over the value of their real estate
and machinery, as returned by the assessors. Dissatisfied with the
judgment of the state court, the corporation defendants sued out
this writ of error and removed the cause into this Court.
1. Questions not decided in the state court because not raised
and presented by the complaining party will not be reexamined in
this Court on a writ of error sued out under the twenty-fifth
section of the Judiciary Act. Apart from the question of
jurisdiction, it is necessary that it shall appear that the
question presented for decision in this Court was raised in the
state court and that the decision of the state court was given as
required in that section. Clear and necessary intendment that the
question was raised and must have been decided as claimed in order
to have induced the judgment is sufficient, but it is not
sufficient to show that such a question might have arisen and been
applicable to the case, unless it appears in the record that it did
arise and was applied by the state court in disposing of the
controversy.
2. Defendant corporation resisted the claim of the state in the
state court solely upon the ground that they were not
Page 73 U. S. 637
liable under that act of the legislature to pay any tax at all
to the state, because the cash market value of their capital stock
did not exceed the returned value of their real estate and
machinery, and the value of the bonds held by them which are exempt
from state taxation. On the other hand, the state contended that
the defendants were bound by virtue of that act to pay a tax to the
state treasurer upon the whole excess of the cash market value, as
ascertained, of their capital stock over the value of their real
estate and machinery as returned by the assessors.
Liability to taxation in some form was conceded by the
defendants except for the amount of their government securities,
and the state did not claim any right to tax those securities or
their real estate and machinery included in the lists furnished to
the local assessors. Obvious issue between the parties was whether
the value of the bonds held by the defendants should or should not
be deducted from the excess of the cash market value of their
capital stock over the value of their real estate and machinery.
And the parties, taking the same view as to the real issue between
them, agreed that if the court was of the opinion that such a
deduction should be made from the said excess as ascertained by the
commissioners, then judgment should be entered for the defendants,
otherwise for the plaintiff, for such an amount as in the opinion
of the court the state is entitled to recover, with interest.
Viewed in any light, the agreed statement of facts shows to a
demonstration that the only question in the record not fully
determined in the case just decided is whether the tax imposed by
the state is properly to be regarded as a tax on property or as a
tax on the privileges and franchises of the corporation. Such a tax
so levied is clearly not proportional as is required by the state
constitution in respect to rates and taxes, and consequently, if
sustained at all, either in whole or in part, it must be as an
exercise of the power conferred in the state constitution of
imposing reasonable duties and excises upon "commodities" within
the state. Taxation, as contemplated in the provision under
consideration,
Page 73 U. S. 638
on the corporations designated in the second section of the act,
is without any reference to the amount required to be raised in the
state on the actual property held by the corporation, and without
any reference to the whole amount of property in the state liable
to be assessed for state and municipal purposes. [
Footnote 2]
Regarded as a tax on property, therefore, the tax is plainly
invalid, and cannot be supported for a moment, as the law, if
construed as authorizing such a tax, is in direct contravention of
the state constitution as understood from the time of its adoption.
Manufacturing corporations are private corporations in the
strictest sense, as they are created for the convenience of the
corporation, and are charged with no public duties whatever. Under
the laws of the state and the provisions of their charters, they
enjoy great privileges adapted to the purposes of private profit,
and by the laws of the state they are exempt from all other
taxation, municipal or state, except a property tax on their real
estate and machinery, which is based on a valuation in the same
manner as taxes are imposed on the property of individuals.
Corporate franchises, as determined in the preceding case, are
legal estates, and not mere naked powers granted to the
corporation, but powers coupled with an interest which vest in the
corporation by virtue of their charter, and the rule is equally
well settled that the privileges and franchises of a private
corporation, unless exempted in terms which amount to a contract,
are as much the legitimate subjects of taxation as any other
property of the citizens within the sovereign power of the state.
Such corporations are not exempted by the laws of the state, and
never were in terms which deprived the legislature of the power to
impose on them a franchise tax. [
Footnote 3]
All trades and avocations by which the citizens acquire a
livelihood may also be taxed by the state for the support of
Page 73 U. S. 639
the state government. Power to that effect resides in the state
independent of the federal government, and is wholly unaffected by
the fact that the corporation or individual has or has not made
investments in federal securities. Unless such be the rule, the two
systems of government, state and federal, cannot both continue to
exist, as the states will be left without any means of support or
of discharging their public obligations.
Congress undoubtedly may levy and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises for the purposes described in the
Constitution, but the power therein conferred does not,
proprio
vigore, operate as a prohibition upon the states to exercise
the same powers to raise moneys to support their own governments.
They cannot lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports except
what may be absolutely necessary for executing their inspection
laws, not because Congress may lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises, but because the Constitution expressly
provides that no state shall exercise that power without the
consent of the Congress. [
Footnote
4]
Want of authority in the states to tax the securities of the
United States issued in the exercise of the admitted power of
Congress to borrow money on the credit of the United States is
equally certain, although there is no express prohibition in the
Constitution to that effect. Outside of those provisions, however,
the power of the state to tax extends to all objects, except the
instruments and means of the federal government, within the
sovereign power of the state. Guided by these principles in the
construction of the fifth section of the act under consideration,
it is quite clear that the substantial question presented for
decision is the same as that determined in the case just decided.
Only difference is that different elements of calculation are
prescribed as the basis of computation in ascertaining the amount
of the required contribution.
Separated from the peculiar provision of the state
constitution,
Page 73 U. S. 640
and the long practice under the original decision, the present
decision of the state court upon the subject might well be
criticized as founded in unsubstantial distinctions, but when
weighed as an exposition of that peculiar clause and in view of the
long practice of the state, commencing long before the prior
decision was made, it is not possible to withhold from the
conclusion a full and unqualified concurrence. Most of the solid
reasons for the rule are put forth in the early decision.
Successors to the Chief Justice of that day, in treating the
subject, though their opinions are able and well considered, have
not been able to add much to the cogency and conclusive character
of the reasons assigned by the court at that time in support of the
well founded distinction between franchise taxes and taxes on
property. [
Footnote 5]
Fifty years have elapsed since that decision was made, and the
practice in substance and effect is still continued, having been
repeatedly sanctioned by the unanimous decisions of the highest
judicial authority of the state. Attempt is made to support the
theory of the corporation defendants by the recent decisions of
this Court, but the effort is not successful, as was satisfactorily
shown in the preceding case, to which reference is made.
Property taxation and excise taxation, as authorized in the
Constitution of the state, are perfectly distinct, and the two
systems are easily distinguished from each other, if we adopt the
definition of the term "commodities" as uniformly given by the
courts of the state, and as universally understood by the taxpayers
and assessors. If regarded as meaning goods and wares only, there
would be much difficulty in the case, but if it signifies
"convenience, privilege, profit, and gains," as uniformly held by
the state court, then all difficulty vanishes, and the case is
clear. Such was the construction given to the term by the supreme
court of the state more than fifty years before the present
controversy arose, and the rule is well settled in this Court that
the construction of the constitution or statute of a state by the
highest judicial tribunal
Page 73 U. S. 641
of such state, in a case not involving any question under the
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act, is to be regarded as a
part of the provision, and that it is as binding upon the courts of
the United States as the text. [
Footnote 6]
Many of the views expressed by the state court in this case, as
well as those advanced by the counsel of the state in the argument
of the case, deserve particular notice. They say and we agree that
the market value of the capital stock on the shares is the basis
for computing the present tax. Whatever swells the market value
necessarily swells the tax, as is well contended for the state.
Even if a purely fictitious value is given to it by the action of
brokers or speculators, it makes no difference, the corporation
must pay the one and one-sixth percent upon the excess of such
market value of the capital stock over the value of their real
estate and machinery as returned by the local assessors.
Taxes rise with inflation, however caused or to whatever extent,
whether temporary or permanent, and depression, be it ever so great
and whether caused by imaginary difficulties or by war or famine,
lessens the demand for contribution in a corresponding ratio.
Suffice it to say that universal experience shows that actual
value, as ascertained by the appraisement of the assessors, may be
very different from the market value, as a great variety of
elements enter into the latter estimation which have no place in
the former. Demonstration of that proposition is afforded in the
very able opinion of the supreme court of the state in this
case.
Our conclusion is that the decision of the state court is
correct.
Judgment affirmed with costs.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, GRIER, J., and MILLER, J., as in the
preceding two cases, similar, dissented, and on the same ground,
to-wit, that the tax was a tax on the property, and not on the
franchises and privileges of the plaintiff in error.
[
Footnote 1]
Sessions Laws 1864, 132.
[
Footnote 2]
Commonwealth v. Hamilton Manufacturing Company, 12
Allen 300.
[
Footnote 3]
5 Mass.Stat. 76; 6 Spec.Laws, 227, 597; Sess.Laws 1830, 326; 7
Spec.Laws 192, 730; Rev.Stat. 830.
[
Footnote 4]
Art. I, § 8.
[
Footnote 5]
Portland Bank v. Apthorp, 12 Mass. 252.
[
Footnote 6]
Leffingwell v.
Warren, 2 Black 603;
Bank of
Hamilton v. Dudley, 2 Pet. 492;
Shelby
v. Gray, 11 Wheat. 351.