Summary
In R. R. v. Comrs. of Carteret, 75 N.C. 474, cited by plaintiff, it was held that Art. V, sec. 5, of the Constitution did not exempt the physical property of the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad Company from taxation, although the State of North Carolina owned a majority of the capital stock of the corporation.
Summary of this case from Weaverville v. Hobbs, Comr. Veterans Loan FundOpinion
June Term, 1876.
Railroads — Taxation — Constitutional Law.
1. So much of section 11, subsec. 3, chap. 184, Laws 1874-'75, as provides that railroad beds listed for taxation, "shall not be valued at less than $8,000 per mile," without regard to its real value, is in conflict with the Constitution, and therefore void.
2. The provision contained in sec. 6, Art. V. of the Constitution, exempting property belonging to the State from taxation, does not embrace the interest of the State in business enterprises, such as railroads and the like, but applies to the property of the State held for State purposes."
APPLICATION for an injunction, heard before Seymour, J., at February Term, 1876, of CARTERET.
Application was made to his Honor, on 12 November, 1875, for a restraining order against the collection of certain taxes; which order his Honor granted, upon the plaintiff's giving bond, etc., at the same time giving notice to the defendant to appear at the next Superior Court of Carteret, and show cause why the injunction should not be continued until the hearing.
The defendant at the said term (February Term, 1876), by way of showing cause, urged that the tax levied on plaintiff's property was not exorbitant or excessive, and that the State of North Carolina, although a stockholder to the amount of two-thirds of the stock of the plaintiff company, stood on a footing with the private stockholders in said company, and that being so, that State's interest in the company's road and other property was not exempt from taxation. The company plaintiff, on the other hand, contended that the interest of the State in said road was exempt from taxation, under sec. 6, Art. VII of the Constitution, and that the tax levied and sought to be collected by the defendant was unconstitutional and void.
At the same term the plaintiff moved for a perpetual injunction against the defendant's collecting said tax, which motion the (475) court, being of opinion with the defendant, overruled.
From the judgment of the court, refusing to grant an injunction, the plaintiff appealed.
The grounds of the plaintiff's application for a restraining order, and other facts pertinent to the points decided in this Court, are stated in the opinion of Justice READE.
Hubbard and Clark Son for appellant.
Smith Strong, contra.
1. The Constitution, Art. V, sec. 3, provides that all property, real and personal, shall be taxed by a "uniform rule," according to its "true value in money."
The statute (1874-'75, chap. 184, sec. 11, subsec. 3) provides that railroad beds shall be given in the counties where they lie, and that they shall not be valued at less than $8,000 per mile.
Now, if the Legislature were to enact that every man's land shall be valued at eight dollars per acre, without regard to its real, value, its conflict with the Constitution would be manifest. And so, if it provided that no man's land should be valued at less than eight dollars per acre, although it be worth much less.
We have to declare, therefore, that the aforesaid statute under which the defendants made the valuation of the road bed, as we infer from their letter to the plaintiff, is unconstitutional.
2. The State owns two-thirds of the capital stock of the road, and yet the defendants valued the road as if the State had no property in it.
The plaintiff complains of this because the Constitution, Art. V, sec. 6, provides that "property belonging to the State shall (476) be exempt from taxation."
Although this language is general, yet we do not think it was intended to embrace this case. The Capitol is not taxed because the State would be paying out money just to receive it back again, less the expenses of handling it. And if taxed for local purposes it would to that extent embarrass the State government.
Nor is it any hardship upon the locality to have the property exempt, as the advantages from it are supposed to compensate for the exemption. And, as with the Capitol, so with other State property.
But where the State steps down from her sovereignty and embarks with individuals in business enterprises, the same considerations do not prevail. The State does not engage in such enterprises for the benefit of the State as a State, but for the benefit of individuals or communities — at least this is generally so — and if the State gets no taxes she may get nothing. Suppose, for illustration, that the plaintiff should declare no dividends and consume the whole earnings in current expenses; in that case the State as a State would never derive anything from the road except the taxes.
At any rate, we do not think the exemption in the Constitution embraces the interest of the State in business enterprises, but applies to the property of the State held for State purposes.
The property may be valued upon the basis of this opinion, and that such valuation may be collected, and the excess, if any, restrained.
PER CURIAM. Error.
(477)