US SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

CINCINNATI, N.O. & T.P. R. CO. V. COMMONWEALTH, 115 U. S. 321 (1885)

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U.S. Supreme Court

Cincinnati, N.O. & T.P. R. Co. v. Commonwealth, 115 U.S. 321 (1885)

Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas

Pacific Railroad Company v. Commonwealth

Argued October 16, 19, 1885

Decided November 16, 1885

115 U.S. 321

I

N ERROR TO THE COURT OF APPEALS

OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY

Syllabus

A state statute for raising public revenue by the assessment and collection of taxes which gives notice of the proposed assessment to an owner of property to be affected by requiring him at a time named to present a statement of his property, with his estimate of its value, to a designated official charged with the duty of receiving the statement, which fixes time and place for public sessions of other officials at which this statement and estimate are to be considered, where the official valuation is to be made and when and where the party interested has the right to be present and to be heard, and which affords him opportunity, in a suit at law for the collection of the tax, to judicially contest the validity of the proceeding does not necessarily deprive him of his property without "due process of law" within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 322

A state law for the valuation of property and the assessment of taxes thereon which provides for the classification of property subject to its provisions into different classes, which makes for one class one set of provisions as to modes and methods of ascertaining the value and as to right of appeal, and different provisions for another class as to those subjects, but which provides for the impartial application of the same means and methods to all constituents of each class, so that the law shall operate equally and uniformly on all persons in similar circumstances denies to no person affected by it "equal protection of the laws" within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The Commonwealth of Kentucky brought its several actions against the railroad companies above named as plaintiffs in error respectively to recover the amounts of certain taxes levied against each of them under the provisions of "An act to prescribe the mode of ascertaining the value of the property of railroad companies for taxation and for taxing the same," approved April 3, 1878. Bullitt & Feland's General Statutes of Kentucky, 1881, 1019.

As the validity of this statute is drawn in question in these actions, it is here set out in full as follows:

"§ 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky that the president or chief officer of each railroad company or other corporation owning a railroad lying in this state shall, in the month of July in each year, return to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the state, under oath, the total length of such railroad, including the length thereof beyond the limits of the state, and designating its length within this state, and in each county, city, and incorporate town therein, together with the average value per mile thereof, for the purpose of being operated as a carrier of freight and passengers, including engines and cars and a list of the depot grounds and improvements and other real estate of the said company, and the value thereof, and the respective counties, cities, and incorporated towns in which the same are located; that if any of said railroad companies owns or operates a railroad or railroads out of this state, but in connection with its road in this state, the president or chief officer of such company shall only be required to return such proportion of the entire value of all its rolling stock as the number of miles

Page 115 U. S. 323

of its railroad in this state bears to the whole number of miles operated by said company in and out of this state."

"§ 2. That should any railroad or part of a line of railroad in this state be in the hands or under the control of a receiver or other person by order or decree of any court in this or any other state, it shall be the duty of such receiver or other person to make, under his oath, the returns and valuations required by the first section of this act, and should such president or chief officer of any railroad company or such receiver fail to make said returns and valuations on or before the first day of August in each and every year, the said auditor shall proceed and ascertain the facts and values required by this act to be returned, and in such manner and by such means as he may deem best, and at the cost of the company failing to make the returns and values."

"§ 3. That the governor of the state, on or before the first day of August, 1878, shall appoint three disinterested freeholders, citizens of this state, who shall constitute a board of equalization, who shall meet annually at the office of the Auditor in Frankfort on the first day of September in each year, a majority present constituting a quorum, for the transaction of business, and at the said meetings the auditor shall lay before them the returns made to him under this act, and any schedules and valuations as he may have made under the second section hereof, and should the valuations, or any of them, in the judgment of said board, be either too high or too low, they shall correct and equalize the same by a proper increase or decrease thereof. Said board shall keep a record of their proceedings, to be signed by each member present at any meeting, and the said board is hereby authorized to examine the books and property of any railroad company to ascertain the value of its property, or to have them examined by any suitable disinterested person, to be appointed by them for that purpose. The members of said board shall hold their office for the term of four years, and shall receive for their services ten dollars per day, and all traveling and other necessary expenses while in actual service provided, that said service shall not be for a longer period of time than twenty days in any

Page 115 U. S. 324

one year, and before proceeding to act under their appointment, they shall take an oath before the governor of the state that they will faithfully and impartially perform their duties as members of said board of equalization, and in the case of the death, resignation of either, or failure to act, the governor shall fill the vacancy by another appointment."

"§ 4. The same rate of taxation for state purposes, which is or may be in any year levied on other real estate in this commonwealth shall be and is hereby levied upon the value so found by the said board, of the railroad, rolling stock, and real estate of each company, and the same rate of taxation for the purposes of each county, city, town, or precinct in which any portion or any railroad is located which is or may be in any year levied on other real estate therein shall be and is hereby levied on the value of the real estate of said company therein and of the number of miles of such road therein reckoned as of the value of the average value of each mile of such railroad with its rolling stock as ascertained as aforesaid. And immediately after the said board shall have completed its valuations each year, the Auditor of Public Accounts shall notify the clerk of each county court of the amount so assessed for taxation in his county, and each railroad company of the amount of its assessment for taxation for state purposes, and for the purposes of such county, city, town, or precinct. And all existing laws in this state authorizing the assessment and taxation of the property of railroad companies by counties, cities, or incorporated towns are hereby repealed, and no county, city, or incorporated town in this state shall hereafter assess, levy, or collect any taxes on the property of railroad companies of this state except as provided by this act."

"§ 5. All taxes levied under the provisions of this act shall be paid on or before the 10th day of October in each year, and for a failure to pay the same, the officers of the said companies shall be subject to the same penalties to which they are now subject for a failure to pay the taxes now levied by law. And the taxes in behalf of the commonwealth may be recovered by action in the Franklin Circuit Court, and those in behalf of

Page 115 U. S. 325

the counties by actions in the courts of civil common law jurisdiction in such counties respectively."

"§ 6. That all laws in conflict with this act are repealed."

"§ 7. This act shall take effect from its passage."

The powers and duties conferred by this act upon the board of equalization were by a subsequent act, approved April 19, 1882, devolved upon the board of railroad commissioners, appointed under an act approved April 6, 1882. These actions were brought in the Franklin Circuit Court in pursuance of the fifth section of the act. The cause of action against the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railroad Company was set out in the petition, according to the practice in Kentucky, as follows:

"The plaintiff states that the defendant is a railroad company and corporation, and is and was during the year 1882 the owner of, by lease, and operating, a line of rail way lying in the State of Kentucky known as the Cincinnati Southern Railway, and the same constructed under, and chartered and incorporated by, an act of the General Assembly of the commonwealth of Kentucky, entitled"

"An act to authorize the trustees of the Cincinnati Southern Railway to acquire the right of way and to extend a line of railway through certain counties in this commonwealth,"

"approved February 13, 1872."

"Plaintiff states that the defendant, for the purpose of assessment and taxation for the year 1882 as required by law, reported to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Kentucky the total length of said road owned and operated by it as aforesaid and the value thereof per mile, and also reported its engines, cars, depot grounds, improvements, and other real estate and the value thereof. The total valuation of said roads, including sidings and other taxable property as reported, was ___ dollars."

"Plaintiff states that after said report and valuation was made to the Auditor of Public Accounts by the defendant, the board of railroad commissioners, who by law constitute a board of equalization to value and assess the railroad property of the state, after being sworn as required by law, met on the first day of September, 1882, at the office of the auditor in

Page 115 U. S. 326

Frankfort, and with a majority of said board present, constituting a quorum, the auditor placed before them the valuations, returns, and report made to him by defendant."

"Plaintiff states that said board of equalization continued its sittings from day to day, as provided by law, of which the defendant had due notice, and plaintiff avers that defendant did appear before said board by its officers, agents, and attorneys, and presented such facts, figures, and information, and argument in relation to the valuation and assessment for taxation of its said property as it saw proper to."

"Plaintiff states that said board, after a full hearing of defendant, by her officers, agents, and attorneys and a full consideration of said returns, reports, information, and arguments before them, valued and assessed for taxation for the year 1882 the defendant's line of railroad lying in this state, the same reported by defendant to the auditor, together with the rolling stock, engines, cars, depot grounds, improvements, and other real estate at the sum of $6,027,942.00, and on the ___ day of September, 1882, returned and filed with the Auditor of Public Accounts the record of said assessment and valuation, signed and attested, as provided by law, a certified copy of which, marked 'A,' is filed herewith as a part hereof."

"Plaintiff states that the Auditor of Public Accounts, before the 10th day of March, 1882, duly notified defendant of the amount of its assessment for taxation, and, as required by law, opened an account with defendant, charging it with the sum of $28,632.42, the amount of tax due the State of Kentucky upon said assessment and valuation of the defendant's property for the year 1882 at 47 1/2 cents on the one hundred dollars, which is the rate of taxation prescribed by law on such property, and all other real estate of the commonwealth. A certified copy of said account is filed herewith as a part hereof, marked 'B.'"

"Plaintiff states that the defendant is indebted to him in the sum of $28,632.42, taxes due as aforesaid for the year 1882, no part of which has been paid."

"Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment against the defendant

Page 115 U. S. 327

for said debt, and interest from October 10, 1882, and for her costs, and all proper relief."

In the case against the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, the petition is substantially the same, except the averment of the valuation of its lines of railroad, which, it is alleged, were valued and assessed at the sum of $15,521,406, on which the amount of tax at 47 1/2 cents to the $100, is $72,726.69, on which there is admitted a credit of $25,000, paid January 22, 1883.

The taxable property of the other plaintiff in error, the Chesapeake, Ohio and Southwestern Railroad Company, it is averred in the petition, otherwise substantially the same as in the other cases, was valued an assessed at $2,791,994, on which the tax levied was $13,261.98, which is credited with $6,798.32, paid January 5, 1883.

An answer was filed in each case, but, so far as they raised an issue of fact, they were withdrawn, and the causes were heard on demurrers, the questions of law being such as arose upon the face of the petitions.

Judgments were rendered in favor of the commonwealth in all the cases, and were affirmed by the Court of Appeals, and thereupon the present writs of error were allowed and have been prosecuted. chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 330

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court. After stating the facts in the language above reported, he continued: chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 331

Two federal questions arise on the record, in these cases, contained in the following propositions affirmed by the plaintiffs in error:

First, that the Act of April 3, 1878, and the taxes levied in pursuance of it, if enforced as it is sought to be, in these judgments, in effect take the property of the defendants below without due process of law, and second that they constitute a denial of the equal protection of the laws, in both particulars violating the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

In support of the first of these propositions, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiffs in error that by the enforcement of these judgments, they will be deprived of their property without due process of law because the valuation of their property under the act is made by the board of railroad commissioners without the right on their part to notice of the proceeding or the right to be heard in opposition to any proposed action of the board, in its progress.

It has, however, been repeatedly decided by this Court that the proceedings to raise the public revenue by levying and collecting taxes are not necessarily judicial, and that "due process of law," as applied to that subject, does not imply or require the right to such notice and hearing as are considered to be essential to the validity of the proceedings and judgments of judicial tribunals. Notice by statute is generally the only notice given, and that has been held sufficient. "In judging what is due process of law,'" said MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY in Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U. S. 97, 96 U. S. 107,

"respect must be had to the cause and object of the taking, whether under the taxing power, the power of eminent domain, or the power of assessment for local improvements, or none of these, and if found to be suitable or admissible in the special case, it will be adjudged to be 'due process of law;' but if found to be arbitrary, oppressive, and unjust, it may be declared to be not 'due process of law.'"

In its application to proceedings for the levy and collection chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 332

of taxes, it was said in McMillen v. Anderson, 95 U. S. 37, 95 U. S. 42, that it

"is not and never has been considered necessary to the validity of a tax . . . that the party charged should have been present, or had an opportunity to be present, in some tribunal when he was assessed."

This language, it is true, was used in the decision of a case in reference to a license tax where all the circumstances of its assessment were declared by statute, and nothing was entrusted to the discretion of public officers, but in the State Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U. S. 575, 92 U. S. 610, where the ascertainment of the taxable value of railroads was the duty of a board, as in the present cases, whose assessment was challenged for the reason that the proceeding was not "due process of law" for want of notice and a hearing, it was said by MR. JUSTICE MILLER, delivering the opinion of the Court:

"This board has its time of sitting fixed by law. Its sessions are not secret. No obstruction exists to the appearance of anyone before it to assert a right or redress a wrong, and in the business of assessing taxes, this is all that can be reasonably asked."

In the proceedings questioned in these cases there was, in fact and in law, notice and a hearing. The railroad company, by its president or chief officer, is required by law at a specified time to return to the Auditor of Public Accounts, under oath, a statement showing

"the total length of such railroad, including the length thereof beyond the limits of the state and designating its length within this state and in each county, city, and incorporate town therein, together with the average value per mile thereof, for the purpose of being operated as a carrier of freight and passengers, including engines and cars and a list of the depot grounds and improvements and other real estate of the said company, and the value thereof, and the respective counties, cities, and incorporated towns in which the same are located. That if any of said railroad companies owns or operates a railroad or railroads out of this state, but in connection with its road in this state, the president or chief officer of such company shall only be required to return such proportion of the entire value of all its rolling stock as the number of miles of its railroad in this state bears to the whole

Page 115 U. S. 333

number of miles operated by said company in and out of this state."

This return, made by the corporation through its officers, is the statement of its own case in all the particulars that enter into the question of the value of its taxable property, and may be verified and fortified by such explanations and proofs as it may see fit to insert. It is laid by the Auditor of Public Accounts before the board of railroad commissioners, and constitutes the matter on which they are to act. They are required to meet for that purpose on the first day of September in each year at the office of the auditor at the seat of government, when these returns are to be submitted to them. The statute declares that,

"Should the valuations be either too high or too low, they shall correct and equalize the same by a proper increase or decrease thereof. Said board shall keep a record of their proceedings, to be signed by each member present at any meeting, and the said board is hereby authorized to examine the books and property of any railroad company to ascertain the value of its property, or to have them examined by any suitable disinterested person, to be appointed by them for that purpose."

And in the performance of these duties, their sessions are limited to a period of not longer than twenty days in anyone year.

These meetings are public, and not secret. The time and place for holding them are fixed by law. The proceedings of the board are required to be made matter of record, and authenticated by the signature of the quorum present. Anyone interested has the right to be present. In reference to this point, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in its decision in these cases, says, 81 Ky. 492, 512:

"As we construe this act, although in the nature of an original assessment, the parties had the right to be heard, and were in fact heard before the board passing on the question of valuation."

It is averred in the petitions filed in these actions that

"defendant did appear before said board by its officers, agents, and attorneys, and presented such facts, figures and information, and argument in relation to the valuation and assessment for taxation of its said property as it saw proper to,"

and

"that said board, after a full

Page 115 U. S. 334

hearing of defendant by her officers, agents, and attorneys and a full consideration of said returns, reports, information, and arguments before them, valued and assessed for taxation"

the defendant's line of railroad, etc. These averments are not denied, but stand confessed in the record of each case.

It is said, however, in answer to this by counsel for plaintiffs in error in argument that whatever was in fact this alleged hearing, it could only have been accorded as a matter of grace and favor, because it was not demandable as of right under the law, and consequently has no such legal value as attaches to a hearing to which the law gives a right, and to which it compels the attention of the officer, under an imperative obligation, with the sense of official responsibility for impartial and right decision which is imputed to the discharge of official duty.

But such is not the construction put upon the statute, as we have seen, by the Court of Appeals of the state nor the practical construction, as we infer from the averments of the pleadings, put upon it by the officers called to act under it. And if the plaintiffs in error have the constitutional right to such hearing for which they contend, the statute is properly to be construed so as to recognize and respect it, and not to deny it. The Constitution and the statute will be construed together as one law. This was the principle of construction applied by this Court, following the decisions of the state court, in Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370, where words denying the right were regarded as stricken out of the state constitution and statutes by the controlling language of the Constitution of the United States, and in the case of Cooper v. Wandsworth Board of Works, 14 C.B.N.S. 180, 194, in a case where a hearing was deemed essential, it was said by Byles, J.,

"that although there are no positive words in a statute requiring that the party shall be heard, yet the justice of the common law will supply the omission of the legislature."

It is still urged, however, that there is, notwithstanding what has been said, no security that the final action of the board of railroad commissioners in valuing and assessing railroad property under this statute may not be unequal, unjust, chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 335

and oppressive, and that either by error of judgment, through caprice, prejudice, or even from an intention to oppress, valuations may be made which are excessive, bearing no reasonable relation to what is fair and just and fixed arbitrarily, based neither upon actual evidence nor an honest estimate. But the same suppositions may be indulged in in opposition to all contrary presumptions with reference to the final action of any tribunal appointed to determine the matter, however carefully constituted and however carefully guarded in its procedure, and whether judicial or administrative. Such possibilities are but the necessary imperfections of all human institutions, and do not admit of remedy -- at least no revisory power to prevent or redress them enters into the judicial system, for, by the supposition, its administration is itself subject to the same imperfections.

But whatever relief courts of justice may afford against the injuries apprehended when in fact they have resulted is secured to the plaintiffs in error by the very statute of which they complain. For the valuation of railroad property under that act and the assessment of the taxes thereon are not final in the sense that they constitute a charge upon the property subject to the tax or a liability fixed upon the corporation owning it. That result can be attained and the tax actually collected only by suit, as provided in the fifth section of the statute, either against the officers of the companies for penalties incurred by a failure to pay the taxes levied or for the recovery of the taxes themselves by action in the Franklin Circuit Court or in the courts having jurisdiction in the counties for the taxes payable to them respectively. The case is thus brought directly and distinctly within the decision in Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U. S. 97, 96 U. S. 104, where it was held

"that whenever by the laws of a state or by state authority a tax, assessment, servitude, or other burden is imposed upon property for the public use, whether if be for the whole state, or of some more limited portion of the community, and those laws provide for a mode of confirming or contesting the charge thus imposed in the ordinary courts of justice with such notice to the person or such proceeding in regard to the property as

Page 115 U. S. 336

is appropriate to the nature of the case, the judgment in such proceedings cannot be said to deprive the owner of his property without due process of law, however obnoxious it may be to other objections."

And this is the principle that was followed in the subsequent case of Hagar v. Reclamation District, 111 U. S. 701. In that case, the statute of California, which conferred the jurisdiction authorized any defense going either to the validity or to the amount of the tax assessed to be pleaded. What inquiries may be permitted in such cases, of course, is a matter that depends upon the particular provisions of the law of the jurisdiction. In the absence of such provisions and as a principle of general jurisprudence, it is safe to say that any defense is admissible which establishes the illegality of the proceeding resulting in the alleged assessment, whether because it is in violation of the local law which is relied on as conferring the authority upon which it is based or because it constitutes a denial of a right secured to the party complaining by the Constitution of the United States. The judgments now under review were rendered in just such actions, so that we cannot escape the conclusion that there is no ground for the plaintiffs in error to contend that they have been rendered without due process of law.

The plaintiffs in error, however, did interpose a defense below, legitimate in itself, and arising under the Constitution of the United States, namely that in the proceedings of the board of railroad commissioners, resulting in the valuation and assessment under the Act of April 3, 1878, they were severally denied the equal protection of the laws contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. As this defense was overruled by the Circuit Court of Kentucky, another federal question is presented which we are bound now to examine and decide.

The discrimination against railroad companies and their property which is the subject of complaint as being unjust and unconstitutional arises from the fact that in the legislation of Kentucky on the subject, railroad property, though called real estate, is classed by itself as distinct from other real estate, such as farms and city lots, and subjected to different chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 337

means and methods for ascertaining their value for purposes of taxation, and differing as well from those applied to the property of corporations chartered for other purposes, such as bridge, mining, street railway, manufacturing, gas, and water companies. These latter report to the auditor the total cash value of their property, and pay into the treasury as a tax upon each $100 of its value a sum equal to the tax collected upon the same value of real estate, and their reports and valuations are treated as complete and perfect assessments, not subject to revision by any board or court and conclusive upon the taxing officers.

But there is nothing in the Constitution of Kentucky that requires taxes to be levied by a uniform method upon all descriptions of property. The whole matter is left to the discretion of the legislative power, and there is nothing to forbid the classification of property for purposes of taxation and the valuation of different classes by different methods. The rule of equality in respect to the subject only requires the same means and methods to be applied impartially to all the constituents of each class, so that the law shall operate equally and uniformly upon all persons in similar circumstances. There is no objection, therefore, to the discrimination made as between railroad companies and other corporations in the methods and instrumentalities by which the value of their property is ascertained. The different nature and uses of their property justify the discrimination in this respect which the discretion of the legislature has seen fit to impose.

So the fact that the legislature has chosen to call a railroad, for purposes of taxation, real estate does not identify it with farming lands and town lots in such a sense as imperatively to require the employment of the same machinery and methods for all in the process of valuation for purposes of taxation. Calling them by the same name does not obliterate the essential differences between them, and accordingly it is not insisted on in argument, as an objection to the system, that a railroad running through several counties is valued and taxed as a unit and by a special board organized for that purpose, while other real estate is valued in each county by assessors. The final chanrobles.com-red

Page 115 U. S. 338

point of objection seems to be reduced to this. In the case of ordinary real estate, it is said, when the assessor has made his valuation, it is submitted to a board of supervisors, who may change the valuation, but not so as to increase it without notice to the taxpayer and an opportunity for a formal hearing upon testimony to be adduced under oath and with a right of appeal on his part first to a county judge and again, if the amount of the tax is equal to $50, to the circuit court. This is contrasted with the proceeding in the case of railroad property before the board of railroad commissioners, in which it is alleged there is no notice of an intended change in the valuation returned by the company and no appeal allowed if it is increased.

The discrimination, however, is apparent rather than real. An examination of the statutes shows that the original valuation of the assessor in case of ordinary real estate is conclusive upon the taxpayer, no matter how unsatisfactory, and the appeal allowed is only from the action of the board of supervisors, in case they undertake to increase the valuation made by the assessor. But in the case of railroad property, no board has authority to increase the original assessment made by the railroad commissioners, and there is therefore no case for an appeal similar to that of the owner of ordinary real estate.

But were it otherwise, the objection would not be tenable. We have already decided that the mode of valuing railroad property for taxation under this statute is due process of law. That being so, the provision securing the equal protection of the laws does not require in any case an appeal, although it may be allowed in respect to other persons differently situated. This was expressly decided by this Court in the case of Missouri v. Lewis, 101 U. S. 22, 101 U. S. 30. It was there said by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, delivering the opinion of the Court and speaking to this point, that

"the last restriction, as to the equal protection of the laws, is not violated by any diversity in the jurisdiction of the several courts as to subject matter, amount, or finality of decision if all persons within the territorial limits of the irrespective jurisdictions have an equal right, in like cases and under

Page 115 U. S. 339

like circumstances, to resort to them for redress."

The right to classify railroad property as a separate class for purposes of taxation grows out of the inherent nature of the property and the discretion vested by the constitution of the state in its legislature, and necessarily involves the right on its part to devise and carry into effect a distinct scheme, with different tribunals, in the proceeding to value it. If such a scheme is due process of law, the details in which it differs from the mode of valuing other descriptions and classes of property cannot be considered as a denial of the equal protection of the laws.

We see no error in the several judgments of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in these cases, and they are accordingly

Affirmed.

MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD did not sit in these cases or take any part in their decision.



























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