Boston Water Power Co. v. City of Boston
Boston Water Power Co. v. City of Boston
Opinion of the Court
The court are of opinion that the plaintiffs are not liable to be taxed for personal estate or income. The whole value of their personal estate is included in the value of the shares of the stock, and, as such, is liable to be taxed to the holders of the shares eo nomine. By the Rev. Sts. c. 7, § 4, “ personal estate shall, for the purposes of taxation, be construed to include stocks in turnpikes, bridges and all monied corporations.” By § 9, all personal estate, not excepted in §10, “ shall be assessed to the owner in the town
If this personal property was “ stock in trade,” or “ machinery employed in any branch of manufactures,” it should have been so stated; but being taxed generally, as “ personal property,” we are not so to understand. Indeed, the case finds that the plaintiffs have no personal property, and that the tax was imposed in respect to income.
If it be said that the plaintiffs are not a manufacturing corporation, then there is no statute provision that subjects any of their personal property to taxation, and the respective owners are taxable for the whole value of the personal property; and of course the corporation is not taxable.
But the real estate stands upon a different footing ; being' taxable where it is situated, whoever is the owner; and therefore is taxable to the corporation. Indeed, the corporation was taxed, every year, for a considerable amount of real estate; and of this no complaint is made. But it is insisted that, as that part of the plaintiffs’ estate is described as lying in Ward 11, and, in some of the assessments, is described as “lots,” it is wrongly taxed as a separate estate, because it was annexed o, or occupied with, the mill, as an entire and inseparable estate The first answer is, that it was assessed in that mode.
But after all, the whole real estate in the same town or city, belonging to the same owner, constitutes, as between the town or city and the tax payer, but one substantive subject of taxation; and therefore, when the tax payer has cause of complaint, that the tax is too large, his only remedy is by appeal to the assessors for abatement, and, on their refusal, to the county commissioners, or to those who exercise the same functions. Osborn v. Inhabitants of Danvers, 6 Pick. 98. A distinction has been made, for obvious reasons, between real estate and personal property; and xvhere one is not liable for any tax on personal property, it is held that a tax on his poll and personal property is not an over-taxation, but a wholly void tax, although he, as a non-resident, is taxed for real estate in the same town. Preston v. City of Boston, 12 Pick. 7.
It it argued that this property is wholly exempted from tax
Considering the taxes on the personal and real estate as separate and distinct; that the tax on personal property was not an over-taxation, but a tax which the city had no authority to assess; and that the payment was under notice and claim of exemption ; the court are of opinion that the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment for the amount thereof, with interest from the time of demand; 4 Met. 181; but that, in respect to the real estate, their only remedy was an appeal in the manner prescribed by the Rev. Sts. c. 7, §§ 37-41.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Boston Water Power Company v. City of Boston
- Status
- Published