Douglass v. State
Douglass v. State
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a matter of taxation. One of the provisions in the charter of the defendants (Laws 1859, p. 306,) is in these words, viz., “ That as soon as the said company shall declare to their stockholders, dividends equal to seven per centum per annum, from and after the commencement of the building of said road, and so long as said company pays dividends of seven per centum per annum, the said company shall pay to the treasurer of this state a tax of one per centum on the cost of the said road, to be paid annually on the first Monday in January; provided., that no other tax or impost shall be levied or raised from said corporation by virtue of any law of this state.”
The question is, whether this clause of the defendants’
The plaintiif in error insists that the defendants are not within this exception, because they have no contract with the state exempting them from taxation. This position is founded on the proposition maintained in the opinion delivered in this court in the case of The State v. The Mayor, &c., of Jersey City, 2 Vroom 575, to the effect that a legislative provision similar to this in the charter of the defendants, does not, in a strict legal sense, constitute a contract between the state and the corporators. The line of reasoning in the opinion referred to was, that as these charters can be altered or rescinded at pleasure, the provision designating a special mode of- taxation does not contain the essential elements of a legal agreement, and consequently did not differ from ordinary acts of legislation. The terms of the law which gave rise to this conclusion were of vague and uncertain meaning, and there’was ground for the apprehension that to give them the wide effect contended for would extend the exemption to a class of companies not embraced within the statutory design. Under such a law it was proper to require a plain title, when a claim was made to immunity from ordinary taxation. In strictness of law, I think the counsel of the plaintiff in error are right when they say that the defendants have no contract with the state exempting them from taxation; but the question to be settled in the construction of this statute is not one relating to the accuracy of legal definition, but simply one with respect to legislative intendment. We decide this controversy as soon as we ascertain what the law-makers meant by the expression “ contracts,” contained in the charters of private corporations.
This meaning, however uncertain it may have formerly
Apparently, in pursuance of this suggestion that the omission of the word “ irrepealable ” would clear the clause from all obscurity, and would extend the benefits of the exemption to all companies whose charters contain provisions similar to that of the defendants above recited, in the year 1866 the legislature remodeled the section, and dropped from it the word “ irrepealable.” This modification of the law could have been but for one purpose — that is, to make the terms clear in the sense indicated in the judicial opinion, above
The judgment below should be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, The Chief Justice, Dalrimple, Depue, Van Syckel, Clement, Kennedy, Ogden, Olden, Vail, Wales.
For reversal — None.
Rev.,p. 1156, § 74.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BAILEY B. DOUGLASS, RECEIVER OF TAXES OF THE CITY OF NEWARK, IN ERROR v. THE STATE, THE ORANGE AND NEWARK HORSE CAR RAILROAD COMPANY, IN ERROR
- Status
- Published