People ex rel. Parker Mills v. Commissioners of Taxes
People ex rel. Parker Mills v. Commissioners of Taxes
Opinion of the Court
This case depends upon the construction to be given to the act of February 27, 1855, amendatory of the several acts for the assessment and collection of taxes in this State. Section 1 of that act is as follows: “All persons and associations doing business in the State of Hew. York, as merchants, bankers, or otherwise, either as principals or partners, whether special or otherwise, and not residents of this State, shall be assessed and taxed on all sums invested in any manner in said business, the same as if they were residents of this State; and said taxes shall be collected from the property of the firms, persons, and associations, to which they severally belong.”
I have no doubt, and shall" therefore assume, that the words, “persons and associations,” used in this statute, should be construed to include corporations. But the words descriptive of the property in respect to which they are to be assessed, are among the most indefinite in the language. The word
It was not uncommon, previous to the passage of the act, as the history of our legislation shows, for foreign corporations, particularly insurance companies, to establish agencies in the city of New York, and perhaps elsewhere in this State, for the transaction of their corporate business. These agencies were protected by our laws and carried on a profitable business within this State, and yet contributed nothing towards the expenses of government. They came in direct competition with domestic'corporations, which were heavily taxed. It was certainly just and right that they, or the corporations by which they were established, should be made to contribute, to some extent, to the public burdens. But there was also another class of cases which called for special legislation, and which the legislature probably had more directly in view in passing the act of 1855. Many persons, engaged in business in the city of New York as partners of commercial firms or otherwise, resided in New Jersey, Connecticut, or elsewhere out of this State. These persons frequently had large amounts of property in this State, and enjoyed the fruits of a profitable business carried on under the protection of our laws; and yet, by reason of the rule that personal property is deemed to follow the person of the owner, they escaped taxation in respect to this property, at least in this State, and probably in most cases altogether.
There is no doubt that, to provide for these two classes of cases, especially the last, was the main object of the act of 1855. That it was never intended to include a case like the present, seems to me clear. In the two classes of cases referred to, the investment of funds by the non-residents has more or less of
It is difficult to see any difference in principle between the-present case and that of a drover who transports his herds of cattle by railroad to the city of New York for sale; and yet, I-apprehend, no one ever supposed the owner of the cattle, if a non-resident, to be taxable in such a case. It may be .said that the Parker Mills had a store and an agent in the city of New York. So the drover may have his field or his yard for keeping his cattle, and his herdsman to take, care of them. The cases are, I think, parallel; and the reason why the statute does not apply to either is, that there is no sum invested or used for the purpose of carrying on a continuous business in this State.
That it never was the policy of the State to impose taxes upon property sent into the State for the mere purpose of sale, is shown by the course of legislation on this subject. The general tax law provides (1 B. S., 389, § 5) that every person shall be assessed in the town or ward where he resides, for all personal estate owned by him, “ including all such personal estate in his possession, or under his control as trustee, guardian, executor,” &c. By the amendatory act of April 15, .1851 (Sess. Laws, 1851, ch. 176), agents are added to the class of persons named in the previous statute; btit lest the clause, with this addition, should be construed more broadly than the legislature intended, it was further provided that “ the products of any State of the United States, consigned to "agents in any town or ward in this State for sale on commission for the benefit of the owner thereof, shall not be assessed to such agents.”
Ordered accordingly.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.