Nashville Gas Light Co. v. Mayor of Nashville
Nashville Gas Light Co. v. Mayor of Nashville
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented in this case is the liability of certain real estate belonging to the Nashville Gas. Light Company to municipal taxation. The City of Nashville, by an assessment of 1873, imposed upon this real estate a tax for that year. This assessment is resisted upon the ground that this real estate constitutes part of the capital stock of said company, and as such is not liable to taxation in virtue of the 8th section of the act of the General Assembly of 1873, ch. 118, entitled “An act to provide more just and' equitable laws for the assessment and collection of rev--
Without this act both the capital and the shares might be assessed for taxes, the one as owned by the corporation and the others by the individual shareholders. To prevent this seeming injustice the act of 1873 provides that only the real estate of the corporation shall be taxed. Taking into view the privileges granted to joint-stock companies, this may well have seemed to the Legislature a fair adjustment of the question of taxation in regard to their stock-holders. However this may be, it is very clear that the Legislature has not exempted such real estate from taxation, unless it be in virtue of the exemption of the capital. In this case it is said that the manufactory property is the capital, and 'moreover that this as the property of a private corporation is personalty, and for both reasons does not come within the proviso of the statute. But the property, on the contrary, is
The authorities referred to by plaintiff are two from other States and three from Tennessee. The case of the Lehigh Navigation Co. v. Southampton County, 8 Watts & Serg., 334, was a case in which a county had imposed a tax upon the land occupied by a canal, and some grounds occupied by houses necessary to the use of the canal, as real estate. The judge who decided 4jie case assumed that the grounds occupied by a canal in public use, though owned by a private corporation, were not taxable, and as a consequence that the grounds and houses necessary to its proper use were also exempt; but he goes on further to say that they were not taxable as real estate, because the stock of share-holders was personal property. This last proposition is certainly a non sequitur, and is in effect contradicted by the decision in 9 Yer., 490, of the Union Bank v. The State, where the distinction is clearly taken between the ownership of shares by individuals and that of property by the corporation. The assumption in regard to the non-taxability of canal grounds does not accord with anything as'yet decided by our courts;
The cases referred to in our books certainly do not sustain the plaintiff’s position. The case of Day v. Joiner, 6 Baxter, 441, was one where it was said an
On the other side, without referring again to the-case of The State v. The Union Bank, in 9 Yer., we have two cases, one of which in principle and the-other in its precise circumstances are like the present case. The first of these cases, that of Ensley v. The City of Memphis, 6 Baxt., 554, decides that where a manufacturing company had paid the tax upon its real property used for the purposes of its manufacture, it was still bound to pay the tax imposed on its shareholders, retaining the same out of their dividends, and that this was not double taxation. The other case, not yet reported, and decided at the last term, was. that of the South Nashville Street Railroad Co. v. The Mayor and City Council of Nashville. The 8th section of the act of 1873 is there construed, and the real estate used by the company for its corporate purposes, is held liable to taxation; the questions made here were
Our conclusion is, then, that the judgment of the circuit court be in all things affirmed.
Reference
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- Nashville Gas Light Co. v. Mayor and City Council of Nashville
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- Published