Commonwealth v. P. Lorillard Co.
Commonwealth v. P. Lorillard Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The examiner of records for the city of Richmond assessed the P. Lorillard Company, Inc., with $2,000, income tax for 1916, on income received during the year 1915, and $5,000 income tax for 1917, on income received during the year 1916, and reported it to the commissioner of the revenue, who entered the same on his books. The company feeling aggrieved thereby, applied to the hustings court of the city of Richmond for relief. The application was made on June 17, 1918, under section 567 of the Code of 1887, as amended (Code 1919, sec. 2385). The hustings court granted the relief prayed for, and to its judgment a writ of error was awarded.
The statute invoked is as follows: “Any person assessed with taxes on lands or other property, aggrieved by any such assessment, may, unless otherwise specifically provided by law, within two years from the first day of September of the year in which such assessment is made, and any person assessed with a license tax, aggrieved thereby, may, within one year after such assessment, apply for relief to the court in which the commissioner gave bond and qualified, * * *”
The Code, from which the section is taken, is divided into titles, chapters and sections; these terms being used in the descending grade. The title is “Public Revenue,” under which there are embraced nine chapters. The first of these chapters relates to “Assessments of lands and lots, and their subsequent re-assessment.” The second chapter under that title relates to “Assessment of taxes on persons and property; licenses, how procured; certain acts imposing taxes continued in force.” None of the remaining chapters under this title affect the questions in controversy. In the chapter last mentioned is contained the section in controversy. This chapter also contains the provisions with
It would seem from these statutes, read together, as they should be, that the legislature intended to divide all taxes which were extended on the books of the commissioners of the revenue into but two classes, one real estate and the other personal property, and to include income in the latter, and that the application to the court permitted by the statute last mentioned had reference to section 567, Code, 1904, as we have been unable to find any other statute under which the application could have been made.
What we have said above is to be restricted entirely to an interpretation of the statute, and not be otherwise extended.
The next assignment of error is to the action of the trial court in “granting relief in the absence of any evidence that the assessment complained of was erroneous or illegal.” The holding of the trial court was that the assessment was illegal because there was “no law of this Commonwealth which authorized, clearly and specifically, the assessment by ' this State of such a tax as is complained of in this proceeding.”
The plaintiff in error is a foreign corporation doing business in Virginia, and a number of other States, and also-in foreign countries. It pays a license tax here for doing business in this State, and also a property tax on its property located in this State. It has its principal office in the State of New Jersey, where it was incorporated, and de
“The assessment being so important, the statutory provisions respecting its preparation and contents ought to be observed with particularity. They are prescribed in order to secure equality and uniformity in the contributions which are demanded for the public service, and if officers, instead of observing them, may substitute a discretion of their own, the most important security which has been devised for the protection of the citizen in tax cases might be rendered valueless.” Cooley on Taxation (3d ed.), 598-9.
Taxes are imposed by the State in the exercise of its sovereign power. This power is exerted through the legislature, and an executive officer who seeks to enforce a tax must always be able to put his finger upon the statute which confers such authority. Taxes can only be assessed, levied and collected in the manner prescribed by express statutory authority. Tax assessors have no power to make an assessment except in the manner prescribed by law, and if the statute prescribes a method of assessment which is invalid, the assessor has no power or authority to adopt a method of his own which would have been legal if it had been prescribed by the legislature.
In Allen v. Pullman’s Palace Car Co., 191 U. S. 171, 180, 24 Sup. Ct. 39, 41 (48 L. Ed. 134), the Supreme Court, in speaking of a statute of Tennessee, which affected interstate commerce, said: “We are not at liberty to read into the statute terms not found therein, or necessarily implied, with a. view to limiting the tax to local business which the legislature in the terms of the act impose upon the entire business of the company.” The same remarks may be applied to the statute under consideration.
In Meyer, Auditor of State of Oklahoma v. Wells, Fargo & Co., 223 U. S. 298, 32 Sup. Ct. 218, 56 L. Ed. 445, the following paragraphs of the syllabus are fully sustained by the opinion:
“In estimating for taxation the proportion of income of a corporation doing interstate business, a State cannot include income from investment in bonds and lands outside of the State.
“Whére a State statute requires that a corporation, doing both interstate and intrastate business, return its
“The court cannot reshape a taxing statute which includes elements beyond 'the State’s power of taxation, simply because it embraces elements that it might have reached had the statute been drawn with a different measure and intent.”
“Persons and corporations doing a part of their business within the State and a part without the State, and having offices or other regular places of business both within and without the State, shall be taxed only upon such income as is derived from business transacted and. property located within the State, which may be determined by an alloca
We find no error in the judgment of the hustings court, and it is, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- Commonwealth v. P. Lorillard Company, Inc.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Jurisdiction. — Want of Jurisdiction — Consent or Waiver. — Where a court has no jurisdiction of the question submitted to it, its judgment is; void. The legislature alone can fix the classes of cases of which the courts of the Commonwealth are to take jurisdiction, and no consent or waiver of the parties can in any way confer a jurisdiction not so fixed. 2. Jurisdiction. — Time and Place of Making Objection. — Objection for want of jurisdiction of the question at issue may be made anywhere, or in any way, and at any time, and the Supreme Court of Appeals will, of its own motion, take judicial notice of the lack of such jurisdiction of the trial court. 3. Taxation. — Belief Against Erroneous Taxation — Code of 1919, section 2385 — Liberal Construction. — The object of section 2385, Code of 1919, providing for the relief of persons erroneously assessed with taxes is to give speedy and inexpensive relief against taxes erroneously assessed, and, being remedial in its character, it will be liberally construed in order to further the remedy provided by the legislature. 4. Taxation. — Income Taxes — Sec. 2885, Code of 1919. — A tax on income is embraced in the language “taxes on land or other property,” as used in Code of 1919, section 2385, providing that the persons assessed with “taxes on land or other property” and aggrieved by such assessment, may apply for relief to the court in which the commissioner gave bond and qualified. 5. Taxation. — Income Taxes- — Business Done Without the State.— The State of Virginia cannot impose' an income tax on the income oí a corporation derived from business done outside of the State, as that would deprive the corporation of the exemption afforded by Acts 1916, ch. 495, p. 830, to Virginia corporations which do no part of their business within the State. 6. Taxation. — Power of the Legislature. — The legislature has the sole power of determining what machinery shall be exercised in carrying out the provisions of a law authorizing the imposition of taxes. 7. Taxation. — Construction in Favor of Taxpayer. — Statutes imposing taxes are construed most strongly in favor of the taxpayer, and will not be extended by implication to the prejudice of the taxpayer beyond the clear import of the language used. 8. Taxation. — Authority of Tax Officers — Power of the Legislature —Assessment.—Taxes are imposed by the State in the exercise of its sovereign power. This power is exerted through the legislature, and an executive officer who seeks to enforce a tax must always be able to put his finger upon the statute which confers such authority. Taxes can only be assessed, levied and collected in the manner prescribed by express statutory authority. Tax assessors have no power to make an assessment except in the manner prescribed by law, and if the statute prescribes a method of assessment which is invalid, the assessor has no power or authority to adopt a method of his own which would have been legal if it had been prescribed by the legislature. 9. Taxation. — Income Taxes — Business Without the State — Case at Bar. — In the instant case, complainant, a foreign corporation doing business in Virginia, was assessed on its income under Acts 1916, ch. 472, p. 794. It did not appear how much of the income was derived from business done in Virginia, nor did the statute provide any method by which that fact could be ascertained, but the administrative officers seeing that they could not enforce the provisions of the statute as, to income derived from business done outside of the State, and the statute being silent on the subject, undertook to devise a scheme of their own by which to determine how much of the total income of the corporation was derived from business done in this State. Held: That the statute conferred no such authority upon the officers, and they had no such power. The legislature could exercise this power, and having failed to do so, no such apportionment could be made. The trial court was right in holding that there was no law in this State under which the income tax sought to be assessed could be collected on so much of the income as was derived solely from business done in this State. The legislature seems to have recognized this situation, for at its next session it removed the difficulty. See Acts 1918, p. 395.