Detroit, G.H. & M. Ry. Co. v. Fuller

Decision Date22 February 1913
Citation205 F. 86
CourtU.S. District Court — Eastern District of Michigan
PartiesDETROIT, G.H. & M. RY. CO. v. FULLER, Auditor General, et al. GRAND TRUNK RY. CO. OF CANADA v. SAME.

H. Geer and L. C. Stanley, both of Detroit, Mich., for complainants.

Franz C. Kuhn, Atty. Gen., and Oscar Edward Waer, of Grand Rapids Mich., for defendants.

TUTTLE District Judge.

These suits involve the constitutionality of Act No. 95, Public Acts of Michigan for the year 1911, under which certain taxes have been assessed against the owners or holders of the stock, bonds, and other evidences of indebtedness of the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company, and also involve the validity of such taxes on other grounds than the constitutionality of that act as against such owners or holders. The Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company is what is known as a specially chartered railway company being organized and existing under an act of the territorial Legislature of Michigan of March 7, 1834 (Laws 1834, p. 40). Act No. 95, which is in question, seeks to impose on the stock, bonds, and other indebtedness of specially chartered railway companies doing business in Michigan certain specific taxes. These bills are filed by the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada as the owner and holder of certain of the outstanding bonds and other evidences of indebtedness of the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company, and by the latter company as the representative of certain of its unknown bondholders, the act making it the duty of that company to pay the taxes assessed against bondholders whose names and addresses are unknown, to enjoin the state officials charged with the duty of collecting the taxes assessed from enforcing collection. The taxes assessed against the stockholders are not involved in these suits, and the court does not intend to be understood as passing upon their validity. The defendants have demurred to the bills.

The first question raised by the demurrers is whether the complainants have an adequate remedy at law. The court is of the opinion that no adequate remedy at law exists. The act provides that it shall be the duty of the persons or corporations against whom the taxes are assessed to pay them into the state treasury, and then, if they claim that the taxes are illegal for any reason, that they may bring suits against the State Treasurer to recover the taxes thus paid. If the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company should comply with this provision as to the unknown bondholders represented by it, and should pay the taxes assessed against such bondholders into the state treasury deducting the amount thereof from the interest payable to the bondholders, then it is obvious that that company would subject itself to liability to suit at the hands of such bondholders, and could only justify such payments by showing the validity of Act No. 95. This would clearly result in a multiplicity of suits because each bondholder affected could bring such a suit to recover the amount of the taxes thus withheld by the Railway Company.

The court is also of the opinion that the taxes assessed under this act constitute a cloud upon the real estate of the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company, and that equity has jurisdiction to remove such a cloud.

As to the bill of the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada, the court is of the opinion that it makes a case for equitable relief on the ground of irreparable injury. If that company should pay the taxes assessed against it, and then bring suit against the State Treasurer to recover them and should finally recover, it would have been subjected to a long and useless litigation and could not recover the necessary expenses to which it would inevitably be put. As said in Railway Company v. Sullivan, 173 F. 456, 97 C.C.A. 1: 'An injunction in this suit will enable it (the company against which the tax was illegally assessed) to retain it (the tax), and will end this controversy here. * * * This proposed remedy (at law) is neither as prompt nor as certain nor as complete as the relief which may be granted through this suit in equity.'

See, also, Raymond v. Traction Co., 207 U.S. 20, 28 Sup.Ct. 7, 52 L.Ed. 78, 12 Ann.Cas. 757; Michigan Telephone Tax Cases (C.C.) 185 F. 634.

The court does not find it necessary to decide whether the lien given by the act upon the bonds and other evidences of indebtedness upon which the tax is assessed constitutes a cloud upon the title which will give jurisdiction to a court of equity. For the reasons above stated the court is of the opinion that no adequate remedy at law exists, and therefore that this court should take jurisdiction in these cases.

The first ground upon which Act No. 95 is attacked by the complainants is that it constitutes class legislation, so called, in contravention of the fourteenth amendment to the federal Constitution. The bills show that there are in Michigan a large number of other railroad companies organized and doing business under the general railroad laws of this state, and paying taxes under the Ad Valorem Tax Law of this state. The Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company is the only specially chartered railway company in Michigan and no more companies of that kind can be organized under the present Constitution adopted in 1908. It pays taxes under a special contract with the state, consisting of section 9, Act 140, Session Laws of 1855, which has been held to be a valid and binding contract between that company and the state of Michigan in the cases of Powers v. Railway Co., 201 U.S. 543, 26 Sup.Ct. 556, 50 L.Ed. 860, and Attorney General v. Railway Co., 157 Mich. 144, 121 N.W. 814. Act No. 95, in seeking to impose a tax only upon the stock, bonds, and other evidences of indebtedness of specially chartered railway companies, is, in the opinion of the court, an arbitrary singling out of the Detroit, Grand...

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