Court Opinion

ID: 8746824
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 11:10:52.868571+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:42.449176
License: Public Domain

DAY, Circuit Judge,
after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The right to an injunction in this case turns upon the determination of the issue as to whether the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company has been once taxed upon the bridge mentioned in the information under proceedings already had under the tax laws of Ohio. If the receivers have established the affirmative of this proposition, further attempts to tax the same property may be enjoined under the laws of Ohio, which provide the equitable remedy of injunction against illegal taxation. Rev. St. Ohio, § 5848. In Ohio the taxing of property of railroad companies is regulated by the Revised Statutes of the state (Rev. St. 1890, §§ 2770-2776, inclusive). Where a railroad is in several counties of the state, the auditors of such counties constitute a board of appraisers and assessors for such railroad company. For any railroad company having its road, or any part thereof, in one county only, the auditor of such county constitutes the board. At its annual meeting in May the board is required to proceed to ascertain all the personal property of the company, which, it is provided, shall include the roadbed, water and wood stations, and such other realty as is necessary to the daily running operations of the road, moneys and credits of the company, the undivided profits, reserve, or contingent fund, whether the same be in money, credits, or in any manner invested, and the actual value thereof in money; and also locomotives and cars not belonging to the company, but hired for its use or run under its control on its road by a sleeping car or other company, but as to such rolling stock the company may return it separately from its own property, in which event it shall be valued separately, but included in the aggregate valuation. Such boards have power to require certain officers of the road to make a detailed statement, under oath, of the items and particulars constituting such property, moneys, and credits, and the values thereof. The value of such property, moneys, and credits, as found and determined by the board, is required to be apportioned by the board among the several counties through which said road, or any part thereof, runs, so that to each county, city, village, township, and district, or any part thereof, therein, shall be apportioned such part thereof as shall eqxialize the relative value of the real estate, structures, and stationary personal property of such company therein, in proportion to the whole value of the real estate, structures, and stationary personal property of such company in the state; and the rolling stock, main track, roadbed, supplies, moneys, and credits of such company shall be apportioned in such proportion as the length of such road in such county bears to the entire length thereof in all said counties. When a railroad company has part of its road in the state, and part thereof in any other state or states, the proper board shall take the value of such property, moneys, and credits so found and determined as aforesaid, and divide it in the proportion the length of said road in the state bears to the whole of such road, and determine the principal sum for the value of such road in the state accordingly, equalizing the relative value thereof in the state, as above set forth.
*50An analysis of these sections shows two general systems of dis- ' tributing the taxable valuation of the property of railroad companies in Ohio. It is primarily made the duty of the board, /whether it is to consist of one or more of the county auditors, to ascertain the property subject to taxation, and to place upon it a valuation. For the purpose of ascertaining the character and extent of the property, detailed statements may be required, under oath, from the officers of the company. The distribution of the valuation of the property, where several counties are interested, is made according to the nature of the property. Real estate, structures, and stationary personal property are to be apportioned to its own local taxing district. These valuations the statute requires to be “equalized,” so that the local real estate, structures, and stationary personal property in any taxing district shall be valued in the same proportion as the value of said property in said taxing district bears to the total valuation in the state. The other class of property to be valued, which includes rolling stock, main track, roadbed, supplies, moneys, and credits, is not localized for taxation; but the aggregate value of this class of property is apportioned among the local taxing districts according to the mileage of the road in such districts, respectively. One object of this statute is evidently to require real estate and structures to be locally taxed. The valuation of the real estate and structures is apportioned to the locality where situated. This is the policy of the statute, and is in harmony with the general system of taxation in the "state.
In view of this system of classification of railroad property for taxation in Ohio, to which class does the bridge in question belong? The part of the bridge which it is proposed to tax in Belmont county is the approach from the Ohio side, the length of which is 1,490 feet; on the West Virginia side, 864 feet. The approach on the Ohio side is described as consisting of 43 semicircular stone arches, with two spans of deck bridge. The piers are described as massive in structure. The bridge is an expensive and durable one. It was built under authority of an act of congress, and is made a post route of the United States, subject to regulation as such. Additional rates are charged to passengers and freight using the bridge. It has a distinct value as a bridge, irrespective of its present use for railroad purposes. It is a suggestive fact that the West Virginia portion has been valued for taxation in that state in the sum of $315,000. These considerations would seem decisive of the question as to whether this bridge is to be regarded as a structure to be locally taxed, or “roadbed” or “main track,” with taxable valuation to be distributed throughout the length of the line in proportion to its mileage. It is, in our judgment, a structure, within the meaning of the statute, and to be taxed as other local structures are in the district where it is situated. Similar considerations led the supreme court of Nebraska to like conclusions in a well-considered case. Cass Co. v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 25 Neb. 348, 41 N. W. 246, 2 L. R. A. 188.
In the returns made by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company for the Central Ohio Railroad, no mention is made of this structure. There is nothing in the testimony or in the finding of the master to show that it was distinctly considered in making a valuation of the *51property to be taxed, notwithstanding its great value as an independent structure. But it is contended that this bridge has already been taxed as a part of the main track, including roadbed and right of way, by the board of county auditors. The findings of fact show that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company is assessed and pays the taxes upon the property in Ohio of the Central Ohio Company, of which it is the lessee. This is because of the agreement between the companies, which requires this course of action. In Ohio all property is taxed against the owner. Rev. St. 1890, §§ 2734, 2733. In the return and assessments referred to, the Baltimore & Ohio Company assumes the obligation which the law imposes upon the Central Ohio Railroad Company. It is said that this bridge is included in the assessment of the 137.3 miles of main track, including roadbed and right of way; being the entire length of the line of the Ohio Central Railroad from low-water mark on the Ohio side of the river to its northern terminus at Columbus, Ohio. The finding shows that the southern terminus of the Central Ohio Railroad is at low-water mark on the Ohio side. It also appears that the tracks of the Central Ohio Railroad were raised and laid upon the approaches to this bridge. But it also appears from the allegations of the petition and the admissions of the answer that the bridge is the property of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company. In the mortgage which is the subject of foreclosure in this case this bridge is described as owned and operated by that company, “known as the ‘Benwood Bridge,’ beginning in Marshall county, in the state of West Virginia, and running through the town of Benwood, over the Ohio river, into the town of Bellaire, in Belmont county, in the state of Ohio, together with the approaches thereof; the said bridge and approaches being of the total length of 8,556 feet, more or less.” It is true that the master finds that this bridge was built under a contract between the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company and the Central Ohio Railroad Company, by which the latter company pays one-third of the cost of the bridge; and, after the payment of the certificates issued for such cost, the companies were to hold the same as tenants in common, in the proportion of two-thirds to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, and one-third to the Central Ohio Railroad Company. This contract cannot overcome the allegations of the pleadings as to the ownership of the bridge. Nor does the joint ownership of the structure relieve the situation from the considerations which give it a local character for the purposes of taxation. It is also found that the approach in question is upon ground of the Ohio Central Company, and that its tracks are laid upon it. This does not affect the question of the right to tax this large and costly structure against its true ownership, irrespective of the ownership of the track upon it, or of the right of way upon which it rests. When land is owned by one, and the buildings by another, the two may be separately assessed for taxation. People v. Board of Assessors of Brooklyn, 93 N. Y. 308. If this were not so, much property which must be assessed against the owner would escape taxation. It appears that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, the owner of this bridge and its approaches, is the owner, also, of a line of railroad extending across *52the bridge from Ohio, and thence eastwardly, through West Virginia. We think this structure is a part of that railroad, and, within the requirements of the Ohio Statutes, taxable in Belmont county. We cannot agree that the assessment of the main track of the Ohio Central Railroad covered so much of this structure as includes the approach to this bridge from the Ohio side, or that, under the facts shown, it could be legally assessed as a part of such main track, including roadbed and right of way. It may be the practice to assess bridges as a part of such main track of railroads in Ohio. It may be that many bridges have no value except to carry the track of the company. Whether this practice, if it exists, be right or wrong, is immaterial here, in view of the character and ownership of the bridge in question.
We think the circuit court did not err in vacating the restraining' order and dismissing the petition of the receivers. Judgment affirmed.