The notices to the appellant given by the board of equalization and county court regarding the proposed increase of his assessment were ample and sufficient. Nor was any reply to the answer filed by appellant in response to the notice necessary. Proceedings for the equalization of taxes are not governed by the rules of practice in civil cases, but are necessarily summary. The taxpayer is entitled to be notified of the proposed increase, and however informal the notice may be, it will answer the purpose intended, as he will be very likely to get, there, and usually will not stand upon the order of his going. Besides, the board will not be apt to get at the bottom of his affairs by the most diligent- search and inquiry to which it may subject him. The only matter that need be considered in the case is the right of the said county court *382to include, in the appellant’s list of taxable property, the money, notes, and mortgages he owned and held in the then Territory, now State of Washington. The question as to a right of government to tax choses in action, due tp its subjects from those of another jurisdiction, has been a great source of embarrassment to the courts.
The difficulty, to a great extent, has been occasioned by attempting to apply the maxim that movables follow the person of the owner. The maxim, at best, is only a legal fiction, which may be resorted to or brushed aside, as the justice of the case requires. If the right in the outset had been considered from an equitable standpoint, the law upon the subject would have been relieved of much uncertainty. I can discover no justice whatever in a government exacting from an owner of property, which is within the territorial jurisdiction of another government, the payment of a property tax thereon, when it is subject to a like burden under the laws of the latter government, whether it be tangible or intangible, as courts have been pleased to distinguish certain kinds of property. In the present case, what grounds can there be, in sense and reason, entitling the county of Yamhill to claim that the appellant should pay, in support of the county and State government, a tax upon the §1,500 loaned out in the State of Washington, when neither said county nor the-State of Oregon can afford him any protection whatever to the property? He loaned the money under the laws of the then Territory, and if it is not paid, and he is compelled to resort to compulsory means to enforce its payment, it is to the laws of that government he must look for his remedy. And the case would be the same if his agents were to embezzle the -funds. Not a judge, justice of the peace, sheriff or constable within the State of Oregon could, by virtue of his office, render him the slightest assistance. How can the State then demand from the appellant a contribution on account of his ownership of this property, except as an arbitrary exaction, which is but another name for robbery? The money, notes and mortgages were undoubtedly sub*383ject to taxation in Washington Territory; the right to tax them there is sustained by a line of decisions of the courts upon the subject, since the one made in Catlin v. Hull, 21 Vt. 152, down to the present time, including Crawford v. Linn County, 11 Or. 482, and they are undoubtedly correct in principle.
Property, in all cases, unless exempt by-law, should contribute to the expense of the government, which protects the owner in his enjoyment of it. But upon what principle a government can claim that property which is outside of its jurisdiction, and subject to the jurisdiction of another government, shall contribute to its expenses, I can not imagine, unless it be upon the ground that it has the sovereign power to enforce it. The counsel for the respondent claim that the situs of property of the character of that in question must necessarily, from the nature of it, be with the person of the owner, and would have this court infer from that, I suppose, that the §4,500, or the notes and mortgages, were at the time of the assessment with the person of the appellant. The county court, however, found that the money was sent to Washington Territory and loaned out by appellant’s agents there, before the assessment, upon notes and mortgages which had never been in this State. The counsel’s logic may be on the principle of that of the lawyer who assured his client that the authorities would not put him in jail, while the latter was listening to him from within the bars of a cell, conscious of the fact that he was already in jail, though they probably intended to claim that the legal fiction of the property being with the appellant is paramount to the actual fact. But it seems to me, under the circumstances and situation of the property, it had a situs in Washington Territory for the purposes of taxation under its laws, and that therefore it could not be regarded by force of a mere fiction as being with the person of the appellant. If the appellant had been a resident of Washington Territory, and had sent the money to this State, to be loaned out by his agents here, and they had accordingly *384loaned it and taken notes and 'mortgages in security therefor, and the securities left in the hands of such agents, the property would have been taxable under the laws of this State beyond a peradventure; and the statute of Washington Territory in force at the several times when the money was loaned and the assessment made, to which our attention has been called, is sufficiently broad in its terms to have authorized the taxation of the property in that Territory. The authorities of this State therefore had no moral right to tax the property in question. Nor had they any legal right to do so, unless it is conceded that the statutes of this State require the taxation of property so situated, whether taxable under the laws of another government or not, and that such a requirement is lawful; a proposition to which I should be exceedingly loth to assent.
But even then the assessment in question cannot be upheld, as our statutes, by any fair construction, do not go to that extent. Section 2731, Annotated Code, provides that “the terms ‘personal estate’ and ‘personal property’ shall be construed to include all household furniture, goods, chattels, moneys and gold dust, on hand or on deposit, either within or without this State; all boats or vessels, whether at home or abroad, and all capital invested therein; all debts due or to become due from solvent debtors, whether on account, contract, note, mortgage or otherwise,” which is the only provision from which it could possibly be inferred that the property in question might be taxable in this State. The section was adojhed in 1854, and undertook to define the words “personal estate” and “personal property ” as used in the revenue Act, of which it was a part. Said words were to be construed as meaning certain articles on hand or deposit, within or without the State: also boats and-vessels, whether at home or abroad, and all capital invested in them; and also all debts, whether on account, contract, etc. The clause relating to debts due or to become due, etc., was evidently intended to include domestic debts only, as it does not declare, like the other *385two clauses, that it includes debts due from parties “either within or without this State” or “at home or abroad,” or contain terms of equivalent import, Leaving out of the latter clause the qualifying words referred to, after having inserted them in the two former ones, would iudicate, on the part of the legislature, an intent not to include debts due from parties living out of the State as “personal property” or “personal estate,” and authorize the construction indicated. The first clause of the section would include property like that in question, if it had not limited the construction to articles “on hand or on deposit.” The property in question was neither on hand nor on deposit, but was in the hands of the appellant’s agents in Washington Territory, invested by them and under their control. The case is very similar in its features to that of The People, ex rel. Jefferson, v. Smith et al., 88 N. Y. 576, and, I think, we can safely follow the decision therein made.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, and the case remanded to that court, with directions to entertain the said writ of review and determine the same in accordance with the principles announced herein.