Dissenting Opinion by
Chief Justice Carroll.The opinion of the court is rested on the opinion in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hopkins, 121 Ky. 850. In that case the court had before it two cases, one involving the right of the city to require the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. to pay a license tax, and the other involving the right to exact a license tax from the L. & N. R. R. Company.
I agree with so much of that opinion as exempted the telephone and telegraph company from payment of a license tax, because, it had paid the city a consideration for the privilege of doing business there, when it bought from' the city a franchise under section 164 of the Constitution.
*246But so much of the opinion as holds that both it and the railroad company were exempt from the license tax on the ground that the tax paid on the value of their intangible property under the assessment of the state board of valuation and assessment, was in effect the payment of a privilege tax for the right- to do business in the city, should I think be overruled.
The state, under sections 4077-4091, requires this express company and other like companies, to pay a property tax on the value of their property employed in business in this state; and the value of the property so employed in the state is assessed by the state tax commission, and the tax distributed by the commission to -each county, city and taxing district in the state, in proportion to the extent of the lines in each county, city and taxing district.
This method of assessment was adopted because it was not thought practicable or just to permit the taxing authorities in the various taxing districts, through which they run, to assess the property employed imbusiness in each of them. And all of the opinions of this court, except, the Hopkins case, supra, hold that the assessment of these companies is based solely on the value of their property employed in business in the state, and . ihat on the value of this property alone they are taxed.
The Hopkins case, however, goes beyond this and in conflict with many cases that have been written by this court before and since that opinion was handed down, declares that corporations like this express company are paying a franchise or privilege tax under and by virtue of the state tax commission’s assessment, to every taxing district in which they are doing business for the right to do business in this state. In so holding the Hopkins case stands by itself, and a diligent search assisted by counsel in the ease has failed to discover any authority in or out of the state sustaining it.
It is of course true that the value of the intangible property of a carrier corporation, like this express company, depends- largely if not entirely on the volume of business that it does, and likewise true, that if it did no business, its intangible property would have little if any value, but this circumstance can have no bearing on the question we have in this case.
We are not here concerned with the factors that go to make up the value of the intangible property of these *247corporations or the volume of business they do; these are matters for the state tax commission to deal with when it comes to fix the value of the intangible property for assessment purposes.
The only question in this case is, does the payment by this corporation of a tax on its intangible property, although the value of this property is created by the business it does, amount to the payment of a license tax to Lawrenoeburg and the other cities in which it does business? That* it does not is, I think, conclusively demonstrated, when it is, as it must be admitted, that the tax on its intangible property is a property tax.
No provision had ever been made in our tax laws for a property tax that includes a iicense tax. The two classes of taxes are as separate and distinct as a municipal street improvement tax and a state school tax. They are separately treated in all text books and in all court opinions. One is a tax upon the property that the taxpayer owns, the other is a tax he pays for the privilege of doing business. He may own property worth a million, but he will pay no license tax unless he engages in a business subject to such tax.
• He may not own any property of any kind, .but yet if he goes into a business, such for example as auctioneering, he must pay a license tax.
One tax is authorized by section 171 of the Constitution, the other 'by section 181 of the Constitution. They are kept separate and apart in the whole scheme of taxation.
If the license tax due by this corporation is included in, and was a part of, the property tax paid by it to the city of Lawrenoeburg when it collected its property tax, why should it not be said with as much force and truth that the merchant when he pays his property tax also pays his license tax?
I submit that the mere fact that the corporation pays on its intangible property, while the merchant pays, on his tangible property, cannot be made the basis of any distinction such as was made in the Hopkins case.
Intangibles such as bonds, notes and capital stock, are as much property as lands, and cattle.
It may be asked why the correctness o.f the principle laid down in the Hopkins case has been permitted to stand unchallenged for a dozen years. A sufficient answer to this is, that, in the case we have, the rule an*248nounced in the Hopkins case is directly drawn in question for the first time since that opinion was handed down.
The result of its affirmance in this case will be, that this company and others doing a common carrier business, as well as all the corporations mentioned in section 4077, will be exempt from the payment of the license tax to the cities and towns of the state, that all other persons and corporations doing business thereih, are being, and will be required to pay.
I can think of no just or sound reason why this express company should occupy any different position from that of any other person or private corporation doing business in the city of Lawrenceburg, all of whom are required to' and do pay a license tax for the privilege of carrying on their business, in addition to the property fax that they do and must pay on the property employed in carrying on the business they are engaged in.
The city of Lawrenceburg, under an ordinance that admittedly it had the power to adopt, exacts from all persons engaged in any kind of business in the city, an annual license fee, in addition to the property tax imposed upon all property in the city.
"When the American Railway Express Company is singled out by the opinion from other persons doing business in the city of Lawrenceburg, it is put in a class by itself and the especial favor is granted it of exemption from a license tax, that every other person and private corporation doing business in the city must pay.
This exemption is put upon the -sole ground that this company has paid, and is paying to the city a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business there, and therefore the exaction of a license tax would be taxing it twice for the same thing. If this contention was sustained by the law or the facts, I would find no fault with the opinion.
But it is not, and the error in the opinion consists in the fact that it assumes that this company has paid, and xs paying, a franchise tax to the city for the privilege of doing business there, when as a matter of fact and truth, the city has never attempted to exact from it, nor has' it ever paid to it directly or indirectly or in any way, a franchise or privilege tax of any kind.
It pays as do all other carrier corporations, a property tax to the city, estimated on the value of its -property *249employed in business in the state, as found by the state tax commission, and this is the only character of tax it has ever paid to the city.
The only difference between the position of the merchant or other private corporation and this company, in respect to the assessment and payment of a property tax, is found in the fact that the property of the merchant and the private corporation is' assessed by the local assessor, while the property of this company is assessed by the state tax commission, and it certifies to the city that proportion of the tax due by the company, that is represented by its property employed in business in the city.
Nor does this company pay any franchise or privilege tax to the state of Kentucky. The state has never exacted from it any tax of any sort for the privilege of doing business in the state.
Much more might be said in the pertinent support of the views I have briefly expressed, but other pressing duties oblige me to conclude with the statement of these propositions,: .
(1) The tax paid by this company to the cities, towns and taxing districts, through which it runs, is not a privilege or franchise tax paid for the right to do business in the state or any city or town thereof; it is a property tax levied on its intangible property in the state for the benefit of the taxing districts in which it does business, as much so as the tax paid by individuals on their lands, notes, bonds and stocks. Henderson Bridge Co. v. Comm., 99 Ky. 623; Commonwealth v. Cumberland Tel. & Tel. Co., 124 Ky. 535; L & N. R. R. Co. v. City of Henderson, 154 Ky. 575; City of Newport v. South Covington St. Ry. Co., 156 Ky. 403; Kentucky Heating Co. v. City of Louisville, 174 Ky. 142; L & N. R. R. Co. v: Greene, Auditor, 244 U. S. 522; 61 Law Ed. 1291; Adams Express Co. v. Ohio, 166 U. S. 185; 41 Law Ed. 965; Adams Express Co. v. Kentucky, 166 U. S. 171, 41 Law Ed. 965,
(2) A license tax for the privilege of doing business in the state or in a city or town may be exacted in addition to the property tax laid on the property employed in the business, and such a tax is not double taxation. Constitution, section 181; City of Covington v. Wood, 98 Ky. 344; Wilson Bros. v. City of Lexington, 105 Ky. 765; City of Louisville v. Schnell, 131 Ky. 104; *250Hager, Auditor v. Walker, &c., 128 Ky. 1; City of Louisville v. Sagalowsiki, 136 Ky. 324; City of Louisville v. Weikel, 137 Ky. 784; Gordon v. City of Louisville, 138 Ky. 442; Greene, Auditor v. National Surety Co., 186 Ky. 353; Nebraska Telephone Co. v. City of Lincoln, 82 Neb. 59, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221.
(3) When a corporation for a valuable consideration has secured from a city or town under section 164 of the Constitution, the privilege of doing business in the city or town, it cannot be again taxed by the municipality for the privilege of carrying on its business there. Cumberland Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Hopkins, 121 Ky. 850; Adams Express Co. v. Boldrick, 141 Ky. 111; Cumberland Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Calhoun, 151 Ky. 241.
(4) As the case was practiced and the decision grounded on the assumed conclusive authority of the Hopkins case in which the subject of interstate commerce was not mentioned, I have not thought it necessary to consider the question as to the light of the city to puf a license tax on a carrier like this, engaged in interstate commerce. I may say however that as it is stipulated that this company does both an interstate and an intrastate business, the power to require it to pay a reasonable license tax for the privilege of doing intrastate business seems to be settled in the cases of Pacific Express Co. v. Seibert, 142 U. S. 339, 35 Law Ed. 1035; Osborne v. State of Florida, 164 U. S. 650, 41 Law Ed. 586.
I think the judgment should be affirmed.