The opinion of the court was delivered by
The capital of the plaintiff company is §800,000, being 8000 shares of §100 each.
This amount of capital was fixed by an act of fusion between said company and certain parties holding a lease of its road, under the authority of an act of the Legislature of 1867, which authorized said road “ to issue such additional stock as may represent the value of the improvements placed on said railroad by said lessees, and scale the stock of the present stockholders in accordance with its real value,” etc., “ provided the total amount of stock shall not exceed §1,000,000,” etc.
Of the §800,000 capital thus fixed, stock to amount of §400,000 was given to the lessees, and §400,000 to the original stockholders of the company.
It is abundantly shown that at the time of the assessment complained of in this suit the stock was considerably above par.
The assessors have valued the real estate, cars, mules, horses, and road-bed at §244,750, and, after deducting these items from the capitaL of §800,000, have assessed it with the remainder, §555,250, as value of “ capital.” The present suit is brought to have that item of $555,250> stricken from the roll.
It is manifest that the property, rights, and privileges of the company at the time of the fusion were estimated as worth §800,000.' The legislative act contemplated that stock should only issue to the extent, of the combined values of the improvements made by the lessees and of
We are unable to distinguish this case from that of the “ St. Charles-Street Bailroad vs. the Board of Assessors,” lately decided, and not yet reported.
We are at a loss to understand how it can be affirmed that the capital, i. e. the property, rights, and privileges of this corporation is worth less than §800,000, when its shares, i. e. the evidences of the ownership of that capital, were worth, in open market, on the day of the assessment, far more than that sum. It is said in argument that the value of these shares is largely due to good management and administration of the corporation. Admitted. But does not the value of all property fluctuate, according to its productiveness ? Is not a well-managed and carefully administered cotton or sugar plantation valued more than one that is unproductive and gone to waste ? It is said that the profits of this corporation may not be so great hereafter, and that then its shares will depreciate! True, and then the vajue of its capital, if fixed by the value of its shares, will be proportionably diminished, and its assessment reduced.
In conclusion, we will add that the assessment of “the capital” of a corporation can not, in the nature of things, particularize each and every article and element of value entering therein. It must of necessity be assessed, to great extent, in general terms, and, so far as we can perceive, no distinction exists in law between corporations whose capital is all in money and those whose capital consists of property, privileges, and franchises. We think the plaintiff’s counsel underrates the value of plaintiff’s privileges as a corporation. He denies that it has any franchises. It certainly has an exclusive right to the use of its tracks laid through the public streets of New Orleans. A similar right has lately been bought by the Oity Bailroad at the sum of §630,000.
For these reasons, and those adduced in the case of the St. Charles-Street Bailroad case, it is ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be affirmed with costs.
Behearing refused.'