Hopkins v. Baker Bros.

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was tried in the Baltimore City Court on an •agreed statement of facts. The agreement shows that Charles J. Baker, William Baker, Jr., and Charles E. Baker, compose the firm of Baker Bros, and Company; that Charles E. Baker is a resident of Baltimore City, and the other two members of the firm are residents of Baltimore County; that Charles J. Baker has a fourteuths interest, and the other two have each a three-tenths interest, in the firm. It is admitted that the place of business of the firm is on Charles street, in Baltimore City, at which place is kept the stock of the partnership, of an average value of $80,000.00; that the' firm has been assessed by the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City for $80,000.00 on their stock, and $750.00 on their horses used in their business, and taxed $1,393.95 for State and City taxes for 1892.

*370The appellees declined to pay those taxes, but were willing to pay on the horses, which they keep permanently in the city, and on the three-tenths interest of Charles E. Baker. The question raised by the agreed statement of facts and the prayers was whether taxes-could be levied and collected from the whole stock of the-firm, or whether only the three-tenths interest of Charles E. Baker therein was liable.

The Court below decided that the plaintiff was only entitled to recover the amount of taxes due for the horses and for the interest of Charles E. Baker in the whole stock of the partnership. A judgment was entered accordingly for $432.38 with interest and costs, and the plaintiff appealed to this Court.

The appellees rely upon section 51 of Article 3 of the-Constitution of Maryland, which provides that: “The personal property of residents of this State shall be subject to taxation in the county, or city, where the resident bona fide resides for the greater part of the year for which the tax may or shall be levied, and not elsewhere, except goods and chattels permanently located, which shall be-taxed in the city or county where they are so located.” The principal question to be determined is the meaning-of the term “permanently located,” as used in that section of the Constitution, it being contended by the appellees that the goods and chattels composing their stock in trade are not “permanently located” in the City of Baltimore.

Article 15 of the Declaration of Rights asserts that “every person in the State, or person holding property therein, ought to contribute his proportion of public taxes for the support of the government, according to his actual worth in real or personal property.”

Taking this in connection with the provision of the Constitution above quoted, it is clear that it was contemplated by the framers of the Constitution that per*371sonal property such as that referred to in this case should be taxed somewhere. If a resident of Baltimore County has personal property, carriage, and horses, for example, which go in and out of the city, without having any permanent abiding place in the city, he should pay taxes on the same in Baltimore County. The object of the constitutional provision was to insure as far as possible taxation once, and to prevent it more than once on the same property.

As the situs of personal property is ordinarily the place of residence of the owner, the Constitution provides that personal property should be taxed where the owner bona fide resides for the greater part of the year; but, as that provision alone might work great hardship on the county or city where goods and chattels of the owner are permanently located, the exception was made. Goods and chattels permanently located at the residence of the owner are to be taxed there, so what might be called his “floating” goods and chattels’ are taxed at the place of his residence, because they have no actual situs of their own, and hence that of their owner is adopted, but such goods and chattels as compose the stock in trade of the appellees are not carried backwards and forwards between Baltimore County, or some other county and the City of Baltimore. As .long as they are the property of the appellees they are located in Baltimore City, and they are as “permanently located’' there as such goods and chattels can be any where. They are not manufactured or purchased to be kept as long as they remain in existence. The separate articles constituting the stock may continue the property of the appellees for a day, a week, a month, a year, or longer, but until they are sold they remain permanently in Baltimore, and are not moved from place to place. That is clearly what is meant by “permanently located” — not that the goods and chattels must remain until they are *372worn out, or indefinitely. The agreed statement of facts shows that the average value of the stock carried by the appellees is $80,000.00, and that they were assessed for that amount. In other words, the appellees keep constantly on hand at their place of business in Baltimore City $80,000.00 worth of goods and chattels in the shape of glass, etc. It may be true that $5,000.00 worth of glass may be sold and shipped away to-day, and another lot of glass worth $5,000.00 may be substituted for it to-day or to-morrow, but the stock of goods and chattels of the value of $80,000.00 is kept on hand — is permanently located- at their place of business. It is not necessary to itemize the stock in trade when it is assessed. The assessors examine the stock, the goods and chattels, and fix their value for taxation, just as they do the furniture or other tangible personal property at the respective residences of the appellees. If the contention of the appellees is to prevail then merchandise cannot be taxed anywhere. No merchant expects to keep his stock permanently on hand in the sense that term is used by the learned counsel for the appellees.

He expects to sell as soon as he can receive his price, and as he sells he replenishes his stock. The articles are changing from day to day, but the stock, which represents the aggregate of the goods and chattels, remains about, the same. Yet can it be claimed that a merchant who resides and carries on his business in Baltimore is not to be taxed for his stock in trade ? A reasonable construction must be given the constitutional provision, and we must bear in mind the object in taxing goods and chattels permanently located in the city or county where they are so located.

If the position of the appellees is correct, it is possible to have hundreds of thousands of dollars, probably millions, of tangible personal property, goods and chattels, within the City of Baltimore, having the benefit of *373its police and fire protection from year to year, and yet not contribute one dollar to the support of the police or fire departments. Merchants transacting business in Cumberland, Hagerstown, Frederick, Annapolis and other incorporated cities and towns in the counties could escape all municipal taxes on their stock in trade by living beyond the corporate limits of those cities and towns, whilst those living within such cities and towns must pay the municipal as well as the State and county taxes on their stock in trade. Such a construction of the law would encourage fraud. A resident of a remote county might carry a large stock in trade in Baltimore City, or on the Eastern Shore, without the knowledge.of the authorities of the county where he resided.

We recognize fully the force of the argument of counsel for the appellees that property cannot be taxed simply because it may seem inequitable to permit it to escape taxation. But when we are called upon to construe statutes or the Constitution on this subject, it is our duty, in seeking the true interpretation of language used, to place a reasonable construction upon it, and to bear in mind the fact that our Constitution aimed to require all persons to bear their just share of the burden of taxation.

This case differs wholly from those of Hooper vs. Mayor, &c., of Baltimore, 12 Md., 464, and Phila., Wilm. and Balto. Railroad Co. vs. Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City, 50 Md., 397, cited by the appellees. Hooper was a resident of Baltimore County, and this Court decided that his ship was not permanently located “within the State,” and hence it could not be taxed by Baltimore City. The statute then in force required, property owned by residents of this State, and not permanently located elsewhere within the State, to be assessed to the owner in the county or city where he resided. The ship was registered in the custom house at Balti*374more, but under the law of Congress existing at that time she could not he registered elsewhere whilst the owner resided in Baltimore County, as Baltimore City was the port of entry of the district which embraced Baltimore County; and hence the fact that she sailed from the port of Baltimore City to foreign ports did not permanently locate her there if, in the language of the Court in that case, “a vessel built for and ^actually employed in foreign trade, can be said to be permanently located anywhere.” The case in 50 Md., 397, supra, determined that the rolling stock of the company could not be assessed in Baltimore City, as it was not permanently located there, within the meaning of the general assessment Act of 1876, which had a provision very similar to that in the Constitution. The Court decided that Baltimore City was not the home office of the corporation. It said on page 416: “The engines and cars of the appellants have no abiding place or permanent location in this State, so as to become incorporated with the other permanent property of the State, and are only brought here transiently when employed in the operation of the road.” The Court uses as equivalent terms “abiding place” and “permanent location. ” In this case the goods and chattels have an “abiding place” in Baltimore City, and are “incorporated with the other permanent property” of the city. They are not simply in transitu or temporarily located; and it is not a strained construction of the language'of the Constitution to determine, as we do, that the stock in trade of the appellees is “permanently located” in the City of Baltimore, and hence liable to taxation there.

We do not deem it necessary to determine whether this stock could he taxed in Baltimore City by reason of the fact that it is owned by a firm transacting its business there. We are of the opinion, however, that it is perfectly proper to assess the property to the firm, *375instead of to the individual members thereof according to their respective interests.

(Decided 12th January, 1894.)

There are many reasons why this should be so. The interest of the partners may vary from time to time, and should it be necessary at any time to sell the property for taxes, it might be very inconvenient, and cause serious delay in the collection of taxes, if the interests of partners must be determined as they would likely have to be before any one would purchase.

As partnership assets are liable for partnership debts before they are for the debts of the individual members of the firm, it would be proper to levy the taxes against the firm. Assessing the firm instead of the individual members, will save much inconvenience to the authorities, and do no injustice to anyone.

It follows from what we have said that the judgment below must be reversed.

Judgment reversed,, and neio tried awarded.