The opinion of the court was delivered by
Van Syckel, J.This controversy relates to the imposition of an assessment, amounting to the sum of $4,209.30, levied by the state board of assessors, for the year 1897, upon *327the Singer Manufacturing Company, under the Corporation Tax act of 1884 as amended in 1892. Gen. Stat., p. 3336, § 260.
It is called a franchise tax, and is laid upon the entire capital of the company less $814,000, the assessed value of its real and personal property in this state.
The defendant company is a manufacturing corporation, chartered by special act of the legislature of this state, in 1873 (Pamph. L., p. 971), with a capital stock of $10,000,000.
The exemption of the company from liability to this tax rests upon the provisions contained in the sixth section of its charter, which reads as follows:
“ That whenever five hundred thousand dollars shall have been paid in, said corporation may organize and proceed to business under this act, and shall immediately thereafter file with the secretary of state of this state a certificate of such payment and organization, whereupon and not until then shall this act take effect; and if and so long as the said corporation shall invest and keep invested in real estate within this state the sum of five hundred thousand dollars, the real and personal property of the said corporation not actually in fact within the State of New Jersey, and the stock of the said corporation held or owned by any of its stockholders shall not be liable to any tax or impost whatsoever.”
Previous to its incorporation in'this state, the company was incorporated under the laws of the State of New York, where it had a large factory. It also had a factory in Glasgow, Scotland, one in Austria, and another in the State of Indiana.
Upon the grant of its charter by this state, the New York factory was abandoned, and the business removed to Elizabeth, New Jersey, where a large factory was erected, giving employment to over four thousand men.
The property of the company invested in manufacturing in this state, more than one-half of which is real estate, exceeds in value $1,000,000.
The question to be solved is whether the sixth section of the charter of this company constitutes an irrepealable con*328tract with the state, and if it does, whether the imposition of •this tax violates the contract.
The sixth section contains all the elements of a contract. There are present a subject-matter, parties and a consideration. On the one side is a complete performance, and on the other acceptance.
That it must be regarded as a contract under our adjudications there can be no question. State v. Branin, 3 Zab. 484; State v. Berry, 2 Harr. 80; Camden and Amboy Railroad Co. v. Hillegas, 3 Id. 11; Bridge Co. v. Hoboken Land and Improvement Co., 2 Beas. 81; Mount Pleasant Cemetery Co. v. Newark, 23 Vroom 539.
The stringency with which this rule is applied is illustrated in the opinion of the late Chief Justice in the case last cited.
Is this contract irrepealable ?
If the sixth section of the charter of the company contains the entire contract, it is unassailable by state legislation. Both the federal and state constitutions inhibit the passage of any law by the state impairing the obligation of a contract.
The state attempts to justify this tax by reading into the charter of the Singer company the sixth section of the act of 1846 (Pamph. L., p. 16), which is as follows:
“The charter of every corporation which shall hereafter be granted by or created under any of the acts of the legislature shall be subject to alteration, suspension and repeal in the discretion of the legislature.”
For many years after the passage of this act it was uniformly held by the courts of this state that the sixth section of the act of 1846 was to be literally read into every charter thereafter granted by the legislature, thereby rendering every such charter subject to repeal or alteration at legislative discretion. Such was the judgment of this court in Morris and Essex Railroad Co. v. Commissioners of Railroad Taxation, 9 Vroom 472, decided in 1875. That case was removed to the Supreme Court of the United States and the decision of this court was reversed. New Jersey v. Yard, 95 U. S. 104. The federal court, in reversing, declared that a legislature *329could not bind its successors; that, notwithstanding the act of 1846, it was still competent for any legislature to make an irrepealable contract if it elected to do so, and that it was therefore a question in every case of a contract made by the legislature, whether that body intended that the right to change or repeal it should inhere in it, or whether, like other contracts, it was perfect and without the power of the legislature to impair its obligation.
The federal court held the contract under consideration in that case to be irrepealable because it could not be believed that it was the intent of either party to it that one should be held forever and the other merely at will, and it refused to read the act of 1846 into the contract because the contract was inconsistent with it.
The rule thus so explicitly laid down by the federal court has since been accepted as the law of this court. State Board v. Morris and Essex Railroad Co., 20 Vroom 193. Unless, therefore, an intention can fairly be drawn from the terms of this contract, as agreed upon by the parties, to reserve to the state the right to repeal the contract at will without the consent of the company, there can be no departure from it.
There is nothing in the language of this contract which gives the slightest foundation for the suggestion that the state reserved the right to deprive the company at will of the benefit it was to receive under the agreement after it had fully performed on its part.
The undertaking is express that, if and so long as the company shall invest and keep invested $500,000 in real estate in this state, the exemption shall continue. There is no uncertainty in that respect. It excludes most clearly the idea that the act of 1846 was to be deemed a part of the Singer charter.
It cannot be conceived that either the state or the company deliberately entered into a contract by which it was understood and intended that the state should be at liberty.fo deprive the company of the benefit to be derived’ from it as soon as the company had performed on its part. Such a *330proposition could not have been seriously made by the state nor for a moment entertained by the company.
The terms of the contract and the circumstances attending it repel the assumption that the entire engagement is not expressed in the sixth section of the charter.
When a contract is made the good faith of the state must-be preserved and the contract performed according to a reasonable and just interpretation of it.
The company was induced to remove its works from the State of New York and to erect a large and expensive factory in this state by this agreement to limit the power of the state to subject it to taxation, and it will be derogatory to the state to resort to any subterfuge or narrow and sharp construction in order to evade the effect of the contract.
It may be well to observe here that it could not have been supposed by those who voted for the constitutional amendments of 1875, that it was intended to bestow upon the legislative branch of the state government the power to disregard and violate the contracts into which the state had previously entered. It would be a reflection upon the integrity of those who framed the amendments, to infer such a power from any language contained in them. That no such power resides in the lawmaking power by force of the constitutional amendments of 1875 was manifestly the opinion of this court in Mount Pleasant Cemetery Co. v. Newark, 23 Vroom 539. So free from doubt was this question' regarded that the distinguished Chief Justice who delivered the opinion of the court in that case did not even suggest that it was a question worthy to be considered.
The contract must be regarded as irrepealable. The real question in the cause is, what is its true meaning and its just construction ?
The exemption is “ that the real and personal property of the company not actually and in fact within the State of New Jersey, and the stock of the said corporation held or owned by any of its stockholders, shall not be liable to any tax or impost whatsoever.”
*331It has been the accepted law of this state since 1852 that an enactment which exempts a corporation or its property from taxation also exempts the shares of its stock held by its stockholders. State v. Branin, 3 Zab. 484; State v. Bentley, Id. 532; State v. Powers, 4 Id. 400.
In the case last cited Chief Justice Green declared that this principle must be considered as clearly settled. It was the conceded law of the state at the time the contract with the Singer company was concluded, and has not been challenged until the present controversy arose.
It had the sanction of the federal courts and was pronounced to be the law by the highest legal tribunals in many of the states. Gordon v. Appeal Tax Court, 3 How. 133; Farrington v. Tennessee, 95 U. S. 679; Bank v. Tennessee, 104 Id. 493.
Conceding this to be the law, it must logically result that an express exemption of the shares of a corporation from taxation will also exempt the company, unless it can be maintained that a burden cast upon the company is not a burden upon the shares of the company which represent its property.
In the case cited from 3 How. 133, upon which Chief Justice Green based his decision in the Branin case, the legislature had extended the charters of certain Maryland banks, upon their having subscribed for the stock of a turnpike company, and in the act of extension had pledged the faith of the state not to impose any further tax or burden upon them during the continuance of their charters. This was held to protect the stockholders against a tax upon the stock of the banks in their hands.
The court said : “Does the contract exempt the respective capital stocks of the banks, as an aggregate, and the stockholders from being taxed as persons on account of their stock ? We think it does both. The aggregate could not be taxed without its having the same effect upon the parts that a tax upon the parts wmuld have upon the whole.”
That is a self-evident proposition, and it is equally clear that no sane person would regard as of any value an exemp*332tion of the shares of a corporation, if the state was left free to impose taxation at its will upon the corporation itself.
In either case the tax is in fact exacted from the stockholders ; they are the company.
In Mayor of Baltimore v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co., 6 Gill 288, the charter of the company provided that the shares of capital stock of the company should be personal property and exempt from the imposition of any tax or burden. This was held to exempt the company as well as the stock from taxation.
The court said : “ The design contemplated by the legislature in the insertion of this clause of exemption in the act of assembly was to confer a certain substantial, not a nominal,, benefit on the stockholders and to induce capitalists to risk their money in a novel and hazardous enterprise. To impute to the legislature, in the case before us, an intention to exempt the shares of the stock from taxation and at the same time to reserve the right to tax everything which constituted it a stock and gave to it its value, would be gratuitously to cast an imputation upon the legislature inconsistent with every principle of judicial courtesy.”
This is precisely what this court has been urged to do in this case.
In like cases of exemption of shares in’ the hands of stockholders in other states the courts have been equally pronounced in declaring that if the -company itself was held to be subject to taxation, the contract would be “ a piece of folly and the promised exemption a delusion.” Scotland Co. v. Missouri Railway Co., 65 Mo. 123; Grand Gulf Railroad Co. v. Buck, 53 Miss. 246 ; Hannibal Railroad Co. v. Shacklett, 30 Mo. 550; New Haven v. City Bank, 31 Conn. 106.
The exemption granted to the Singer company is far broader than that in any case to which the attention of the court has been directed.
There is not only an express exemption of the stock of the corporation in the hands of stockholders, but there is an express limitation upon the right to tax the company itself, *333by which the extent- of the state’s right is defined. “The real and personal property of the company not actually in fact within the state is not liable to any tax or impost whatsoever.”
This contract was made long after the decisions before cited from 3 Vroom, and long before the decision of Justice Peckham in 161 U. S., in which he expressed himself -as unwilling to adopt the previously-declared construction of Justice Swayne, that an exemption of the shares exempted the company.
The language of the contract was fitly chosen to exclude any claim that the company was to be wholly exempt from taxation. The provision that the real and personal property of the company not actually in fact within the state shall be exempt implies the reservation of a right to tax the real and personal property which is within the state. The apparent purpose and entire effect of the language used is to enable the state to tax property within its borders. The statute was drawn to secure to the state the benefit of taxing the property which the company, for the grant of its- franchises, agreed to hold within the state. Such property, real and personal, must, under our constitutional provision, be assessed for taxes like other real and personal property, and not otherwise.
More comprehensive language to assure absolute immunity from the burden now sought to be laid upon it could not be employed.
The state pledged exemption not from taxation only, but from any imposition whatsoever.
Much of the brief on the part of the state is devoted to proving that, at the time the Singer charter was granted, the accepted meaning of the word “ impost” was “ a tax or tribute or levy upon goods brought from out of the state or country into it,” and the familiar rule was invoked that after a practical construction has been given to language by judicial decision, it will be presumed that it has been adopted with the meaning so given to it.
*334If this meaning is given to “ impost,” the charter must be read as follows:
“ So long as $500,000 shall be invested in real estate within this state, the real and personal property of the corporation not actually in fact within the state, and the stock of said corporation held or owned by any of its stockholders, shall not be liable to any tax or duty upon any property which it shall bring from out of this state into the state.”
It is apparent that such an interpretation of this language is in contravention of the expressed intention of the parties to the contract. Property out of the state is to be non-taxable, but as soon as it is brought into the state it is made subject to imposition in language in respect to which there is no uncertainty.
This narrow and restricted meaning given to the word “impost” would lead to an absurd result and is manifestly inadmissible.
In Pacific Insurance Co. v. Soule, 7 Wall. 433, Mr. Justice Swayne says: “ Impost is a duty on imported goods and merchandise. In a larger sense, it is any tax or imposition.” And again, “that duties aud imposts were probably intended to comprehend every species of tax or contribution not included under the ordinary terms, taxes and excises.”
We are confirmed in our view expressed in 29 Vroom that the word “impost,” as used in the Singer charter, includes every kind of enforced contribution to the public treasury.
What the corporators evidently apprehended, and what the charter in express words guards against, is the laying of an imposition of any nature upon the shares of capital stock as well as upon the real and personal property of the company outside of this state.
The charter couples real and personal estate in the exempting clause, and while the situs of personal property for taxation is the domicile of the owner, the idea of imposing in this state a direct tax upon the real estate of the Singer company lying.in Scotland, in Austria and in other places outside of this state, has never been suggested in the wildest scheme for *335raising public revenue, and it surely did not enter into the consideration of the parties in this contract for immunity from taxation.
It is not conceivable that either the state or the company supposed that this charter simply gave the company a pledge that its property, real and personal, outside of the state should not be subject to direct tax, reserving to the state unlimited power to tax the capital of the company and thereby tax that property by indirection.
The manifest object was to restrain the state from levying' au indirect imposition upon the property of the company outside the state in the mode now resorted to or in any other way. The language is most aptly chosen to protect the company.
The imposition resisted by the company in this case is laid upon the entire capital stock of the company of $10,000,000, less the value of its real and personal property in this state, and is in effect as much an impost ou property out of this state as if it was put directly upon the property itself and not upon the capital which stands for and represents it. It is an attempt to accomplish by indirection what it is stipulated shall not be done. It is an effort to levy á franchise tax out of the many millions of dollars of its capital invested by the company in real and personal property outside of this state.
The act of 1884 (Pamph. L., p. 232) is entitled “An act to provide for the imposition of state taxes upon certain corporations and for the collection thereof.”
In that act this imposition is called a yearly license fee or tax.
In a supplement passed to tke act- of 1884 (Pamph. L. 1891, p. 150) it is styled “a tax.”
In a further supplement passed in 1892 (Pamph. L., p. 136) it is called “ an annual license fee or franchise tax.”
It is wholly immaterial what name may be given to it. The fact that it ie called a “license fee” or “franchise tax” cannot validate it. It is levied under an act passed “to authorize the imposition of state taxes,” and it is none the *336less an interdicted imposition, and none the less a tax because it is given a new name.
Although under our adjudications it is not a tax on property in a sense which brings it within article 4, section 7, paragraph 12 of our state constitution, it is a tax on the capital stock of the corporation. Otherwise the act would be manifestly void for want of a title expressing its object, and the state would be deprived of all its revenue under the act of 1892. The franchise of the company is the right to hold property and exercise its corporate privileges. The Supreme Court of the United States has decided that where a corporation is exempted from taxation, it is not subject to a tax on its franchise. Wilmington Railroad Co. v. Reid, 13 Wall. 264.
All the rights and privileges which the company is empowered to exercise were granted to it by its charter upon the terms therein specified. Those terms cannot be changed or altered without the consent of both parties to the charter contract. The right to make further exactions from the company under any pretext involves the power on the part of the state legislature to render the grant to the company futile and. of no value, by impositions'of like'charactér, to such an extent that the business of the company cannot be prosecuted with profit to the shareholders. That an impost laid upon the entire capital stock is a burden on each share into which such capital stock is divided, in the hands of its several holders, is too clear to be doubted. The proposition that an imposition may be laid upon the aggregate of the capital stock, which is expressly forbidden to be levied upon the several parts which constitute the whole thereof, is so absolutely devoid of merit that it cannot be assented to!
Thus far the discussion has related to the correct interpretation of this contract, as if it were a novel question submitted now for the first time for adjudication. A reference to our own judicial decisions will show ihcontrove'rtibly that at the time the Singer charter was granted the words “shall not be liable to any tax or impost whatsoever” (the language of the exempting clause) hád received a judicial construction which *337must now be accepted as its true meaning in this contract, leaving no place for further interpretation.
As long ago as 1839 the Supreme Court, in State v. Berry, 2 Harr. 80, construed a provision in the charter of the Paterson and Hudson River Railroad Company, “ that no further or other tax or impost shall be levied or assessed upon said company.”
The same language was again submitted to the Supreme Court for construction in the case of Camden and Amboy Railroad Co. v. Hillegas, 3 Harr. 11.
In these cases the Supreme Court declared that this language “ does not exempt the franchises or privileges of the company merely from taxation, but it exempts the company generally from all other taxation to which their property, in common with the property of individuals, would have been subject without such special exemption.”
These adjudications were fully concurred in and approved by the Court of Errors and Appeals in Gardner v. State, 1 Zab. 557, and in the more recent case in this court of State Board v. Morris and Essex Railroad Co., 20 Vroom 193.
After our court of last resort had decided that the language contained in the charter of the Paterson and Hudson River railroad, and like language in the charter of the Camden and Amboy railroad, deprives the state of the right to impose a franchise tax upon either of those companies, this contract with the Singer company was made, in which not only the same language was used, but it was made even stronger in favor of the company by adding the word “ whatsoever” — the Singer company “shall not be liable to any tax or impost whatsoever” — manifestly intending to exclude any possible burden on the company except the one previously specified.
It is manifest that both the legislature, when it granted the charter, and the company to which it was granted, understood, from the prior decisions of our courts, that the exempting language was intended to secure exemption from a franchise tax. To affirm the contrary is to assert that the language of the contract was used in a sense the opposite of that which *338both parties are presumed to have known was its declared and accepted meaning in the law.
The parties to the contract must be held to have adopted this language with the meaning which had been given to it previously by our highest court, and that is decisive of this controversy; it is not open to question.
The company cannot be brought within the operation of the act of 1892 without impairing the obligation of its contract with the state.
In Shelby County v. Union Bank, 161 U. S. 149, Mr. Justice Peckham, who delivered the opinion of the court, refused to adopt the view expressed by Mr. Justice Swayne in Farrington v. Tennessee, supra, and that case is chiefly relied upon as' a reason for renewing this controversy. The case has no controlling pertinency to the present discussion for two reasons:
First. The language construed by Mr. Justice Peckham was as follows: The charter of the company provided “ that it should pay to the state an annual tax of one-half of one per cent, on each share of capital stock, which shall be in lieil of all other taxes,” and he held that while it limited the amount of tax on each share of stock in the hands of shareholders it did not exempt the corporation. That charter provision differs from the Singer charter in the important respect that the latter not only exempts the shares of stock but it also contains an express limitation on the right to tax the company. From the language used and from that limitation the implication arises in favor of the company’s immunity.
Second. The clause construed by Mr. Justice Peckham had not, as in the Singer case, prior to its incorporation in the company’s charter, been given a definite, established and well-understood meaning by judicial decision in the state where the controversy arose. But if any substantial basis could be found upon which to rest the claim of the state to lay this contested burden upon the company, the state is precluded by the previous judgment of this court from the further litigation of this subject.
*339A like tax in all respects was laid by the state upon the Singer company in 1891.
The right of the state to levy that tax was controverted by the company, and the case was brought into this court for judgment. It was twice argued before this court by eminent counsel, and considered with great deliberation and care. The decision of this court, reported in 29 Vroom 633, is that the charter inhibits the imposition of this tax upon the company. That decision was concurred in by every member of this court (consisting of eleven judges) who heard the arguments in the case. TTo application for rehearing was made, and that judgment stands as the law of this court and of this case.
It is a judgment between the same parties, in regard to the same subject, involving the construction of the same contract, and presenting precisely the same questions both of law and fact, which have been agitated in this case.
In New Orleans v. Citizens’ Bank, 167 U. S. 398, the Supreme Court of the United States said :
“ No principle of the law is more inflexible than that which 'fixes the absolute conclusiveness of such a judgment upon the parties and their privies. Whether the reasons upon which it was based were sound or not, and even if no reasons at all were given, the judgment imports absolute verity, and the parties are forever stopped from disputing its correctness. The estoppel extends to every material allegation or statement which, having been made on one side and denied on the other, was at issue in the cause, and was determined therein.
“ It follows, then, that the mere fact that the demand in this case is for a tax for one year, and the demands in the adjudged cases were for taxes for other years, does not prevent the operation of the thing adjudged, if, in the prior cases, the question of exemption was necessarily presented and determined upon identically the same facts upon which the right of exemption is now claimed.”
Such is the language of the highest federal court in a tax case, and that its authority should not be doubted is the dictate both of reason and sound policy.
*340In the case reported in 29 Vroom the conditions and questions to be solved were identical with those here presented, the only difference being that in this case the tax is for a subsequent year. Unless the question involved is res adjudieata, it can never become so; the unsuccessful litigant may year after year continue to vex his adversary and the court with the same questions which have been decided.
The attempt now to reopen questions which have been once adjudged by this court, by trying to enforce a subsequent tax of the same character, should not be countenanced. It is contrary to the traditions of this court; no precedent can be found for it from the foundation of this court to the present time.
The judgment of this court must be regarded as a finality. It is established to review the decisions of inferior courts and discontented suitors cannot invoke its aid to review and set aside its own deliberate judgments.
The questions sought to be reopened in this case should be regarded as closed and no longer a subject of controversy between these parties, and in accordance with the former judgment of this court the judgment of the Supreme Court setting aside the tax against the company should be affirmed.
Yredenbtjrg-h, J.My reasons for voting to affirm the judgment setting aside the tax in question are founded especially upon the following considerations, viz.: There was certainly one intent of the parties to the above-quoted contract of 1873 about which there is no room for debate, namely, that no real or personal property of this company, when situated outside of the state, should be liable to taxation by the state, and my point is that the present exaction of a per centum upon the amount of the issued capital stock of the company is a form of taxation of such property — that the state is attempting to accomplish by indirection what it cannot do directly. It seems to me, to use the language of authority, that “ a tax upon an ineideni to a prohibited thing is a tax upon the thing itself, and that if there is a want of power to *341tax the thing itself there is an equal want of power to tax the incident,” the broad principle being that the law always regards substance and not form.
It is to be observed that in 1873 the term “real and personal” property of a person or corporation was commonly believed to embrace all property that was legally possible to be subjected to taxation against such person under our constitution, It was not until about the year 1884 that a new species of revenue taxation, which Mr. Justice Field, lately sitting in the Supreme Court of the United States, in the income tax case of Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Co., 157 U. S. 592 (1894), called a species of excise tax, was adopted in this state. His language was this: “ Excises are a species of tax consisting generally of duties laid upon the manufacture, sale or consumption of commodities within the country or upon certain callings or occupations, often taking the form of exactions for licenses to pursue them.”
The act of 1892 in question denominates the present exaction a “ license fee or franchise tax,” and it is imposed for the purpose of revenue upon the occupation of the company, generally and without restriction to any locality. It is not a tax assessed upon any basis of valuation of the property of the company, but is arrived at annually by the mere multiplication of the amount of the company’s issued capital stock by the arbitrary per centum fixed in the act.
It appears by the evidence taken in these proceedings that the extra-territorial property of the Singer company has largely increased since 1873, and now consists of serving machine factories and their contents, located in Scotland, Austria, Canada, Illinois and Indiana, from the sales of the products of which and of the goods there manufactured, in addition to those of their factory in this state, the business of the company is carried on and their annual earnings and dividends, if any, are realized. This annual license fee or franchise tax is certainly a tax upon the general business of the company. Mr. Justice Bradley, in Leloup v. Mobile, 127 U. S. 645, said: “We fail to see how a state can tax a business occupation when it can*342not tax the business itself. Of course the exaction of a license tax as a condition of doing any particular business is a tax on the occupation, and a tax on the occupation of doing a business is surely a tax on the business.”
Undoubtedly, upon the company’s failure to pay the tax in question in this suit, its charter would be liable to forfeiture at the instance of the Attorney-General. The payment is, in all respects, compulsory. So that in fixing the scope of the contract the question becomes narrowed to this: Is an annual tax on the business of the company in effect a tax upon the property, with and from the use alone of which that business is done? I find a line of cases holding that “where the business or occupation consists in the sale of goods, the license tax required for its pursuit is, in effect, a tax upon the goods themselves.” It was so decided in the case of Welton v. State of Missouri, 91 U. S. 275. There the validity of a license tax which had been exacted by the State of Missouri from dealers in goods which were not the product or manufacture of that state was in question, and the Supreme Court of the United States held that such an exaction must be regarded as a tax upon the goods themselves. So in Cook v. Pennsylvania, 97 U. S. 566, it was held that a tax upon the amount of sales of goods made by an auctioneer was a tax upon the goods sold. So in Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, 444, it was held that the tax on the occupation of an importer was the same as a tax on imports.
The language of Chief Justice Marshall, in this case, is particularly significant in this connection. He said: “It is impossible to conceal from ourselves that this is varying the form without varying the substance. It is treating a prohibition which is general as if it were confined to a particular mode of doing the forbidden thing. All must perceive that a tax on the sale of an article imported only for sale is a tax on the article itself.”
In Almy v. California, 24 How. 169, it was held that a duty on a bill of lading was the same thing as a duty on (he article which it represented. In Railroad Co. v. Jackson, 7 Wall. 262, it was held that a tax upon the interest payable on *343bonds was a tax, not upon the debtor but upon the security. And in the latest deliverance of the Supreme Court of the United States on the subject., upon the re-argument of the income tax cases, reported in 158 U. S. 601, it was held, after the most careful consideration, that the taxes on the rents and income of real estate are equally as direct taxes as the taxes on the real estate itself, and that the taxes on the income of personal property, are equally as direct taxes as the taxes on the personal property itself, the very point of the decision being that there was no legal difference or distinction between taxing property and taxing its income or earnings.
The language of Chief Justice Fuller (157 U. S. 581), in his opinion, is that “ an annual tax upon the annual value or annual user of real estate appears to us the same in substance as an annual tax on the real estate, which would be paid out of the rent or income.” And in Iron City Bank v. Pittsburg, 37 Pa. St. 343, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said, “to tax the business which capital performs is to tax the capital. This is as certainly true as that taxation of capital is a burden on the business in which it is engaged.”
Under the tax classification adopted by this court in the case of Standard Underground Cable Co. v. Attorney-General, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 270, the assessment in question, speaking in a strict constitutional sense, must be defined to be a franchise tax as distinguished from a property tax. This,' as a legal definition, must be accepted as correct, but while a franchise tax is not one levied directly upon property, and is not, therefore, to be named a “ property tax,” it is, when imposed in substantial sums for purposes of revenue, as in the present instance, a tax burden upon the income of property. Unless we follow the name and shadow merely, and lose sight of the substance of things, the intent of the parties in the use, at the close of the exemption clause, of the comprehensive words, viz., “ shall not be liable to any tax or impost whatsoever,” is as clearly expressed as if they had instead appended thereto the words “ whether such tax or impost be ascertained in the form of an assessment upon the value of such property or in the form of a franchise tax fixed by a *344percentage upon the capital.” In either case the governmental burden to be borne by the company and paid out of the earnings of the property for the privilege of using it to carry on its extra-territorial business will be increased, and its net earnings decreased to that extent, in disregard of the real intent and just expectation of the contracting parties.
Now, the State of New Jersey solemnly agreed not to tax the real and personal property of this company not actually in fact within the state, and yet, after long years of acquiescence in the system of property taxation then in vogue, have devised a new experiment of taxation under which, while in the matter of form, indeed, that real and personal property is not made liable by any assessment against it, yet, in the matter of substance the annual income and earnings of that property is to be reached and consumed by the aid of the multiplication table and an arbitrary per centum of the capital stock. Does not this law of 1892, therefore, impair that contract of 1873? The general rule of interpretation of such contracts, having the approval of very high authority, was adopted by this court, in 1890, in the case of Mount Pleasant Cemetery Co. v. Newark, 23 Vroom 539, 541. Chief Justice Beasley, quoting Judge Cooley with approval, then said : “Any law which enlarges, abridges or in any manner changes the intention of the parties discoverable in it, necessarily impairs the contract itself, which is but the evidence of that intention ; the manner or degree in which this change is effected can in no respect influence the conclusion.” I think that this law of 1892 thus tested cannot stand the test. The exaction annually of this license fee of $4,212 by the compulsory power of the state, though not in form a tax upon the property of this corporation outside of this state, is, in fact, a burden upon the annual earnings of that property, and must of necessity be paid out of them either in whole, or, if not, certainly in large part, and thus falling on them is, in a manner, as I have above argued, a tax upon that property, and to such extent, at least, “ abridges ” the intention of the parties. The action of the state’s taxing department in levying this tax is *345not intended to be criticised. It is exercising its right, through its proper officers, of collecting its tax revenues required for the conduct of its affairs. It is met in this effort by a contract of exemption made by the legislature of 1873, a most unwise and impolitic bargain, tending to derange and confuse the tax system of the state and striking a serious blow at its finances. Nevertheless, as it seems to me, this concededly irrepealable contract is binding not only in law, but especially “ in foro conscientice ” upon this.court of final resort. As the substantive intention of the parties to that contract is, in the view I have above taken, clearly to exempt this property from taxation in every form, and as the history of this litigation shows that this court has already unanimously held to that effect, I think all attempts now to enforce the payment of the tax proposed are oppressive and unconscionable.