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[222 U.S. 448, 449] Messrs. William C. Prentiss, Elias S. Clark, and Henry F. Ashurst for appellants.
[222 U.S. 448, 450] Messrs. Robert Dunlap, T. J. Norton, and Gardiner Lathrop for appellee.
Mr. Justice Holmes delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a bill brought by the railway company, the appellee, to restrain the collection of taxes from which it says that it is exempt. The facts in brief are these: A predecessor of the appellee, the Santa Fe & Grand Canyon Railroad Company, between August, 1899, and October, 1900, built over 56 miles of the road concerned. In July, 1901, this road was sold on foreclosure sale to pur- [222 U.S. 448, 451] chasers who organized the appellee and in August conveyed the road to it. The new company finished the road to the edge of the Grand Canyon and laid out stations and hotel grounds at the end. In 1906 the territorial board undertook to levy the tax complained of. The supreme court held that the appellee was exempt. 12 Ariz. 69, 95 Pac. 187. 12 Ariz. 117, 100 Pac. 438.
The railroad company was organized under act No. 3, February 8, 1897, of the territory, which authorized such corporations to be formed for the purpose of buying the property of railroads sold on foreclosure, and to buy and exercise 'all the rights, privileges, franchises, immunities, and powers' of their predecessors. By 7 such corporations were to have all rights, immunities, etc., then or thereafter given to any railroad organized under the general laws; but by 8 it was provided that the act should not be construed 'to give to any corporation created under it, any exemption from taxation created by any existing or future exemption laws of the territory of Arizona.' The question does not stand on this act alone, however, and the cases discussed in Rochester R. Co. v. Rochester,
No doubt a strong argument can be made and was made for a different view, based on the passage before and on the date of the act of 1897 of statutes like that of 1899.
[222 U.S. 448, 452]
But the considerations that prevailed also are agent and so obvious as not to need statement. Moreover, the question is not whether the later statute constituted a contract (Damon v. Hawaii,
Judgment affirmed.
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Citation: 222 U.S. 448
No. 86
Decided: January 09, 1912
Court: United States Supreme Court
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