Chapter XVII - Taxes Page 04
PAYMENTS
All tax bills are due and collectable on presentation, but this is never enforced.
A time is, however, fixed beyond which payment cannot be deferred.
A sufficient amount of any property may be sold at auction to satisfy a tax bill.
Of old, and still in some places, the road taxes were paid in cash, but more frequently by work on the roads, either by the individual man, or in connection with his team, each day's work of one or both being fixed at a regular rate.
TAXING CORPORATIONS
The state does not tax the individual members of a corporation for property held in common. The same result is secured better by taxing the corporation as a body. This applies to banks, railroads, and incorporated manufacturing establishments.
Savings banks are taxed lightly. Every depositor is liable for a personal property tax proportioned to the amount of his credit.
To make collection easy the savings bank always pays the amount of this tax in bulk, and then charges it to the expense account of the establishment, so that indirectly the depositors pay after all, as their dividends are reduced by just the amount of the tax.
TAXES IN GENERAL
When a man owns property in different towns, counties, or states, he is regarded as so many individuals, and must pay each as the local demands require. No matter where a man's personal property is placed, the rule is to tax him for the whole at the place of his usual residence.
The landlord and the merchant each pays a direct tax to the collector, but it would be a business error to think that in so doing either or both is carrying more than his share of the total taxation.
The landlord keeps in mind the added expense when he comes to adjust leases with his tenants. The merchant, who pays taxes on his stock and so adds to his expense account, should not be blamed if he keeps this in mind when he fixes the selling prices of his goods.
THE RETURNS
Taxes duly paid, honestly collected, and properly expended should never be regarded as a burden.
From no equal expenditure of money do the people get so much good.
The public schools, the public highways, the protection of life and property, public hospitals, public libraries, residences for the old, the blind, the orphaned and the insane, as well as secure places for the lawless, are built and maintained by the taxpayer.
As a rule all these things are done honestly and well, notwithstanding the outcry to the contrary.
If there be dishonesty in places, it is the fault quite as much of the voter who selected him as of the official culprit himself.
We must take all the responsibility of our agents, whether they be public or private.
Every good citizen should feel that his public duty is an important private business.