75 Miss. 275 | Miss. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
It was held, in Y. & M. V. R. R. v. Thomas et al., 65 Miss., 562, affirmed 132 U. S., 174, that the exemption offered in section eight of act of February 17, 1882 (laws 1882, p. 838), was to commence from tile completion of a line of said railroad to the Mississippi river. The question there involved related to state and county taxes. The contention here relates to municipal taxes alone. The United States supreme court there declared the inflexible rule, that ‘ ‘ exemptions from taxation are regarded as in derogation of. the sovereign authority and of common right, and, therefore, not to be extended beyond the exact and
What reasonable explanation can be suggested why this railroad should have perpetual and absolute exemption from municipal taxation as to all its property, of every kind whatever, and only limited and conditional exemption from state and county taxation as to its railroad property proper ? There is no construction that can uphold appellee’s view, save the most technically literal one, in the very face of the paramount purpose of the act to secure a line of railroad to the Mississippi river. We are asked to take the last clause of the entire section, sep
"A statute must receive such construction as will, if possible,, make all its parts harmonize with each other, and render them consistent with its scope and object. ’ ’ Ellison v. Railroad Co., 36 Miss., 572. “The entire statute must be so read that the whole may have a harmonious and consistent operation.” Vinden v. Bowers, 55 Miss., 18. “In the construction of a. statute the object is to get at its spirit and meaning, its design and scope; and that construction will be justified which evidently embraces the meaning and carries out the object of the law, although it be against the letter and the grammatical construction of the act. ’ ’ Dixon v. Doe, 1 Smed. & M., 70; Pointer v. Trotter, 10 Ib., 537; Board v. Railroad Co., 72 Miss., 239. “In determining the proper construction of a statute, the entire legislation on the same subject-matter, its policy and reason, as well as the text of the particular act, must, be looked to.” Clements v. Anderson, 46 Miss., 598.
Apply these elementaly tests, remembering that statutes relating to exemptions “in derogation of sovereign authority and common right, are not to be extended beyond the exact
Judgment reversed, demurrer overruled and cause remanded.