112 Ky. 659 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1902
•Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
These actions being all for taxes and involving the same •questions of law are by consent heard together. The case first above against Newport & Cincinnati Bridge Co. is for taxes on property assessed by the county assessor, being its bridge and certain lots in the city of Newport, and for the year 1892 to 1895. The second styled case, against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. is for tax on its prop■erty as assessed by the R. R. Commission for the years '1892 to 1895. The same as to the case against Maysville & Big Sandy Railroad Company. The case last set' out is .against the Newport and Cincinnati Bridge Co. for taxes .on its'franchise assessed by the State board of valuation .and assessment for the years 1893 to 1896.
The last named action is brought in the name of Campbell county and the Commonwealth of Kentucky for the use of «'Campbell county and a special demurrer as to the right and power of the named plaintiffs to sue being sustained an .amendment was -.filed adding as' plaintiffs the fiscal ■ court of Campbell county,.and C. L. Raison, Jr., official collector of the fiscal .court, .for the use of Campbell county.
The petitions state the fact of the levy of the tax rate,» the regular assessment of the property by the proper authority for each of the different years, and that the taxes due had not been paid.
In the several amendments filed to the petitions the-pleader anticipated the probable defense of appellees and, pleaded that their contention was, and is, that their property was and is exempt from taxation in Campbell county or rather by Campbell county by reason of the provisions-of an act of April 17, 1882, as amended by the Acts, of March 13, 1880, and March 15, 1898, concerning the courthouse district in Campbell county. Appellants then pleaded that the acts, in so far as an exemption from taxation; is given or attempted to be given, is unconstitutional and void, and pleads that appellees are not exempted from taxation by Campbell county. To these several petitions as amended the court sustained a special demurrer to the right to maintain the action as well as a general demurrer to the right to recover, and dismissed the actions, from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The questions that are presented for our consideration are (1), the right of the county, either by itself, by its fiscal court, by the Commonwealth, or by the back tax collector appointed by the fiscal court, for the use and benefit of the county to maintain an action for taxes due it,and .(2) the constitutionality of the several acts of the Legislature exempting property from taxation by the county of Campbell, where it is situated within the taxing district created by the act of 1882.
It is insisted by appellant that by section 4021, Kentucky Statutes, authority and power is given to the county to sue for taxes due. The section reads:
“The Commonwealth, and each county, incorporated city, town and taxing district, shall have a lien on the property assessed for the taxes due them respectively which shall not be defeated by gift, devise, sale, alienation, or am' means whatever, unless the gift, devise, sale or alienation shall have been made for more than five years before the institution of proceedings to enforce the lien, and nothing shall be exempt from levy and sale for taxes' and costs incident to the same, etc.”
It is also contended that by section 4104 of Kentucky Statutes, authority to sue for taxes is expressly conferred.
That section reads:
“Taxes, penalties and interest due the Commonwealth 'from any railroad company may be recovered by the auditor of public accounts, by action in the name of the Commonwealth, in the Franklin Circuit Court; and those due any county, city, incorporated town, or taxing district, may bt recovered by -the officer authorized to receive same by action in the ■ name of the Commonwealth in any court of competent jurisdiction.”
it will be noticed that this section, 4104, applies to railroads alone by its terms. However, in the case of Henderson Bridge Co. v. City of Henderson, 90 Ky., 498; (12 R., 414) it was held that this section applied also to railroad bridges. The ruling was recently followed in Louisville Bridge Co. v. City of Louisville, 23 R., 1665, (65 S. W., 815), decided December 19, 1901.
It is insisted by appellees railroad companies, that while actions can be maintained against them for unpaid taxes in
In the language ,of the section the officer authorized to receive the taxes may by action in the name of the Commonwealth recover the taxes. The petition herein shows that Raison was an officer of the fiscal court of Campbell county, authorized to receive these taxes and to receipt therefor in the name of the county, and it further appears that the sheriff in office when the taxes were due had gone out of office, and had been acquitted by- his settlement with the county, and therefore he had no right, power or authority to receive these taxes. As they were taxes due the county prior to the term of office of the incumbent sheriff, the fiscal court might or not in its discretion have certified these taxes to the then sheriff or collector, of current taxes. If the fiscal court desired, it had a right to appoint a collector of past, due and delinquent taxes, and such appointee was the officer authorized to receive such taxes and might under section 4104, recover same by action in the name of the Commonwealth for the use of the county.
However, in the case of Louisville Bridge Company against City of Louisville, supra, this court held that under section 4021, there was authority given to sue for taxes so far as the city of Louisville was concerned. Under the provisions of the section the county and taxing district are placed on the same footing as the city. We conclude therefore that appellant had authority to maintain the actions for these taxes by reason of the sections of the statute quoted. This court expressly so held in the Louisville
It would follow therefore that the special demurrer should have been overruled.
The question as to the validity of the exemption granted by the court house district acts might have been left to a demurrer to an answer pleading such exemption or immunity, but as the validity of the several acts was questioned in the several petitions and a demurrer thereto sustained, the question is fairly presented. Section (6) of the act of April 17, 1882, provides:
“The citizens living; within the district above described shall hereafter be exempt from the payment of a poll-tax, and the property within said district shall be exempt from all taxation except for State revenue, for county roads, for taking care of the poor, court and jail expenses, and the Highland district, and the cities of Newport and Dayton, and the town of Bellevue, for the purposes now authorized by law.”
By the amendment of 1886, -the court house district through its commissioners were authorized to levy taxes to pay a portion of the salaries of the county officers and for maintaining the Court House built in Newport. By an act of 1898, section (G), supra, of the act of 1882 was expressly repealed, as also, so much of the act of 1886 as authorized a levy of taxes to pay, and to pay portion of the salary of the county officers.
There is no question as to the constitutionality of the act of 1882, and amendment of 1886, under the Constitution prior to that adopted September 28, 1891. . But it is insisted that by the present Constitution the act of 1882 and
Section 171 Constitution reads: “Taxes shall be levied and collected for public purposes only. They shall be uniform upon all property subject to taxation within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax; and all taxes shall be levied and collected by general laws.”
Section 170 after naming- property exempt from taxation provides: “And all laws exempting or commuting property from taxation other than the property above mentioned, shall be void.”
Section 175 reads: “The power to tax property shall not, be surrendered or suspended by any contract or grant to which the Commonwealth shall be a party.”
The schedule to the Constitution provides: “The provisions of all laws which are inconsistent with this Constitution shall cease upon its adoption except that all laws which are inconsistent with such provisions as require legislation to enforce them shall remain in force until such legislation is- had, but not longer than six years after the adoption of this Constitution, unless sooner amended or repealed by the General Assembly.”
It is perfectly clear that if the act of 1882, even as amended by the act of 1886, is in force, that taxation throughout Campbell county will not be equal and uniform under 'the authority of the levy made by the fiscal court. The fiscal court could only levy tax on property within the court house district for certain named purposes, viz.: •for county roads, for the poor, and for the. court and jail expenses, under that act, while in the other part of the county, outside that district, the taxes could be levied for all county purposes. This was unequal taxation. Again, the exemption accorded to persons and property within the
By the schedule of the Constitution quoted, it is clear that the inconsistent law was repealed by the Constitution itself, and by the clear meaning of the Constitution there could be no law in force longer than six years, if the law was inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution, unci were such laws that could be altered, amended or re* pealed..
As the original act was passed in 1882, it was subjéct to repeal, alteration or amendment unless such change or repeal would change the obligation of a contract lawfully made thereunder. '
The question then'presented is whether the repeal took place on the adoption of the Constitution itself on September 28, 1891, or whether it was within the six year period and was repealed in 1897.
The language of the schedule is that all inconsistent laws shall cease upon the adoption except that laws that are inconsistent with some provision of the Constitution, that requires legislation to enforce, or, in other words, inconsistent with some provision of the Constitution that is not self-executing, may remain till the necessary legislation giving force to the Constitution is provided. '
In the case here the provision of the Constitution prohibiting exemption from taxation is 'self-executing, that requiring uniform taxation, may not have been self-executing (a question unnecessary to determine), but if not self-executing, the necessary legislation was passed by the general revenue act of November 11, 1892, under' whiojh the taxes here claimed was assessed and levied.
So that, if legislation was necessary to give force to section 171, providing for equal taxation throughout the
In our opinion, therefore, the whole of the acts of 1882, and the amendatory act of 1886, except that part relating to levying the tax necessary to pay off the outstanding Court House bonds of- that district and the powers and ■duties of the Commissioners to that end- alone, was repealed, if not by the Constitution itself, by the passage of the general revenue act of November 11,1892.
If there was outstanding bonds executed by the Court House district to pay for the building, the power would remain in the Commissioners under the act to provide for their payment, and for that purpose alone the act remained in force. If no such bonds or obligations existed, or when such obligations have been satisfied, the foundation upon which the act stands to prevent repeal by the Constitution and act of lS92,.that of contract will be taken away and the act will stand repealed in toto.
We therefore hold that there remains in force of the three acts of 1882, 1886 and 1898 only as much thereof as authorizes the commissioners to levy a' tax, within the limits therein provided, for the purpose of paying off the bonds executed and outstanding and given for the purpose of erecting the court house in Newport, and when that purpose shall have been fully m#t, and the obligation arising (hereby shall have been discharged the act will cease to have force and vitality.
It therefore follows that the petition is sufficient and the general demurrer thereto should have been overruled. For the reasons indicated, the judgments are each reversed and causes remanded for further proceedings in each consistent herewith.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.