Subsection (e) of section 2 of the “Retailers’ and Consumers’ Sales and Use Tax Act,” approved February 20, 1951 (Ga. L. 1951, pp. 360-387; Code, Ann. Supp., § 92-3403a (C) (2) (e)), provides: “The tax levied by this Act shall not apply to sales of goods made pursuant to bona fide written contracts entered into before the date of the approval of this Act, or the purchase price of any building supplies, fixtures or equipment that enter into or become a part of building or .other kind of structure in this State, where plans, specifications and construction contract for a specific project has been entered into prior to the date of approval of this Act, provided delivery is made within ninety (90) days.”
It is contended by the plaintiff that, if a tax statute is of doubtful meaning, it must be construed liberally in favor of the taxpayer and against the taxing authority. This is a well-established rule in this State.
Mayor &c. of Savannah
v.
Hartridge,
8
Ga.
23 (6);
Trustees of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, South,
v.
City of Atlanta,
76
Ga.
181, 182 (3b);
Case-Fowler Lumber Co.
v.
Winslett,
168
Ga.
808, 809 (
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In the present case, however, the plaintiff is not relying upon the vagueness or uncertainty of a statute levying a tax. On the contrary, the plaintiff is seeking to claim the benefit of a proviso contained in the Retailers’ and Consumers’ Sales and Use Tax Act, which purports to grant an exemption from taxation. Under these facts, an entirely different rule is applicable. The exemption from taxation must be strictly construed, “and the exemption will not be held to be conferred unless the terms under which it is granted clearly and distinctly show that such was the intention of the legislature.”
Mayor &c. of Macon
v.
Central Railroad & Banking Co.,
50
Ga.
620;
Atlanta Street Railroad Co.
v.
City of Atlanta,
66
Ga.
104, 110;
Athens City Water-Works Co.
v.
Mayor &c. of Athens,
74
Ga.
413;
Mundy
v.
Van Hoose,
104
Ga.
292, 297 (
As a general rule, there is a presumption that a proviso in a statute will apply only to the preceding provision. This general rule, however, is subject to the rule that all parts of a statute, including provisos, are to be construed together, and that construction adopted which is consistent with, and not repugnant to, the purposes of the act.
It is clear from subsection (e) of section 2 of the act that the General Assembly did not exempt from taxation written contracts entered into before the time of the approval of the act. If the Assembly had wanted to make such exemption, all that was required was the placing of a period after the word “Act” in the third line. A period marks the end of a declarative sen *694 tence, and had a period been used after the word “Act,” a different result might have been obtained. By the use of the comma after the word “Act,” and after referring to building-supplies, fixtures, equipment, plans, specifications, etc., in which the only punctuation used is a comma, it is clear that the final proviso is just as much a part of the language relating to written contracts as it is to that having reference to building supplies, fixtures, etc.
The rule stated in Crawford
v.
Burke,
The plaintiff strongly relies upon Murray
v.
Charleston,
The above quotation from the Charleston case clearly demonstrates that only by withholding the income due from a contractual obligation to pay interest, and for the purpose of enforcing a tax, would the contract between the agency of government and the citizens be impaired. For Georgia cases relating
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to taxation of contractual obligations of the State, see
City Council of Augusta
v.
Dunbar,
50
Ga.
387;
Miller
v.
Wilson,
60
Ga.
505;
Mayor
&c.
of Macon
v.
Jones,
supra;
Wells
v.
Mayor &c. of Savannah,
107
Ga.
1, 3 (
In the present case, the State is not a party in any contract with the plaintiff. It has made no promise to pay which it now seeks to tax. On the contrary, the State is only exercising its constitutional power to tax. On the power of taxation generally, the Supreme Court of the United States in North Missouri Railroad Co.
v.
Maguire,
Subsequently to the rule stated by the Supreme Court of the United States in the North Missouri Railroad Company case, it was said by the Supreme Court of Alabama in McPhillips Mfg. Co.
v.
Curry,
Many authorities are cited by the Supreme Court of Alabama in support of the ruling made, including the case of Wiseman
v.
Gillioz,
In Kehrer
v.
Stewart,
In Lake Superior Consolidated Iron Mines
v.
Lord,
Many authorities might be cited to support the right of the State in the present case to collect a tax under the “Retailers’ and Consumers’ Sales and Use Tax Act,” on the sale and delivery of the described property. Such multiplication of authorities is unnecessary. The State had the right to collect a sales tax arising out of the contract pleaded, and to exempt from taxation property made subject to taxes is to increase to that extent the burden on all other property that is taxed.
Elder
v.
Home Building & Loan Assn.,
188
Ga.
113, 118 (
*697 The trial court properly sustained the general- demurrer of the defendant and dismissed the petition seeking to recover the taxes paid.
Judgment affirmed.
