231 N.W. 646 | Iowa | 1930
[1] Only questions of law are involved in the determination of this case. In 1928 the Board of Supervisors of Muscatine County made a "County Emergency Levy" of 3 mills, which was applied to all assessments upon real and personal property within the County. In making the levy, the Board of Supervisors acted under the assumption of authority of Section 373 of the Code. Said section is a part of the Budget Law contained in Chapter 4 of the Acts of the Extra Session of the 40th General Assembly. On March 5th, 1929, this court held that Section 373 of the Code is void for the reason that the subject-matter therein embraced is not included or expressed in the title to the act of which it is a part, as required by Article 3, Section 29, of the State Constitution. See Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co. v. Streepy,
"AN ACT to legalize any and all tax levies heretofore made and collected by any municipality under and pursuant to the provisions of law as contained in Section three hundred seventy-three (373) and Chapter twenty-four (24) of the Code, 1927.
"Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Iowa:
"Section 1. All taxes heretofore assessed, levied or collected by any municipality as defined by the law as it appears in Chapter twenty-four (24) of the Code, 1927, for the purpose of establishing and creating an emergency fund under and pursuant to the provisions of what purported to be the law as contained in Section three hundred seventy-three (373) of the Code, 1927, be and the same are hereby declared legal and valid, *230 and where the same have not been paid, the officers of such municipalities are hereby empowered and directed to proceed at once to collect the same as other taxes are collected, and to use the same in the same manner as they could have been used were they assessed, levied and collected under a valid provision of law.
"Section 2. This act being deemed of immediate importance shall be in full force and effect from and after its passage and publication in the Des Moines Daily Record, a newspaper published at Des Moines, Iowa, and in the Marshalltown Times Republican, a newspaper published at Marshalltown, Iowa." See Chapter 396 of the Acts of the 43rd General Assembly.
The validity of the taxes levied and the constitutionality of the foregoing enactment are challenged on various grounds hereinafter noted.
It is contended by the appellant that, since the invalidity of Section 373 of the Code was due to a constitutional defect, as held by us in Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co. v. Streepy,
"The Constitution of Iowa does not forbid the enactment of retroactive laws, and this court has frequently upheld the validity of such statutes."
A curative act may cure or legalize any act which the general assembly could, as an original question, have authorized. Windsor v. City of Des Moines,
"The court in that case (a Kansas case), however, in argument attempts to distinguish between retrospective laws which are passed to supply defects, and cure informalities in proceedings of officers and tribunals acting within the scope of their authority, the laws which are intended to cure or legalize the acts of such officers done without the scope of their authority, holding that retroactive legislation is legal and valid to cure the acts of officers void for informality, irregularity or mistake, but that such legislation is not valid where it attempts to legalize and validate official acts, void for want of power or authority to perform them. We have already seen that such is not the rule established by the cases decided in this court, and which are above cited. There is no foundation for the above distinction, under our decisions." *232
In Boardman v. Beckwith,
"The point made upon this legislation is that it was not competent for the General Assembly to thus legalize the levy and assessment of 1858; that as there was no law at the time authorizing such levy and assessment, all proceedings thereunder, notwithstanding the curative act, were illegal and void. * * * That it is competent to thus legislate we entertain no doubt. The power of the legislature to pass acts of this character, conducive as they are to the general welfare, and based upon considerations of controlling public necessity, is, in our opinion, undoubted. It does not interfere with vested rights, nor impair the obligation of any contract. Nor is it, we may remark in further answer to appellants' argument, a general statute, having other or less than a uniform operation. It has the operation contemplated by Art. 3, Sec. 30, of the State Constitution; for in no just legal sense is it local or special, but general and uniform."
In Iowa Railroad Land Co. v. Soper,
"It seems to us that there is no ground for distinction between that case and the one before us. The act of 1874 [the one therein involved] purports to render legal and valid certain tax levies which were not legal and valid at the time of the levies, so did the act of April 2, 1860 [the act involved in Boardman v. Beckwith]. * * * If it was competent for the General Assembly to pass the act above referred to, whereby the illegal and void taxes levied in 1858 [those involved in Boardman v. Beckwith] were legalized and their collection authorized, it was likewise competent for the legislature to pass the act under consideration, and thereby make the taxes to pay judgments, which had been levied in excess of legal authority, valid and collectible. There is no valid argument to sustain the former which does not apply to and sustain the latter act. In both cases it is a question of power and not one of policy. Of the power to pass the act in question, we entertain no doubt. * * * There can be no doubt that the General Assembly had the power, and might have enacted a law under which the various municipal corporations in the State would have been authorized to levy and collect the taxes in question. In other words, the authority to levy and collect taxes to pay judgments against municipal corporations could have been conferred by a general law without any limitation therein as to the rate, so that the taxes, legalized by the act under consideration, would have been authorized and valid. Having the power to authorize, by general law, the levy and collection of special taxes, by municipal corporations, without limitation as to rate, for the purpose of paying judgments, the legislature may rightfully legalize or cure the levies made in excess of lawful authority at the time. * * * When it is conceded that theGeneral Assembly has the power to pass an act conferringauthority upon municipal corporations to levy taxes, itnecessarily follows that the same power may cure or ratify andmake valid the taxes levied without such prior authority, unlessvested rights are thereby impaired [the italics are ours]. * * * But the legalizing of a tax, which but for the legalizing act was invalid and not capable of being enforced, does not interfere with any vested right of the tax-payer. * * * The statute has created a liability to pay where none existed before its passage, and this is so whether the act authorizing the tax levies be passed prior thereto or is an act legalizing a tax previously levied. In *234 either case the power of the General Assembly to pass the law is the same. If it has no power to legalize a tax already leviedwithout authority, it has no power to confer the authority in thefirst instance [writer's italics]."
Since the power of the legislature to delegate to the municipalities the right or power to create and make a levy for an emergency fund is not questioned by the appellant, it necessarily follows, that under the foregoing authorities, the legislature may, by a curative act, legalize the taxes and the acts of the municipalities and their officers in levying the same, done without such prior authority. Appellant's contention in this respect must fail. For additional authorities bearing on the foregoing propositions, see Iowa Railroad Land Co. v. Carroll County,
[2] The appellant asserts that the aforesaid curative statute constitutes an attempt by the legislature to directly levy a retroactive tax on the tax payers of Muscatine County, but it is apparent that such is not the case. Section 373 of the Code did not, in and of itself, purport to impose or levy a tax — all that it did, was to purport to delegate to each municipality the power (if it so desired, and there was a demand for it in that municipality), to create and make a levy for an emergency fund. The Board of Supervisors, acting under this assumption of power, made the levy, and all that Chapter 396 of the Acts of the 43rd General Assembly does is to legalize what was done by the municipality and the local officers in pursuance of the assumption of power.
[3] The appellant contends that Chapter 396 of the Acts of the 43rd General Assembly, hereinbefore quoted, is a law imposing or reviving a tax, and that said enactment is violative of Section 7, Article VII, of the State Constitution, which provides: *235
"Every law which imposes, continues, or revives a tax, shall distinctly state the tax, and the object to which it is to be applied; and it shall not be sufficient to refer to any other law to fix such tax or object."
Section 373 of the Code does not purport to impose, continue or revive a tax within the purview of the constitutional provision. As hereinbefore stated, it merely purports to delegate to each municipality the power to create and make a levy for an emergency fund. Statutory provisions, delegating to cities or municipalities the power to levy a tax are not such as come within the meaning of this section of the Constitution. See Youngerman v. Murphy,
"Sufficient answer to this claim [of unconstitutionality] is found in the fact that the act itself does not impose a tax. It authorizes certain cities to do so, and is a valid delegation of power to municipal bodies."
In Fevold v. Board of Supervisors,
"It is urged that the provision of the statute authorizing the board of supervisors to levy a tax for the eradication fund is in violation of Section 7 of Article VII of the state Constitution, providing: [Here the section is quoted.] * * * Broadly speaking, this contention is met in the case of Youngerman v. Murphy,
The aforesaid section of the Constitution applies only to a *236
legislative enactment, which in and of itself imposes, continues or revives a tax. The aforesaid legalizing act does none of these things. It merely legalizes — makes lawful — the acts of the local officers in making the assessment and levy in assumption of delegated power to do so, and which delegation of power to levy a tax, as held in the foregoing cases, does not come within the purview of said section of the Constitution. The legalizing act has no effect whatever, except upon some municipality as defined by the Budget Law, which had made an assessment and levy under color of authority derived from Section 373 of the Code. What the legislature could originally have authorized, it can subsequently ratify. See Utter v. Franklin,
[4] There is involved in this cause of action, the tax which was levied in 1928 and collectible in 1929. The appellant contends that the legalizing act as applied to the unpaid taxes levied in 1928 is violative of Section 29, Article III, of the State Constitution, which provides:
"Every act shall embrace but one subject, and matters properly connected therewith; which subject shall be expressed in the title. But if any subject shall be embraced in an act which shall not be expressed in the title, such act shall be void only as to so much thereof as shall not be expressed in the title."
The purpose of the constitutional provision is to prevent the evils of omnibus bills and surreptitious legislation. 36 Cyc. 1017, and Chicago, R.I. P.R. Co. v. Streepy,
"Every legislative act is presumed to be constitutional, and every intendment must be indulged by the courts in favor of its validity. The limitation must be liberally construed with a view to upholding legislation. The objection should be grave, and the conflict between the statute and the constitution palpable, before the judiciary should disregard a legislative enactment upon the ground that it embraces more than one subject or object, or if it embraces but one subject or object, that it is not sufficiently expressed by the title. Where, after having applied the general principles governing the construction of constitutional provisions, a court is still in doubt as to the constitutionality of an act, it should sustain the same."
It will be observed that the discrepancy between the title to the act and the act itself is in the use of the words "and" and"or." It is a well recognized rule of construction, that when necessary to effectuate the intent of the legislature, conjunctive words may be construed as disjunctive and vice versa.
See 36 Cyc. 1123. This rule of construction has even been applied to statutes relative to criminal law. See State v. Myers,
"* * * the courts must do nothing to prevent or embarrass ordinary legislation. The construction is to be liberal, and not critical or technical. McAunich v. Mississippi and M.R. Co.,
For additional authorities in support of the foregoing *238
principles, see Cook v. Marshall County,
[5] The appellant also contends that the legalizing act violates Section 6 of Article I and Section 30 of Article III of the State Constitution, in that, it constitutes a local or special law without uniform operation throughout the state. It will be observed that the act applies to all municipalities as defined in Chapter 24 of the Code. There is no lack of uniformity in its operation. It has been the universal holdings of this court that a statute of this kind and character is not violative of the aforesaid sections of the Constitution. See Boardman v. Beckwith,
We have carefully considered all matters urged for reversal and find no merit therein. The judgment of the trial court is hereby affirmed. — Affirmed.
MORLING, C.J., EVANS, STEVENS, FAVILLE, De GRAFF, KINDIG, and GRIMM, concur.