69 Mo. 127 | Mo. | 1878
This was a suit by the city for taxes of 1874 and 1875, on a tract of land, owned by Cook, of seventeen and one-half acres, which was included in the new limits of the city as fixed by the act of March 14th, 1873. The 3rd section of this act exempted from city taxation all subdivisions of land over five acres, but it is insisted that this exemption was unconstitutional, because the constitution declares that “ all property subject to taxation ought to be taxed in proportion to its value,” and because it is further declared in the 16th section of the 11th article, that “no property, real or'personal, shall be exempt from taxation, except such as may be used exclusively for public schools, and such as may belong to the United States, to this State, to counties or to municipal corporations within this State.” So that the only question in the case is whether this restriction in the act of 1873 is constitutional.
Suppose that such restriction was unconstitutional, and, therefore, void. The act, then, that brought the defendant within the city was void. It is observed by Judge Cooley, and the principle enunciated admits of no dispute, that “if the provisions of the act are so materially connected with and dependent on each other as conditions, considerations or compensations for each other as to warrant the belief that the Legislature intended them as a whole, and if all could not be carried into effect, the Legislature
Aeeirmed.