27 S.W.2d 102 | Ark. | 1930
Lead Opinion
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
Oliver W. Collins, a citizen and taxpayer of Columbia County, brought this suit in equity against J. Oscar Humphrey as auditor and Ralph Koonce as treasurer of the State of Arkansas, to enjoin them from issuing and paying any warrants issued pursuant to the appropriations authorized by Acts 180, 266, 267 and 364, passed by the Legislature of 1929.
According to the allegations of the complaint, the Legislature of 1929 passed Act 118, known as income Tax Act of 1929, "providing for the levying, collecting and paying of a tax on incomes." Acts of 1929, vol. 1, p. 573. The act was approved March 9, 1929. Section 4 provides that such tax shall first be assessed, levied, collected and paid in the year 1929 with respect to the net income received during the calendar year of 1928. Section 22 provides that all returns for the first taxable year under the act shall be filed on or before the 15th day of August, 1929. Section 24 provides for the time and payment of the tax. Section 41 provides for the distribution of the tax. It provides that the State Treasurer shall credit the first five hundred thousand dollars annually to the Charities Fund, the next several hundred thousand dollars annually to the Common School Equalization Fund, and all of the remainder to a special fund to be used solely for the purpose of reducing the State tax on property.
At the same session of the Legislature, act 180 was passed, which was "An Act to provide adequate buildings for the Hospital for Nervous Diseases and for the Tuberculosis Sanitorium, the issuance of State bonds, and for other purposes." This act was approved March 22, 1929, Acts of 1929, Vol 2, p. 884. Section 11 provides for annual payments from revenue under act 118 of *611 1929; remainder to go to reduce the State property tax. Section 11 of the act reads in part as follows: "To provide for the payment of said `State construction bonds' the first forty thousand dollars ($40,000) collected in 1929, and the first one hundred sixty-five thousand dollars ($165,000) in the year 1930, and the first two hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars ($275,000) annually thereafter collected under act No. 118 of the Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas for the year 1929, and allotted to the `Charities Fund' under said act No. 118 shall be set aside by the State Treasurer into a sinking fund to be known as the the `State Construction Fund,' annually for the retirement of interest and principal of said State construction bonds. The remainder of $460,000 left in 1929, and the remaining $335,000 in 1930, and the remaining $225,000 annually thereafter left out of the $500,000 Charities Fund, as provided for in 41 of said act No. 118 of the Acts of 1929."
The Legislature of 1923 passed Act 118, commonly known as our Severance Tax Law. Acts of 1923, p. 67. The act was approved February 14, 1923. Section 14 provides that two-thirds of the proceeds of the tax shall be wholly dedicated to the common schools of the State. The section further provides that the remaining one-third shall be credited to the county within which such taxes are collected. Section 15 provides that the county allotments shall be distributed, one-half to the highway fund of the county, and one-half to the common school fund of the county, and to be further allotted and distributed under the general law.
The Legislature of 1929 passed Act 266, appropriating part of the funds collected under the Severance Tax Law to the support and maintenance of the State School for the Blind. This act was approved March 27, 1929. Acts of 1929, vol. 2. p. 1148. The same Legislature likewise *612 appropriated of the funds collected under the Severance Tax Law to the support and maintenance of the State School for the Deaf. This act was approved March 27, 1929. The Legislature of 1929 also appropriated out of the funds from the Severance Tax Law for the support and maintenance of the State Board of Education. The act was approved April 3, 1929. Acts of 1929, vol. 2, p. 1472.
The court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and the plaintiff declined to plead further; and electing to stand under his complaint, it was decreed that the complaint to be dismissed for want of equity. The case is here on appeal.
(after stating the facts). The constitutionality of the Severance Tax Law was sustained in Floyd v. Miller Lumber Co.,
It will also be observed that act 180 of the Acts of 1929, which creates the Arkansas Construction Commission for the purpose of providing adequate buildings for the Hospital for Nervous Diseases and for the Tuberculosis Sanitorium, diverts a part of the proceeds derived from the collection of taxes under the Income Tax Act of 1929 to the payment of the "State Construction Bonds" authorized to be issued by the Arkansas Construction Commission for the purpose of providing adequate buildings for the State Hospital for Nervous Diseases, and for the Tuberculosis Sanitorium.
Likewise Acts 266, 267 and 364 of the Acts of 1929 appropriated a part of the fund collected under the Severance Tax Law, respectively, to the support and maintenance of the State School for the Blind, State School for the Deaf, and State Board of Education. It is earnestly insisted that each of the acts, in so diverting the funds and appropriating them to another purpose, is in violation of article 16, 11, of the Constitution, which reads as follows:
"No tax shall be levied except in pursuance of law, and every law imposing a tax shall state distinctly the object of the same; and no moneys arising from a tax levied for one purpose shall be used for any other purpose."
It is first insisted that the constitutional provision applies to taxes collected from all sources, and not merely to property taxes, and in this contention we agree with counsel for the plaintiff. The whole of article 16 of the Constitution is devoted to finance and taxation. It is universally recognized that the power of a State to tax exists as a necessary attribute of sovereignty, except as regulated and limited by the Constitution. The reason is that the State government could not exist or perform its functions without it. The Legislature has all the power with reference to taxation that the State has, and consequently has the right to classify taxes. Therefore the Legislature must decide when and how and for what *614 public purpose a tax shall be levied, and must select the subjects of taxation. Cooley on Taxation, 3d ed., p. 255.
It is a fundamental rule of construction that the Constitution should be construed as a whole, and the various provisions on the same subject must be read in the light of each other. Little Rock v. North Little Rock,
It by no means follows, however that that counsel for the plaintiff are correct in their contention that this section controls the present case. The governing rule in cases of this sort is plainly and clearly stated in 37 Cyc. 1550, as follows:
"Taxes which are set apart by the Constitution of the State for particular uses cannot be diverted by the Legislature to any other purpose. But, subject to this limitation, it is in the general power of the Legislature, not only by appropriation bills, but also by directions incorporated in the revenue laws, to regulate the disposition which shall be made of the taxes collected both by the State agencies and by the local authorities." *615
An examination of the various decisions cited will show that they support the text. A review of our decisions will show that the court has been in accord with the view there expressed.
In Dickinson v. Edmonson,
As said by the Supreme Court of Florida in J. F. McKinnon, v. Florida, ex rel.,
As we have already seen, the power of the Legislature over taxation is unlimited except as restricted by the Constitution. Hence it could supplement the school fund derived from property taxes under the Constitution by appropriating a part of the proceeds derived from the Severance Tax Law; and the part so appropriated could be raised, lowered, or altogether withdrawn at the will of the Legislature. In other words our Constitution has set aside certain revenue raised from property taxes to be held sacred for the benefit of common *616 schools, and the Legislature is without power to divert it. The fund here sought to be diverted from the common schools is not set aside by the Constitution for that purpose. The application of the taxes raised under both the Severance Tax Law and the Income Tax Act of 1929 is left entirely to the control of the Legislature; there being no restriction of their application in the Constitution.
The power of taxation and the power of apportioning taxes are identical and inseparable unless there is some constitutional restriction. In Moore v. Alexander,
In other words, the Legislature has no power to divert a fund after the tax has been levied and collected, *617 and transfer it to another and separate purpose. If it could transfer the funds thus levied and collected, it might seriously embarrass the administration of the State government.
Counsel for plaintiff to some extent rely upon School District No. 14 v. School District No. 4,
Again, they rely to some extent on Gray v. Matheny,
It is not even essential or vital to an appropriation, that it should be for an amount definitely ascertained prior to the appropriation, since there is no requirement of that kind in the Constitution. In Stanley v. Gates,
It is settled by the principles of law announced in Grable v. Blackwood,
In Skinner, Collector of Internal Revenue, v. Union Pacific Coal Co., 249 F. 152, the Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit had under consideration the construction of a section of the Federal Income Tax Act, which provides that the tax shall be levied "upon the entire net income arising or accruing from all sources during the preceding calendar year"; and it was held that the words "arising or accruing" meant the same as "received." Unless the word "arising" is used as the equivalent of "received or collected," it practically means nothing; and instead of providing that "no moneys arising from a tax levied for one purpose shall not be used for any other purpose," the framers of the Constitution would have merely provided that no tax levied for one purpose shall be used for any other purpose. In short, there are "no moneys arising from a tax levied" until the tax is collected.
We have explained acts 180, 266, 267 and 364 of the Acts of 1929, and find each of them to be prospective in its operation. None of them attempt to divert funds or moneys which had already been collected from any subject of taxation to any other purpose than that for which it was levied and collected. The acts of the Legislature passing the Severance Tax Law and the Income Tax Act of 1929 levied the tax, but no moneys could arise or be in existence from the tax levy until the tax had been collected. It follows that the decree must be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with the majority opinion in ruling that the restriction of 11 of article 16 of the Constitution of Arkansas applies to all subjects of taxation, and that it was intended that no money arising from a tax levied for one purpose shall be used for any other purpose. This opinion is a result reached by giving the section in question a broad instead of a narrow construction. I think the same broad construction or interpretation given said section in order to *619
reach this conclusion should govern in ascertaining and determining what the makers of the Constitution meant or intended by using, in the latter clause of the section, the following language: "No moneys arising from a tax levied for one purpose shall be used for another purpose." In construing this language the majority opinion has departed from the rule of broad construction and adopted and applied a very narrow construction of the meaning of the words and the connection in which they are used in the sentence. The meaning attributed to this language by the majority opinion, is that it only inhibits the diversion of money to another purpose than that for which it was levied, after the collection thereof. This is reading something into the section which is not expressed therein and which is not necessarily implied therefrom. The word "arising" in the sentence is a present participle and refers to money then collected or to be collected in the future as long, of course, as the purpose for which the levy was made exists. The broad, natural meaning of the language used in the sentence is that when a tax has been levied for a specific purpose the Legislature cannot thereafter (meaning after the passage of the bill in levying the same) divert the money arising therefrom to a different purpose. Any other construction would permit the Legislature to lay a tax upon the people for a certain purpose agreeable to them and provide for the collection thereof, but, before same had been collected, to divert it to some purpose not agreeable to them. This is the effect of the majority opinion. I cannot believe that it is a correct interpretation of the restriction. The construction is to narrow to give much effect to the language used, and wholly ignores the rules of grammar governing the sentence. I think the construction of the section contended for by appellant and adopted by me is fully sustained by reason in the cases of Gray v. Matheney,
I am impelled therefore to dissent from the majority opinion to the effect that the acts in question are valid.