90 Ky. 384 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a proceeding under the Auditor’s’ Agent Act to have the water-works belonging to the city of Newport taxed by the county court for State purposes. The county court refused to have said waterworks listed for taxation for State purposes upon the ground that, by an amended act of the Legislature of this State, said property was exempted from “State or county taxes as long as the same remained unproductive;” and as the same was not productive at the time the request was made and acted on, said property was exempt from State taxation. The case is here on mandamus to compel the judge of said •court to list said property for taxation.
If the amended act exempting said property from taxation is unconstitutional, the court ought to have listed said property for State taxation. So the question is, had the Legislature the constitutional power tooexempt said property from taxation?
Upon that subject the first section of our Bill of Rights declares: “ That no man or set of men are entitled to exclusive separate public emoluments or privileges from the community but in consideration •of ’public services.”
If the former, the exemption is constitutional; if the latter, it is not. But may a city be treated as a private corporation in the exercise of powers not necessary to carrying on its municipal government as a political power? • We have heretoiore said that it may be so treated. We have also said that its property necessary to carrying on its municipal government as.
The case of the City of Louisville v. The Commonwealth, 1 Duvall, 298, aptly illustrates the foregoing views. In that case it is said: “And if * * * the public property of the -State and counties is exempt, the same reason exempts the public property of Louisville used for carrying on its municipal government. But so far as any of its (the city’s) property may be used, not for that purpose, but only for the convenience or profit of its citizens, individually or collectively, this it owns and uses as a private corporation, and, like the property of all such corporations not expressly exempted [in consideration of public services, of course], it is a legal subject of assessment for taxation.” Now, are appellee’s water-works necessary for carrying on its municipal government as a political power, or are they an enterprise entered into by the appellee for the convenience or profit of its citiizens % If the latter, it can not be constitutionally exempted from State taxation except in consideration of public services. We do not entertain a doubt that it is the latter.
The following extract from Bailey v. New York, 3 Hill, 531, deciding that the city, in erecting waterworks, acted in its private, not public, character, is correct law:
“The powers conferred by the several acts of the Legislature authorizing the execution of this great
It is clear that the appellee, in building and operating said works, acted in its capacity of a private corporation, and as it was not required to render public service in consideration of the exemption of said works from State taxation, the exemption is unconstitutional and void.
In Barbour v. The Board of Trade, 82 Ky., 649, Judge Hines announces the correct doctrine on this subject in the following strong and comprehensive language: “The power of taxation grows out of the necessity to preserve the government by laying the common burden upon every citizen enjoying its protection of life, liberty and property, and is limited in its nature to objects that are public, as distinguished from those that are personal or private in their character. Taxation immediately for the benefit of an individual is a contradiction in terms,” which is prohibited by the fundamental law, unless it is granted as a “public privilege” in consideration of “public services.” If the Legislature were to authorize the payment of a person’s expenses in the performance of any enterprise not a public service, there can be no doubt that such an act would be unhesitatingly declared unconstitutional, and to exempt a person’s property from taxation in consideration of the same service would be equally unconstitutional. To exempt a person’s property from taxation is to increase the burden of
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded, with directions to grant the mandamus to compel the judge of the Campbell County Court to list said property for taxation, etc.