19 Kan. 234 | Kan. | 1877
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1872 the township of Concord, Ottawa county, was duly divided, and from the detached territory the new township of Bennington was constituted. At the time of said division the township of Concord was liable on an indebtedness for certain bonds previously issued by the town
“The legislature shall provide for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation; but all property used exclusively for state, county, municipal, literary, educational, scientific, religious, benevolent and charitable purposes, and personal property to the amount of at least two hundred dollars for each family, shall be exempted from taxation.” (Const., art. 11, § 1.)
Counsel for defendant in error refer us to the rule of taxation as enunciated in the case in 9th Wisconsin Rep., page 440. Now on that page is found the brief of counsel for the plaintiff, in the case of Milwaukee, &c., Rld. Co. v. The County of Waukesha. Said counsel in that case was opposed to the law, and of course said it was invalid. The court however held it'to be valid and constitutional. In the opinion the court say: “ The imposition upon railroad property by the act of 1854, does not violate that provision of the constitution of Wisconsin which provides a uniform rule of taxation, provided like property pertaining to railroads, or all property of that class, is alike taxed, or alike exempt, as it appears to be.” (9 Wis. 449.) This case is reported in a note to the case of Knowlton v. Supervisors of Rock Co., 9 Wis. 410. The court does not, in either of these cases, decide that property other than that exempted by the constitution may not also be exempted from taxation by statute. In the first case mentioned, the court decides as above stated; and in the other case, the court decides that a part of the property in any given district cannot be taxed “by a different rule from that by which other property [in the same district] is taxed,” but
Now in the present case, the real estate of said Bennington township is all “taxed uniformly” to pay said indebtedness, and the personal property is all “absolutely exempt” from such taxation. Is not this in accordance with the said Wisconsin decisions? We are also referred to a decision in California. But in California the constitution requires that “all property in the state shall be taxed in proportion to its value,” and “ taxation shall be equal and uniform.” We are also referred to decision^ in Indiana. Now if we understand the following decisions in Indiana, property may be exempted from taxation by statute which is not so exempted by the constitution: Bank v. City of New Albany, 11 Ind. 139, 142; Connersville v. Bank, 16 Ind. 105; King v. Madison, 17 Ind. 48. We do not take issue with any decision in any state referred to by counsel for plaintiffs below; and so far as the present ease is concerned we might well admit that each of such decisions would be held to be good law in Kansas, even under our constitution. The case before us is outside of all ordinary cases, and is simply analagous to the said Sedgwick county case reported in 16 Kas. 498.
As we have before stated, it is not necessary that all assessments and all taxes in Kansas should be equal and uniform in order to be valid. (See Glasgow v. Rowse, 43 Mo. 480, and Ill. Cent. R. Co. v. McLean Co., 17 Ill. 291, et seq.) And we suppose that no person who has been able to give the subject any careful consideration will so contend. First: The aggregate amount and rate of assessment and the aggregate amount and rate of taxation vary in almost every county, city, town, township and school district in this state. The aggregate rate in some places is as high as five per cent, on the valuation of property, and in other places it is as low as one or two per cent. And yet the constitution says that “ the legislature shall provide for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation.” Now does this mean, “a uni
It seems to be almost universally admitted that said constitutional provision, requiring that assessments and taxes should be at an’ equal and uniform rate, does not apply to such special assessments or special taxes (usually called “special taxes” in this state,) as are imposed upon abutting lot-owners in cities, towns, or villages, for street improvements. It has always been so held in this state, (Hines v. Leavenworth City, 3 Kas. 186, 197, and subsequent cases,) and has .generally been so held in other states under similar constitutional provisions. Now these special and local im
Neither does said constitutional provision apply strictly to license-taxes. [Leav. City v. Booth, 15 Kas. 628, 635; Fretwell v. City of Troy, 18 Kas. 271.) In the case of Leav. City v. Booth, first referred to, it is said that—
“A proper license-tax is not a tax at all, within the meaning of the constitution, or even in the ordinary signification of the word ‘tax.’ (City of East St. Louis v. Wehrung, 46 Ill. 395; Addison v. Saulnier, 19 Cal. 83; Carter v. Dow, 16 Wis. 318; State v. Herod, 29 Iowa, 123, 125; Mitchell v. Williams, 27 Ind. 62.) This is so even where the license-tax is much greater than the mere cost of issuing the license, and even where the surplus fund incidentally arising from the issuing of the license goes into the -treasury to swell the general revenue fund. (Charity Hospital v. Stickney, 2 La. An. 550; Tenny v. Lewy, 16 Wis. 566, 567; Chilvers v. The People, 11 Mich. 43; Ash v. The People, 11 Mich. 347; Baker v. City of Cincinnati, 11 Ohio St. 534, 543, 544; Johnson v. Philadelphia, 60 Penn. St. 445, 450; Henry v. The State, 26 Ark. 523, 525; Orton v. Brown, 35 Miss. 426.) And there are still other decisions, holding that the constitutional provisions with reference to taxation have no reference to the collection of license-taxes, among which are the following: Anderson v. Kerns Draining Co., 14 Ind. 201; Thomasson v. The State, 15 Ind. 449, 451; Bright v. McCullough, 27 Ind. 223, 232; The People v. Coleman, 4 Cal. 46.”
Neither do we suppose that capitation taxes, or poll-taxes, or requirements to work on the roads, or to train in the militia, come within said constitutional provision, although evidently they are all taxes in one sense. Sawyer v. City of Alton, 4 Ill. (3 Scam.) 127, 130; Town of Pleasant v. Kast, 29 Ill. 490, 494.
But even those assessments and those taxes which do come within said constitutional provision are not required to be, and are not always in practice, made and levied by a “ uniform rule.” Railroad property is assessed in one manner,
We need not multiply illustrations. The fact is, that the constitution only requires that all ordinary and usual assessments and taxation shall be imposed at “ a uniform and equal rate;” and all extraordinary and uncommon kinds of assessment and taxation are left to be regulated by law in the same manner as the same would be regulated if said constitutional provision did not exist. Now to tax the property of one township to pay the debt of another township, is an extraordinary and uncommon kind of taxation. It can only happen by the change of the boundary lines of one or more townships. It can perhaps never happen more than once to the same locality. And it can seldom happen even once to any one locality. Constitutions are not generally framed to meet extraordinary and exceptional cases, but only to prescribe general rules for ordinary cases. Our constitution provides that “all county officers shall hold their offices for the term of two years, and until their successors shall be qualified.” (Const., art. 9, § 3); and yet this court held that when a new county is organized that the first county officers may be elected for a less term than two years; that the constitution “applies only to the regular term of the office, and not to vacancies, or exceptional cases.” (Hagerty v. Arnold, 13 Kas. 367.) In the organization of new counties and new townships some things must be done which in the very nature of things cannot come under any of the general rules established for older counties and older townships. And in such cases it is hardly fair to say that the framers of the constitution intended that all of the particular provisions of the constitution for older counties, or older townships, should apply with all their force and rigor to the new counties and new townships, as first organized, and thereby prevent the legislature from doing justice .in the particular case. It is more reasonable to suppose that in such cases such provisions were intended to apply to such extraordinary and exceptional cases
In the case of Comm’rs of Sedgwick Co. v. Bunker,.(16 Kas. 504,) the following language is used: “ When a debt is created against a county, all the taxable property therein, real and personal, becomes liable to pay the same. The real estate becomes permanently liable, (except for subsequent legislation,) because the owner thereof cannot remove it out of the county; but the personal property does not become so liable, for personal property may be removed out of the county at any time at the pleasure of the owner. If the legislature should change the boundary lines of any county, and in doing so should set off a strip of the territory thereof to some other county, then the legislature might at the same time enact that such strip should continue to be liable for the payment .of its share of the debts of the county to which it formerly belonged, or the legislature might entirely relieve such strip from all such liability. And it would seem that the legislature ought to have the power to relieve such strip from a portion of such liability, and to continue its responsibility for the other portion. At least, it would seem that the legislature should have the power to say that the real estate shall continue liable, and the personal property not. It would hardly seem that the detached territory should complain because of such- an arrangement, for the taxpayers of the strip would have no more taxes to pay on their real estate in proportion to its value than the taxpayers of the county from' which the strip was taken would have to pay on their real estate, and they would have nothing to pay on their personal property. They would have the advantage of the taxpayers of the county in not having any personal-property tax to pay. Not taxing the personal property of the strip, however, makes the tax on all the other property both of the cbunty from which the strip is taken, and the strip itself, higher than it otherwise would be. But as such a thing would not make the tax void as to the taxpayers of the county, could it make it void as to the taxpayers of the
But we must conclude. We have already extended this opinion to a greater length than was probably necessary; and yet we have not exhausted the subject. To enunciate a few superficial abstract propositions, and then follow them to their logical sequences, is comparatively an easy task. But to enter upon a real investigation of a difficult and complicated subject, and examine it in all its multifarious relations and countless details, requires more time, labor, and research than we have time to give to it. We have extended this opinion, however, thus far in order to show that the general abstract propositions relied upon by the defendants in error do not state correctly either the letter or the spirit of the constitution. They are too general. They cover too much ground. They embrace within their comprehensive terms too many particulars. No provision of the constitution can be found so comprehensive or so sweeping in its
We do not wish in this case to fix the boundaries of the operation of said constitutional provision. The task would be too difficult, and we could not do it if we would. Nor do we wish to decide where said provision will apply, or where it will not apply, any further than is necessary for the decision of this particular case. Indeed, all that we wish to decide is, that said constitutional provision does not apply in this case to such an extent as to render said sections 3 and 4 of said act of 1873 unconstitutional and void. No other questions are in fact determined, whatever may be said in the opinion. Whether it is within the power of the legislature to authorize the imposition of a greater rate of taxation upon any part of the property of a detached portion of any county or township to pay indebtedness contracted by such county or township prior to its division, than upon the property of the county or township itself, is not decided in this case. The only effect of this decision is, that it announces the principle that the legislature may when dividing a county or township relieve the personal property of the detached territory from all liability for previous debts of the county or township while continuing the liability of all the other property. Nothing else is decided. The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.