123 Ky. 173 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Opinion by
Affirming.
The appellant is a New Jersey corporation, and was organized for the purpose of acquiring large tobacco factories in the country- John Finzer & Bro. and the American Tobacco Company, corporations, owned large establishments in the city of Louisville, manufacturing plug and smoking tobacco. These establishments consisted in large buildings, machinery, money, and property used to carry on the business. The consideration for the sales to the Continental Tobacco Company was cash and common and preferred stock, which was issued to them in the Continental Company. This company was a new corporation, distinct from the corporations whose property is purchased, although some of the persons who held stock and were officers of the selling companies became officers and stockholders in the new concern. This is an action to recover taxes for the years 1900,1901,1902,1903, and 1904, aggregating more than $100,000.
Appellant claims that it is exempt from the payment of these taxes to the city of Louisville by reason of the ordinance which was passed by the general council of the city of Louisville on July 29,1898, which provides that, .in order to induce the location of more manufacturing establishments within the city limits, any person, firm, or corporation, which shall, after the passage of the act of the Legislature authorizing the ordinance, permanently locate and conduct manufacturing establishments within the city limits, shall be exempt from taxation-for the period of five years after such location and commencement of the business of manufacturing therein. This act was passed pursuant to an act of the General Assembly approved March 16, 1898, which authorized the general council,
It is insisted that the facts in this case are exactly the same as they were in Mengel Box Co. v. City of Louisville, 117 Ky. 735, 79 S. W. 255, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1861, and the exemption is claimed under the rule announced in that case. If this claim be correct, then the same rule ought to be applied in this case as in the Mengel Case, supra, and the claimed exemption should be sustained. The John Finzer & Bro. Company and the American Tobacco Company establishments were going concerns, and, so far as this record shows, were prosperous, and no purpose existed to discontinue the business. They were active, going manufacturing establishments, employing a large number of persons and had a vast amount of money engaged in the enterprises. There is nothing in this record showing that the parties contemplated a sus
There is no controversey as to the facts with reference to the John Finzer Company and the American Tobacco Company manufacturing establishments as we here state them. The court could not afford to say that they were not going concerns, that they were dead at the time they were purchased by the Continental Company, in order to say that they were new manufacturing establishments, and exempt from taxation under the Constitution and ordinance. The court might have erred in its conclusion as to facts
The evidence in this case shows that probably the capacities of the establishments have been increased, and that more men have been employed since the appellant acquired the property than were previously employed. This only amounts to an enlargement of ihe old plant, a mere addition to the capital of the going concern, and under the principles of the Mengel Case that would not entitle it to exemption from taxation for five years. If the appellant is not required to pay taxes under the facts of this case, it is possible for manufacturing establishments which are not new enterprises, to escape taxation for an indefinite period. The object and purpose of the exemption of manufacturing establishments from the payment of taxes for a certain period was to induce the location of new establishments in the various cities of the commonwealth, to induce persons of capital and enterprise and business capacity to invest their money so as to build up the cities of the State. The constitutional convention intended to maintain a uniform system of taxation, but feeling that an enlargement of the business interests of the cities was so desirable, it relaxed that uniform rule to the extent of allowing new enterprises to be exempt from taxation, believing that the location of new manufacturing and other business establishments in the cities would ultimately contribute such sums to the payment of the expenses of government as would more than compensate the other tax payers who bore the burden pending the es
Judgment affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled."