delivered the opinion of the Court.
The proceedings in this case were initiated when the appellees, The Greyhound Corporation, Monumental Motor Tours, Inc., and McMahon Transportation Company, Inc., three interstate carriers of passengers, filed claims with the appellant, Department of Motor Vehicles, under Code (1957), Article 81, Section 215, for the refund, with interest, of excise taxes paid to the appellant by the appellees for the issuance of title certificates to various public passenger motor vehicles owned by the appellees. The appellant denied the refunds and appellees filed appeals to the Maryland Tax Court, as provided in Code (1957), Article 81, Section 217. The only evidence presented before the Tax Court consisted of a stipulation and supplemental stipulation. The denial of the refund by the Department was affirmed by the Tax Court in a three to two decision in which a strong dissent was registered, and again the appellees here appealed under the provisions of Article 81, Section 217, and Rule B1-B12 of the Maryland Rules, this time to the Baltimore City Court.
The hearing before the Baltimore City Court was on the record of the prior proceedings in the Tax Court, although the appellant proffered evidence which consisted of certain legislative materials in the form of reports of commissions and letters from various officials and private parties, which the appellant claims would have shown the legislative intent in enacting Chapter 267, Section 2, of the Daws of Maryland, 1961, (codified as Article 56, Section 184 of the Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.)), to support its theory of the case. This proffer was ruled inadmissible by Chief Judge Foster, who reversed the decision of the Tax Court, adopting the opinion of the dissenting minority, *666 •and awarding the appellees the relief for which they prayed. The appeal to this Court followed.
The resolution of this case hinges on the effect of statutes ■dating back to 1933. These statutes have been re-enacted as amended on numerous occasions since their inceptions, and it is upon the effect of these amendments and re-enactments that the contentions of the parties here involved are based.
In 1933, by Chapter 593, a “seat-mile” tax was imposed up-en owners of public passenger carriers on the public highways •of the State. In 1935 Chapter 539 was enacted requiring the ■owners of commercial vehicles, with certain exceptions not here involved, to pay an excise tax to the Department of Motor Vehicles for the issuance of the original certificates of title for the vehicles owned by them. Then in 1961, Chapter 267, Section 2, of the laws of that year was enacted substituting an axle tax for the earlier seat-mile tax, (codified as Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.), Article 56, Section 184 (a)) and this Act also stated that: “No other additional fees, licenses or tax shall be •charged by the State or any county or municipal subdivision ■of the State except the property tax and gasoline tax in respect to such vehicles or their operation.”
In 1964 this exception was expanded to include “* * * the excise tax for the issuance of every original certificate of title,” by Chapter 16, Section 2, of the Laws of 1964 (codified as ■Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.) Article 56, Section 184 (a)). During the period from May 1, 1961, the effective date of Chapter 267 of the Acts of 1961, and April 15, 1963, the appellant collected and the appellees paid, without protest, the titling tax in question. The appellees here claim that the exception in the 1961 Act does not include the titling tax, that a later act repeals an earlier one so far as the two conflict, and that by virtue of this implied repeal they are entitled to refunds for taxes paid during this period. The appellant disagrees with this contention, saying that the statutory provisions involved create an ambiguity and that the intent of the Legislature should be looked to and ascertained to resolve such ambiguity.
While two or more statutes in
pari materia
are to be given full effect whenever possible,
Balto. Credit Union v. Thorne,
Chapter 539 of the Laws of 1935 simply imposed a tax on the issuance of an original certificate of title. This in no way affected the collection of the seat-mile tax provided for in Chapter 593 of the Acts of 1933. However, when Chapter 267 of the Acts of 1961 was passed it stated that “no other additional fees * * * except the property tax and gasoline tax * * *” should be assessed to owners of passenger motor vehicles. The Department earnestly contends that this difference in the statutes creates an ambiguity which should be resolved by looking to extrinsic evidence for the purpose of ascertaining the intent of the Legislature.
State Dep’t v. Ellicott-Brandt,
The statute here involved, Article 56, Section 184 (a) is in no way ambiguous. It simply exempts those paying the axle tax from paying other fees and taxes except the property tax and the gasoline tax. By making these two items the sole exceptions, the statute is as plain as if it had listed all of the fees and taxes not included in the exceptions. As we said in
State Insurance v. Nationwide,
“However, construing a statute liberally and adding to it, by judicial fiat, a provision which the Legislature did not see fit to include are not one and the same thing. As stated by Justice Brandéis, for the Court, in Iselin v. United States,270 U.S. 245 , 251: What the Government asks is not a construction of a statute, but, in effect, an enlargement of it by the court, so that what was omitted, presumably by inadvertence [in that case], may be included within its scope. To supply omissions transcends the judicial function.’ ”
Previously, in
Md. Medical Service v. Carver,
The appellant further urges that the Baltimore City Court failed to give sufficient consideration to the administrative construction of the statute here involved, in this case, the continued collection of the tax by the Department. It is true that in the case of ambiguous statutes, administrative construction is accorded great weight by the courts.
State Roads Comm. v. Jones,
The appellees have devoted a considerable portion of their brief and oral argument to their right to interest on the amounts of titling tax paid by them from the date of payment until the time of refund. As we read the record neither the Maryland Tax Court nor the Baltimore City Court gave consideration to the question of interest. Accordingly, while we will affirm the judgment as to granting the refund, concerning the question of interest, we remand the case to the Maryland Tax Court for consideration of that phase of the case.
Judgment affirmed and case remanded to the Maryland Tax Court for further consideration. Costs to be paid by the appellant.
