199 S.W.2d 622 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1947
Affirming.
The Department of Revenue, O.M. Howard, Commissioner of Revenue, and Norman Davis, Tax Commissioner of Graves County and President of the Kentucky Tax Commissioners Association, representing all county tax commissioners, instituted this action against Clarence Miller, Commissioner of Finance, and T.W. Vinson, Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, under section 639a — 1 et seq. of the Civil Code of Practice, seeking a construction of section
The plaintiffs alleged in their petition that the defendants contended a county tax commissioner is not entitled to compensation for a deputy until the assessed valuation of property in the county amounts to seven and one-half million dollars in excess of fifteen million dollars, when he becomes entitled to $1,500, whereas a proper construction of the statute entitles a county tax commissioner to a proportionate part of the $1,500, or at the rate of 2 cents on each $100 of the excess over $15,000,000. A demurrer to the plaintiffs' petition was sustained, and the plaintiffs having declined to plead further, a judgment was entered dismissing their petition. No actual declaration of rights was made, but all parties to this appeal have treated the judgment as a declaration in accordance with the contention of the defendants, who are the appellees here. We shall so treat it.
Subsection (1) of section
In subsections (1) and (2) the Legislature dealt with the compensation of the county tax commissioner for his personal services and fixed his compensation at a percentage of the total assessed valuation of the property listed by him, 10 cents on the $100 of the first million dollars and 2 cents on each $100 of the excess over one million dollars. Compensation calculated at this rate is allowed and paid until it amounts during any year to $5,000, which occurs when the assessed valuation of the property of the county amounts to $21,000,000, unless an allowance for necessary office expenses is made. When the Legislature undertook in subsection (5) to provide for deputies and to fix their compensation, it provided that "the county tax commissioner shall be allowed by *824 the state as compensation to his deputies the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars for each seven and one-half million dollars of the property assessed in excess of fifteen million dollars." This language is clear and unambiguous. Obviously, it was the intention of the Legislature to allow compensation for deputy hire only when the assessed valuation of property exceeded $15,000,000 by $7,500,000, or amounted to at least $22,500,000. Then the sum of $1,500 must be allowed to the tax commissioner by the state as compensation to his deputies. It is significant that the Legislature, in subsection (2), adopted the percentage basis for determining the compensation of the tax commissioner, but adopted a different basis when it provided for compensation of deputies in subsection (5). If it had intended that a proportionate part of the $1,500 should be allowed to the tax commissioner as compensation to his deputies, it undoubtedly would have provided for payment on the same basis as set forth in subsection (2) for the payment of the tax commissioner's compensation. There is no provision in subsection (5) for any fractional allowance for an additional assessed valuation that is less than $7,500,000. On the contrary, this subsection on its face contemplates an additional assessment of $7,500,000 before my part of the $1,500 compensation for deputy hire is due. The respective sums are treated as units. This is evident from the provisions that the sum of $1,500 for deputy hire shall be allowed "for each seven and one-half million dollars of the property assessed in excess of fifteen million dollars."
Appellants cite Oates, Commissioner, v. Simpson, Tax Commissioner,
The judgment is affirmed.