225 S.W.2d 672 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1949
Affirming.
In 1946 the first paragraph of KRS
"The tax collector shall be entitled to a fee at the rate of four percent for the collection of school taxes, which fee may be charged only for collecting or receiving school taxes or school funds received from the local school levy." No change was made in the second paragraph of KRS
In the case of Weber v. True,
This case involves the applicability of the 1946 amendment to sheriffs in counties having a population of more than 75,000. Specifically, the question relates to the fee collected by the Sheriff of Jefferson County for collecting the Jefferson County school tax requested by the Jefferson County Board of Education and levied by the Fiscal Court of that County. The action was instituted by the Board of Education wherein it charged originally that the additional three percent allowed the Sheriff for collecting the local school taxes constituted a diversion of school funds in contravention of sections 180 and 184 of the Constitution, and therefore was void. This appeal is from a judgment upholding the contention of the appellees.
The constitutional background of the controversy *783 can be better understood by a reading of the applicable parts of the following three sections of our Constitution:
Section 180:
"The General Assembly may authorize the counties, cities or towns to levy a poll tax not exceeding one dollar and fifty cents per head. Every act enacted by the General Assembly, and every ordinance and resolution passed by any county, city, or town or municipal board or local legislative body, levying a tax, shall specify distinctly the purpose for which said tax is levied, and no tax levied and collected for one purpose shall ever be devoted to another purpose." The first sentence of Section 184 establishes the Common School Fund. The second sentence provides:
"The interest and dividends of said fund, together with any sum which may be produced by taxation or otherwise for purposes of common school education, shall be appropriated to the common schools, and to no other purpose." Section 106 provides:
"The fees of county officers shall be regulated by law. In counties or cities having a population of seventy-five thousand or more, the Clerks of the respective Courts thereof (except the Clerk of the City Court), the Marshals, the Sheriffs and the Jailers, shall be paid out of the State Treasury, by salary to be fixed by law, the salaries of said officers and of their deputies and necessary office expenses not to exceed seventy-five per centum of the fees collected by said officers, respectively, and paid into the Treasury."
According to the pleadings and the proof, a fee of one percent is amply sufficient to cover the costs of collecting the local school tax, and the additional three percent will amount to an excess of between $50,000 and $60,000 per year.
In 1920, Laws 1920, c. 36, the General Assembly reduced the commission allowed for the collection of school taxes from four percent to one percent and provided that this charge should be made against the local school levy. In the case of Ross, Sheriff, v. Board of Education of Jefferson County,
Prior to the adoption of the 1920 Act and the decision in the Ross case, the gross amount produced by the local school levy was credited to the local school fund, the charge for the collection of that fund being made against the general county levy. Some of the early cases on this point are discussed in the case of Clark v. Mason County,
"To require the proceeds of a tax levied and collected under chapter 36, supra, (the 1920 Act) for purposes of common school education, to bear the costs of its collection, is not violative of either section 180 or 184 of the Constitution, as it is not the appropriation of a tax levied for one purpose to another purpose, for the taxes must be collected, and some one must be paid for it."
Similar reasoning is found in the opinion in the case of Board of Education of Louisville v. Sea, Tax Receiver,
"Adopting this rule, we are forced to the conclusion that the language employed in section 180 of the Constitution means that taxes levied and collected for the purposes of carrying on one department of government *785 should not be devoted to the carrying on of another department of the government, and does not mean that the taxes levied, for whatever purpose, shall not be reduced in the process of their collection by a sum offered as an inducement to facilitate their collection."
In commenting upon the applicability of section 184 of the Constitution to the discount provision it was said in the Sea opinion, 181 S.W. at page 674:
"Manifestly this language means that the fund referred to therein shall not be appropriated to any other purpose of government than to school purposes. We do not construe it to limit the power of the Legislature, or to prohibit the power of it to offer inducements to all the people alike to pay their taxes; but, if these taxes are paid, the sum so collected shall not be devoted to any other purpose than school purposes. It is contended, however, that within the meaning of that section of the Constitution, a tax is produced whensoever it is levied; and it is therefore argued that there is no power in the Legislature to subtract from any part of the taxes levied any sum for any purpose. To this we cannot agree. To our minds a tax is not produced until it is levied and collected, and, unless plainly prohibited, the levying power may reduce the sum levied in the process of collection in order to produce the collection fund, and that this constitutes no misappropriation of any produced fund."
In many cases this Court has held that school funds, which are said to be state funds, cannot be used for other than school purposes. The immediate question, however, is, What constitutes a school fund? Vigorous arguments are advanced by the appellees in support of their contentions that the gross proceeds of a tax levied for school purposes constitute the local school fund. Indeed, in their cross-appeal they urge that the reasoning in the Ross case is unsound and that no commission should be allowed to the sheriff or anyone else for the collection of school taxes. This question is raised in amended pleadings. On the other hand, the argument is advanced that Section 106 of the Constitution itself presupposes that in counties having a population in excess of 75,000 there would be an excess of fees over and above the amount necessary to pay the salaries and expenses of certain local officers, including the sheriff, and *786 therefore the instant case involves no unconstitutional diversion of school funds. It is true that Section 106 of the Constitution addresses itself to the fees of county officers. The first sentence of that section reads:
"The fees of county officers shall be regulated by law."
It is true also that the statute in question, KRS
"The tax collector shall be entitled to a fee at the rate of four percent for the collection of school taxes, which fee may be charged only for collecting or receiving school taxes or school funds received from the local school levy." There is a marked difference between a fee in its true concept and a tax. As said in 51 Am. Jur., Fees, Section 12:
"The distinction between a fee and a tax is one that is not always observed with nicety in judicial decisions, but any payment exacted by the state or its municipal subdivisions as a contribution toward the cost of maintaining governmental functions, where the special benefits derived from their performance is merged in the general benefit, is a tax." On the other hand, a fee is generally regarded as a charge for some particular service. As pointed out in the case of Neutzel, Clerk v. Fiscal Court of Jefferson County,
We think the reasoning in the Ross and Sea cases is sound. There is an element of cost involved in the collection of any tax. We think no violence is done to either Section 180 or 184 of the Constitution when a reasonable charge is made against a local school tax for its collection. However, the express mandates of those sections must not be overlooked when a school tax is under consideration because under them a tax cannot be levied for school purposes and then used for other purposes. Under the facts presented in this case, it is *787 shown that the additional three percent allowed the Sheriff of Jefferson County under the 1946 Act for the collection of the Jefferson County School taxes will result in a diversion of more than $50,000 annually to purposes other than school purposes. This we believe to be in violation of both Sections 180 and 184 of the Constitution.
Judgment affirmed on both the appeal and the cross-appeal.