138 Tenn. 442 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The hill sought an injunction restraining the issuance of bonds authorized by House Bill 456, Acts of the General Assembly of 1917, passed on March 2, 1917, approved March 6, 1917- (see chapter 100, page 345, Private Acts of 1917), upon the ground that said act was unconstitutional and void.
By way of defense a demurrer was interposed, which the chancellor sustained and dismissed the hill, and from his decree complainants have appealed and assigned errors.
The act assailed, in its first section, authorizes Greene county to issue interest-hearing bonds in the sum of $510,000 “the proceeds of the sale of which shall he applied to macadamizing and grading the roads already built in said county, and grading and macadamizing other roads as hereinafter designated.” The second section provides that “said bonds shall not he issued until issuance has been approved by a majority of the qualified voters of Greene county, voting at an election herein provided for,” and this section provides for the calling of such election, and.that “all qualified voters living within the county excepting those living within incorporated municipalities which levy a street tax to maintain and keep up the streets, shall be entitled to vote in this election, and all persons living in such municipalities, who’ own • real estate outside of same at the time of
The first assignment of error insists ' that the limitation upon the right of suffrage apparent from what has been said above is in contravention of section 5 of article 1 of the Constitution of the state, which provides:
“That elections shall be free and equal, and the light of suffrage, as hereinafter declared, shall never be denied to any person entitled thereto, except upon a conviction by a jury of some infamous crime, previously ascertained and declared by law, and judgment thereon by a, court of competent jurisdiction. ’ ’
The section just quoted, in our opinion has no application to the hind of an election contemplated by the act assailed. Section 5 must be read in connection with section ,1 of article 4 of the same Constitution, which provides:
“Every male person of the age of twenty-one years, being a citizen of the United States, and a resident of this State, for twelve months, and of the county wherein he may offer his vote for six months, next preceding the day of election, shall be entitled to vote for members of the general assembly and other civil officers for the county, or district in which he resides; and there shall be no qualification attached to the right of suffrage, except that each voter shall give to the judges of election where he offers to vote, satisfactory evidence that he has paid poll taxes*446 assessed against him, for such preceding period as the legislature shall prescribe, and at such time as may be prescribed by law, without which his vote cannot be received, and all male citizens of the State shall be subject to the payment of poll taxes and to the performance of military duty within such ages as may be prescribed by law. The general assembly shall have power to enact laws requiring voters to vote in the election precincts in which they may reside, and laws to secure the freedom of elections and the purity of the ballot box.”
When the two sections are read as in pari materia it is manifest that the kind of elections referred to in section 5 of article 1, are those enumerated in section 1 of article 4. The rights of suffrage which section 5 declares shall be “free and equal” is the right it refers to in section 5 of article 1, as “hereinafter declared,” meaning as declared in section 1 of article 4. No mention occurs in the last-named section of the right of suffrage in such an election as is provided for by the act here in question.
It is next insisted that the act violates .section 1 of article 4 of the Constitution set out supra; but this cannot be true if,. we are correct in the views just announced, and in this connection it may not be amiss to add to whai has been said above that the sections of the Constitution above quoted must also be read in connection with section 29 of article 2-of the Constitution, which provides, in part, as follows:
*447 “The general assembly shall have power to authorize the several counties and incorporated towns in this State to impose taxes for county and corporation purposes ... in such manner as shall be prescribed by law'; and all property shall be taxed according to its value, upon the principles established in regard to State taxation.”
Under the section just quoted power was vested in the general assembly to authorize the issuance of the bonds in question without requiring an election to be called, but the assembly saw fit to allow a limited electorate to vote upon the question. The electorate allowed this privilege were those above stated; they were those who owned property so located in the county as to be onerated by the fifth section of the act with taxes annually levied to pay in-erest on the bonds, and to create a sinking fund for their ultimate redemption. All of the class of persons whose property interests were involved in the result of the election, and who- were qualified voters of Greene county were thus given a vote. Now, when it is remembered that the general assembly might have exercised its power under the Constitution without conferring on any class of citizens the right to vote on the particular question, it is clear that the concession of a right to vote ,to a class of persons having a property interest involved in tne result of the election was no violation of any legal or constitutional right of any class which had no such property interest.
In King v. Sullivan County, 128 Tenn. (1 Thomp.), 393, 160 S. W., 847, the bond act assailed was passed for the purpose of building pike roads and authorized the levy of taxes on all property in the county, including that within the corporate limits of any municipality. It was insisted in that case that the scheme of the legislation was unequal and unjust, and violated the above-quoted part of said section 28, but the insistence was rejected. It was said that the quoted part of section 28 must be construed in connection with section 29 of the same article quoted supra, and it was further said:
“The uniformity required by section 28 of article 2 is limited to uniformity in rate, assessment, and valuation of the particular tax involved. It has no «reference to' a uniformity of the sum total of taxes which a citizen is required to pay; that is, it does not require that the total taxes assessed against property situated in a municipality shall not exceed the sum*449 total of taxes assessed against property located outside of a municipality. It does require that there shall be uniformity of valuation and assessment of property for purposes of taxation, and that the tax levy for any given purpose shall be uniform throughout the territory to which it is applied. In this particular case, it would not be competent to authorize a levy of taxes on property inside the city of Bristol ait a rate of taxation more or less than the same levy upon property outside the corporation.”
It was also held that because the building of pike roads was a proper county purpose and complainant’s property was located within the county he was liable for the tax, notwithstanding the fact that the same property so onerated, with the tax for the county purpose was also subject to be taxed for municipal purposes.
In the present case it appears that the only property which escapes taxation for the purposes of the act in question is that located within the corporate limits of the city of Greeneville. It cannot be denied that in order to meet the requirements of section 5 of the act the exception of property located within the corporate limits of Greeneville will impose some additional burden on the property located in the county outside of said corporate limits and made subject to the tax imposed by section 5. But under the above-quoted construction of section 28 made in the opinion of the court in King v. Sullivan County, we think the imposition of this additional burden on
In Patterson v. Washington County, 136 Tenn. (9 Thomp.), 60, 188 S. W., 613, speaking of the same section 29, of the Constitution, it is said:
“Constitutions must be construed as a whole, and no part should be given a construction which is repugnant to express authority contained in another part. The framers oif that instrument evidently deemed that in matters of local taxation for county and corporation purposes, it would be wise for the legislature to have a broad discretion in the manner in which it authorized the several counties and incorporated towns to levy them.”
Another objection to the act is that, as alleged in the assignment, it dismembers the county, in that it authorizes the imposition of a burden of taxation upon part, but not all, of the taxable property located in the county, but the best answer to the point is that in the execution of a legislative scheme for internal improvement section 29 of article 2 of the Constitution expressly authorizes the general assembly to recognize the county organization as one entity by the use of the words “the several counties,” and also expressly authorizes it to recognize municipal corporate entities located in a county by the use of the words “incorporated towns.” There is no effort here to segregate one part of the territory outside
For many years prior to the adoption of the- Con- . stitution of 1870 there had grown up a legislative custom to authorize the levy of a highway tax on all lands outside of incorporated towns for the maintenance of highways of the county, and we are of opinion that the sections of the Constitution involved here should be construed in the light of that custom, unchallenged so far as we have information until this suit.
The acts considered in Smith et al., v. Carter et al., 131 Tenn. (4 Thomp.), 1, 173 S. W. 430, and in Ferguson v. Tyler, 134 Tenn. (7 Thomp.), 25, 183 S. W., 162, are not to be likened to the act aissailed in the present case, and the ruling made in each of those cases does not conflict with our holding here.
We 'have considered all of the assignments of error, and, finding no merit in any of them, we affirm the decree of the chancellor.