Opinion by
Wе allowed this appeal from a decision of the Superior Court (
Plaintiffs are a partnership еngaged in the manufacture of bed springs and allied products. The ordinance in question was enacted under and by virtue of the authority granted by the Act of June 25, 1947, P. L. 1145, which authorized certain political subdivisions, including cities of the second class, to levy, assess and collect taxеs, with certain specified exceptions, on persons, transactions, occupations, privileges, subjects and personal рroperty. An amendment of May 9, 1949, P. L. 898, added another exception, namely, that they should not have authority to levy, assess and colleсt a tax on goods and articles manufactured in such political subdivision or on the by-products of manufacture, or 6n any privilege, aсt or transaction related to the business of manufacturing. The Pittsburgh ordinance imposed a tax on the net profits earned from businesses, professions and other activities conducted by residents of the city, “business” being defined as “an enterprise, activity, profession, or *141 undertаking of any nature conducted for profit or ordinarily conducted for profit, whether by an individual, partnership, association, or any оther entity.” Partnerships were required to pay the tax for each partner’s share of the total net profits therefrom whether or nоt the net profits were actually distributed to the partners. Plaintiffs contended that the profits earned in their business were not subject to the tax because of the statutory provision above cited forbidding the taxation of goods and articles manufactured in the city or any privilege, act or transaction related to the business of manufacturing. They filed a complaint to enjoin the city from collecting the tax on their net profits, and both the Common Pleas Court and the Superior Court sustained their position.
Much of the argument of both the plaintiffs аnd the city is directed to the question whether the exception added by the 1949 amendment should be strictly construed against the city or against the taxpayer. Plaintiffs argue that it constituted a limitation on the power of the municipality to tax, whereas the city contends that it is in the nаture of an exemption provision. On the one hand, municipal corporations can levy no taxes unless the power be plаinly and unmistakably conferred by the sovereign state, and the grant of such right must be strictly construed and not extended by implication:
Hillman Coal & Coke Co. v. Jenner Township,
What, then, is the proper interpretation to be applied? It is argued by plaintiffs that a tax on the earned net profits of a business is a tax on the plant, machinery, equipment, and goods and articles manufactured or in process of manufacture, because profits can be obtained only from the investment in the enterprise of capital made up of those items of property; reliance is placed upon the frequently reitеrated statement that a tax on the income produced by property is a tax on the property from which it is derived:
Murray v. Philadelphia,
When we come to a consideration of the portion of the 1949 amendment which fоrbids the imposition of a tax on “any privilege . . . related to the business of manufacturing”, a totally different question presents itself. It was held in
Isaly Dairy Co. v. Pittsburgh,
Order affirmed at the cost of appellant City of Pittsburgh.
