22 So. 2d 13 | Ala. | 1945
Lead Opinion
Complainant, the Prudential Insurance Company of America, a foreign corporation, is now and has been for a long number of years engaged in a rather extensive insurance business in the State of Alabama. The privilege or license tax for conducting its business in this state is fixed in Title 51, § 816, Code 1940, the sum to be paid being largely in excess of that required of domestic insurance companies engaged in business in the state, as set out in § 819, Title 51, Code 1940. In June 1944, the Supreme Court of the United States in United States v. Southeastern Underwriters Ass'n,
For the protection of its right to do business a temporary injunction pendente lite was proper without the necessity of a decision in favor of the complainant upon the merits of the cause. Clearly there was a substantial question here to be decided and if the bill is properly filed, a temporary injunction to preserve the status quo was in order. Coxe, Ex'r, v. Huntsville Gaslight Co.,
Construing our declaratory judgment statute, Code 1940, Title 7, § 156 et seq., this court has held resort could not be had thereto if adequate relief and appropriate remedy are presently available to the complainant party through the means of other existing forms of action or proceedings, noting some few exceptions not here pertinent. State v. Inman,
This case as here presented, therefore, resolves itself into a single question — was there a plain and adequate remedy at law? The Legislature attempted in what is now §§ 890 and 891, Title 51, Code 1940, to provide a remedy for a refund of the taxes so paid, if found to be illegally exacted of the taxpayer. This court in considering these provisions which were formerly §§ 379 and 380, General Acts 1935, p. 568, concluded and so held that the plan therein outlined contravened Art. 1, § 14, Constitution of 1901, to the effect that the State of Alabama should never be made a defendant in any court of law or equity. Raible Co. v. State Tax Commission,
It is first insisted that §§ 890 and 891, as amended, are unconstitutional as violative of § 45 of the Constitution. This argument is based upon the theory that the title of the Act of 1943 was "To amend Sections 890 and 891, Title 51, of the Code of Alabama of 1940," and that as these sections thus sought to be amended had been declared unconstitutional, the title is defective and does not meet the requirements of § 45. That a section of the Code may be amended by reference to the section number only is well settled by our decisions. Of course, it is understood that the amendatory act must be germane to, supported by and supplemental to the sections of the act sought to be amended. State ex rel. Troy v. Smith,
The question of difficulty, however, arises out of the contention that the amended statutes (§§ 890 and 891) are still invalid as violative of Art. 1, § 14, of the Constitution, prohibiting a suit against the State. It is, of course, a familiar rule for the guidance of this court in construing questions of this nature, that is, the constitutionality vel non of a statute, that the court is under duty to sustain the act unless it is clear beyond reasonable doubt that it is violative of this fundamental law. It is also a familiar rule that where the validity of a statute is assailed and there are two possible interpretations, by one of which the statute would be unconstitutional and by the other would be valid, the court should adopt the construction which would uphold it. Or as otherwise stated, it is the duty of the courts to adopt the construction of a statute to bring it into harmony with the Constitution if its language will permit. Alabama *584
State Federation of Labor v. McAdory, Ala.,
To arrive at a proper understanding of our constitutional inhibition as to suits against the State, the underlying theory of such provision should be considered. After all, Art. 1, § 14, of our Constitution, is but the expression of an established principle of jurisprudence in all civilized nations resting upon public policy that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own courts or any other court without its consent. It is inherent in the nature of the sovereign not to be amenable to the suit of an individual without its consent. This doctrine rests upon reason of public policy — the inconvenience and danger which would follow from any different rule. Considering these underlying principles, therefore, there are many cases pointing out limitations on the rule found noted in 49 Am.Jur. p. 307 et seq. In a number of states (Oklahoma among them) the State may be sued with its consent, the Legislature being the proper body to authorize such suits. 49 Am.Jur. p. 304.
Differing in some respects but bearing similarity to the statute which we are now considering (Antrim Lumber Co. v. Snead,
Counsel for complainant lay some stress upon statements in the majority opinion in the Read case, in comparing the Oklahoma statute to that of California treated in Smith v. Reeves,
The dissenting views in the Read case are to the effect that too much stress is laid upon this mere matter of form. With all due respect to the holding in the Read case, we are impelled to the conclusion that *586 a provision in a refund statute requiring a fund held separate and apart, not to be allocated or distributed pending the question of the determination of the legality of the tax, is a matter of some materiality. In the O'Conner case, supra, concerning the Colorado statute which permitted the funds to go into the general treasury, the court treated it as an identified trust fund, and that the taxpayer's claim to the money pending the determination of the legality of the tax was paramount to that of the State. In the Colorado statute nothing was said concerning how the question of the legality of the tax was to be determined, i.e., against whom the action should be brought. Section 6 of the Act merely provided for refund of the money if it should be determined in an action at law or in equity that it had been erroneously paid. Considering our own State the fund of the taxpayer under the statute is a trust fund, as we have already pointed out. It cannot be allocated or distributed, and is to be kept by the Treasurer separate and apart from the general funds of the State.
As pointed out by the decisions in 49 Am.Jur. p. 307 et seq., it is the nature of the suit or relief demanded which the courts consider in determining whether a suit against a State officer is in fact one against the State within the rule of immunity referred to, and it is not the character of the office of the person against whom the suit is brought. Illustrative of this limitation is our Curry case, to which we have referred. If we are to stick to the letter and lay stress upon formalism, even such a declaratory judgment suit as involved in the Curry case could not have been maintained. And a further illustration is to be found in State ex rel. Turner v. Henderson,
It is next insisted that the remedy at law is not plain and adequate for the reason there is no provision for the payment of interest upon the money paid under protest. Nutt v. Ellerbe, D.C., 56 F.2d. 1058. The State contends that provision for the payment of interest may be implied. We cannot agree with either contention. In Schlesinger v. State,
It results, therefore, that our conclusion is that complainant had a plain and adequate remedy at law and that the bill was without equity. As a result, the decree granting the temporary writ of injunction is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
THOMAS, BROWN, and LIVINGSTON, JJ., concur.
FOSTER, STAKELY, and SIMPSON, JJ., concur in result with a special concurring opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the substance of the Court's opinion. But I do not think it is necessary to support it that the legislature should have provided that the fund in question must be set up in a suspense account and not be available for allocation or distribution; as contained in amended section 891, Title 51, Code Pocket Supplement. I think, as said in the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the Oklahoma case (Great Northern Life Ins. Co. v. Read,
The effect of the amended section 891 is to make an appropriation for the relief of an officer who shall have collected illegal taxes for which he is personally liable when such taxes have been covered into the treasury. There is no doubt of such legislative authority, and there is no doubt of such personal liability. In making the appropriation, the legislature is of course at liberty to provide that the fund shall not be disbursed, but retained in the treasury until the suit is determined, and if it is determined against the officer that it be used in satisfying his liability. But I do not think that it is material that it should be done in that form, since the appropriation may be made out of the State's general fund.
A judgment against the officer under amended sections 890 and 891, supra, is not one to compel him, nor anyone else, to use State funds to reimburse the plaintiff as said in the Oklahoma case, supra, to have been so. The State is not required by the judgment to do anything. But the State may make an appropriation for an anticipated proper purpose payable upon a named condition. In the Oklahoma case, supra, the opinion stresses the fact that the suit is to compel the officer sued to use State funds for a certain purpose, and so it was held to be a suit against the State. But the theory of the O'Connor case, supra, is that the legislature made what amounts to an appropriation to provide for "any difficulty in which the Secretary of State otherwise might find himself in case of a disputed tax." I do not think it is material whether the State officer is named as such in the suit, or is sued individually. A judgment against him as an officer of the State is not one which by itself (unaided by an appropriation) requires or authorizes him or anyone else to use State funds in its payment. But the judgment, whether against him as an officer or as an individual, is the existence of the condition on which the legislative appropriation is payable. It is for a proper purpose, because it satisfies the State's moral obligation to repay a tax which the State has received but which it was not due to receive.
The theory is the same which supports the statute providing for the State Board of Adjustment. Sections 333 to 344, Title *588
55, Code; Hawkins v. State Board of Adjustment,
I am authorized to say that Mr. Justice STAKELY and Mr. Justice SIMPSON concur in the foregoing treatment of this subject.