95 F. 274 | S.D. Iowa | 1899
Louisa Catharine Ott having been duly adjudicated a bankrupt, the county of Scott filed its verified
“The court shall order the trustee to pay all taxes legally due and owing by the bankrupt to the United States, slate, county, district or municipality in advance of the payment of dividends to creditors,” etc.
If this mulct tax is not within said term “taxes,” as therein used, ihe claim will he treated as other claims, having no priority of payment, and as entitled to share in whatever dividend is declared in favor of general creditors. Whether said mulct taxes are thus included in said section 64, cl. a, must be determined under the statutes of the state of Iowa imposing the same, and any construction of these statutes given by ihe supreme court, which may be pertinent to the controversy herein. Chapter 6 of the Code of Iowa of 1897 is entitled “Of Intoxicating- Liquors.” Section 2382 thereof prohibits the selling or keeping for sale of any intoxicating liquor, “except as provided in this chapter.” Section 2384 provides that whoever uses any building for the selling of such intoxicating liquor is guilty of a nuisance, and the penalty therefor is prescribed. Section 2385 provides for the issuing of permits to sell and dispense intoxicating liquors, “for pharmaceutical and medical purposes,” by certain classes of persons, and on certain conditions, in said and other sections following explicitly set forth. Section 2432 contains ihe tollo wing:
“lively person, partnership or corporation, except persons holding permits, carrying on the business of selling or keeping for sale intoxicating liquors, or maintaining a place where intoxicating liquors are sold or kept with intent to sell, shall pay an annual iax, to be called a ‘mulct tax,’ of six hunched dollars, in quarterly installments as hereinafter provided, which tax shall he a lien upon the real properly wherein or whereon the business is carried on, or where (ho place for selling or keeping for sale is maintained, from the time each installment of tax as hereinafter provided shall beeome due and payable.”
Subsequent sections provide for the return by ihe assessor to the county auditor of a list of persons carrying on such business, for the method of payment of the tax installments as Ihe same fall due quarterly, for the certifying by the auditor to the county treasurer of persons and property subject to mulct tax, and for the entry or extension by the treasurer of such certified facts upon the propel*
“After tlie expiration of one month from the date when such tax becomes due and payable, if not paid, it shall be delinquent and collectible by the treasurer in the same method as that in which other delinquent taxes are collectible, and all the provisions as to the collections of other delinquent taxes shall apply.”
Said and next following sections provide for collection of such delinquent mulct tax by sale (1) of personal property used in connection with or in maintaining the business, and (2) of real property wherein or whereon the business is carried on; «and also provide that all the provisions of law as to tax sales for other delinquent taxes (i. e. the general provisions as to tax sales in Iowa) shall apply to tax sales for delinquent mulct tax. Section 2445 provides that the revenue provided for by this mulct tax shall be paid into the county treasury, one half to go into the general county fund, and the other half to be paid over to the municipality in which the business taxed is conducted. But, if the business is conducted in a township outside the limits of a municipality, then such other half is to be paid to the clerk of the township, and the clerk apportions and the same is expended on the highways within the township. Authority is given for the transfer to the county road fund, and expenditure upon the highways of the county, of that half of the mulct tax which is made a county fund. Section 2448 provides:
“In any city, including cities acting under special charters, of five thousand or more inhabitants, no proceeding shall be maintained against any person who has paid the last preceding quarterly assessment of mulct tax, nor against any premises as a nuisance on account of the selling- or keeping for sale therein or thereon by such person, of such liquors, provided the following conditions are complied with,” etc.
Here follow provisions as to -written consent of electors, the granting by the city council of the request of an applicant for permission to sell at some stated place within the municipality, bond, police regulations, application of the statute to cities under 5,000 population, etc., which are not pertinent to the matter here under consideration. Section 2447 is as follows:
“Nothing contained in this chapter, so far as it relates to the mulct tax, shall be in any way construed to mean that the business of the sale of intoxicating liquors is in any way legalized, nor as a license, nor shall the assessment or payment of any tax for the sale of liquors as aforesaid protect the wrongdoer from any penalty now provided by law, except as provided in the next section.”
The next section (2448) is summarized above. The original statute, which has been codified into these sections, is chapter 62 of the Public Laws enacted at the 1894 session of the general assembly of Towa. and bears the following title: "An act to tax the traffic in intoxicating liquors and to regulate and control the same.”
Upon the sections above cited, Scott county urgently insists that the mulct tax falls within the taxes whose payment is given priority in the bankruptcy statute. There is much force in this contention. The assessor, who returns for taxation the taxable property under the general tax laws of the state, returns the names of persons and
It is claimed with much apparent force that what is by the statute denominated a “mulct tax,” and made a charge or lien against real estate, and assessed and collected under and through the officers who, as above jiointed out, assess and collect other taxes, is either a tax or a penalty, since the statute creating it will not permit such tax to be regarded as a license. The statute (section 2447, Code of Iowa, supra) declares that the legislation creating and providing for collecting said mulct tax shall not “in any Avay be construed to mean that.the business of the sale of intoxicating liquors is in anyway legalized, nor is a license.” If such mulct tax is not a license,
“Nor shall the assessment or payment of any tax for the sale of liquors as. aforesaid [mulct tax] protect the wrongdoer from any penalty now provided by law, except as provided in the next section.”
The next section (2448) is hereinbefore stated. The “penalty now provided by law” at date of enactment of said mulct-tax statute was fine, or imprisonment, or both, to be imposed by the courts after due judicial investigation. This section (2448) does not provide for any such penalty, nor for imposing of sentence; nor is there either in the mulct-tax statute as originally enacted or in the same as codified, any such provision.
It is further urged that, if such mulct tax is not in the nature of a license, nor penalty, what is it but a tax? It is not claimed that it is in the nature of an indulgence or price paid in advance for permission to commit crime or to violate the law with impunity after such payment. It is urged that, if not a license, penalty, or indulgence, it is and must be a tax. In other words, the lawmaking body of the state having declared the mulct-tax statute is not in fact, and shall not be construed as being in law, a license, and such statute having provided no penalty for violation, it merely suspends the penalty features of theretofore existing- statutes regarding traffic in intoxicating liquors when the provisions of said mulct-tax statute are complied with, and in its stead substitutes a tax, assessable and collectible in the manner pointed out. The argument favoring the position here taken by Scott county has great force. But I do not find it at this point necessary to determine its correctness.
We now turn to the consideration of the construction of this statute by the supreme court, the highest judicial tribunal of the state. Such construction, if directly and positively given, and upon the sections above cited with respect to the question herein involved, is at least to be given careful and weighty consideration, and may control the decision reached herein.. Indeed, the opposing creditors contend it must control such decision. Smith v. Skow, 97 Iowa, 640, 66 N. W. 893, cited by the opposing creditors, is the only case cited, and the only one coming under my observation, wherein is discussed the question how far, if at all, this mulct tax is a tax. The decision was rendered April 10, 1896. In 1892 Skow and wife executed to plaintiff, Smith, their real-estate mortgage for the purpose of securing a promissory note. Skow subsequently conveyed the mortgaged premises to one Jones, who carried on the business of selling intoxicating liquors in a building on said premises. The mulct tax was entered against said premises on the proper tax books
“As the several members of this court adhere, to iheir former opinions touching the, lien of personal taxes on real estate with reference to mortgages which exist upon real estate when sueli personal tax becomes a lien thereon, It Is desirable to rest the determination of the question presented in this case upon another ground, upon which we all agree, and that is that this sum [mulct tax] which it is provided shall be a lien upon property, both personal and real, is not in fact a ‘tax,’ as we usually use that word. It matters not that the legislature. in the statute, speaks of tills license or. charge as a ‘tax.’ That does not make if: a tax. It is in reality a charge or license exacted for the privilege of carrying on the business of vending liquors, which charge Is made by statute a lien upon all property, both personal and real, used or connected with tlio business. The doctrine adhered to by a minority of the court; in the Bibbins Case extends the priority of the lion of personal taxes on real estate over existing mortgages as to taxes proper; that is, general taxes. As we have said, this is nor a tax, and certainly not a general tax. Not being in the nature of a general tax, and the statute not undertaking to make this charge or license a. lien upon real property superior to existing liens, we discover no reason for holding it to be prior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. It is such a charge as attaches to, and becomes a lien on, the real estate when it is assessed, and does not take priority over the lion of a mortgage then existing upon real estate.”
Order.
Mow there coming on to he heard the question, at the instance of said county of Scott, certified for review to (his court by John M. Hehnick, Esq., referee, as to demanded priority of payment out of said estate of the claim herein proven in favor of the county of. Scott, stab of Iowa, Julius Usher and William Thoophilus appearing for said county of Scott, and Isaac Petersherger and T. A. Murphy for creditors opposing said priority of payment, and argu-menta of counsel having been heard and the court fully advised, it is by the court ordered and adjudged that the action of said Referee Ilelmick, in refusing to allow and order priority of payment herein of the said claim of the said county of Scott, he, and is hereby, approved and affirmed, at the costs of said county of Scott. The said referee will tax and collect the costs incident to and occasioned by said certifying and hearing of said matter, .and will proceed to settle said estate, in accordance with this order.