146 Ky. 660 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Beversing.
The Kentucky Electric Company is a Kentucky corporation, organized to engage in the manufacture and sale of electricity in the City of Louisville. In 1906 it obtained a franchise from the city, permitting it to use the streets thereof for it's conduits, poles and wires, used in the distribution of electricity to its patrons throughout the city. At or about the same time it constructed a large plant and began to actively carry on its business.
The City Assessor was proceeding to assess its property for taxes, and, conceiving that, under section 170 of the Constitution, section 2980-a of the Statutes, and an ordinance approved by the General Council of the City of Louisville July 29, 1898, its. property was exempt from taxes, it sought by suit to have the assessor enjoin from assessing its property in the city of Louisville. Upon hearing the trial court refused to grant the injunction, upon the ground, that while the appellant was a .new business or enterprise in the City of Louisville, it-was not a manufacturing plant within the meaning of the State law and the ordinance of the City of Louisville passed to carry it into effect, whereby new manufacturing plants located in Louisville are exempt from taxation for a period of five years. Appellant’s petition being dismissed, it seeks a reversal here.
Three questions are raised upon appeal. First, is appellant a manufacturing plant; second, if so, is there anything in the language of the statute or the ordinance denying it the benefit of the exemption; and third, if it is entitled to the exemption, how much of appellant’s property is covered by the words “manufacturing establishment” as used in the ordinance.
For the city it is insisted that, as electricity cannot be manufactured, appellant is not and never has been
In the case of Lawrence vs. Allen, 7 U. S. (How.) 785, it was held that the extracting of the sap, of the India Rubber tree, in its liquid or milky state does not constitute manufacturing, and those engaged in extracting this sap or milk of the rubber plant cannot properly be said to be manufacturers. True, the court held that the act of gathering the juice or sap of the rubber plant could not be termed manufacturing,' nor could those who were engaged in this business be said to be manufacturers. But the court held that when this juice was boiled down and changed into any other form, it would be a manufactured article, and those engaged in this business manufacturers. This opinion rather supports' the contention of counsel for appellant, for, although the. rubber is changed in form, it is still rubber. The one in a liquid state and the other boiled down and subjected, perhaps, to some chemical process, by being mixed with other elements, is converted into some useful article of commerce. Those engaged in this business are clearly manufacturers. Other cases cited by counsel for appel-lee upon this question are not directly in point, and the reasoning for the rule upon which the opinion of the
Counsel for appellant, conceding that occasional isolated cases may be found which seem to support the. contention of appellee, insists that the decided weight of authority is in support of its claim, that a company engaged in the production of electricity is in fact a manufacturing company within the usual and generally accepted meaning of the term. As supporting this view he cites the cases of People v. Wemple, 129 N. Y. 543, State v. American Sugar Refining Co., 108 La. 603, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Northern Electric. Light & Power Co., 145 Pa. St. 105, Southern Electric Light Co. v. Philadelphia, 191 Pa. 170, Commonwealth v. Keystone Electric Light Co., 193, Pa. 245, Beggs v. Edison Electric Light Co., 96 Ala. 295, and Lamborn v. Bell, 18 Colo. 346, where the question whether or not an elec: trie light company was a manufacturing plant was directly involved, and in each case the court held it to be such. The further cases of opinion of the Justices, 150 Mass. 592, Edison United Manufacturing Co. v. Farmington Electric Co., 82 Me. 464, Covington Gaslight Co. v. City, 84 Ky. 94, and Newport Light Co. v. City of Newport, 20 S. W. 424, are cited as .showing that, while the question at point was not involved, from the manner in which the court in those opinions spoke of and referred to electric light companies and gas companies, they were clearly regarded as manufacturing plants. We think the contention of appellant upon this point is sound. This couH has twice held that a company engaged in the manufacture of artificial gas-was a manufacturing concern. It is possible that some distinction may be drawn between the making of artificial gas from coal by means of machinery, and the conversion of the heat units or latent electricity in coal and water into electricity, whereby the one may he termed manufactured and the other not. But we are unable to draw so fine a distinction. Gas is known to exist in nature, presumably produced from coal by some great heat and high pressure to which it was subjected in, ages past, since which time it has been confined in pockets in the earth. Electricity is known to exist in nature. The manufactured gas is identical with the natural gas, save perhaps, that some of the impurities are removed. Manufactured electricity is in many respects similar to. electricity as it exists in nature everywhere, but particu
In the case of People v. Wemple, 129 N. Y. 543, where the court had under consideration the question here in
But counsel for appellee relies chiefly upon the ground upon which the chancellor rested his opinion, that, while it is a manufacturing plant, it is not that character of a manufacturing plant which, under the statute, is entitled to the exemption. In other words, being a public service corporation and having procured from the city a franchise to do business in the city — the right to run its wires and poles over the streets of the
; Neither the Constitution nor the statute nor the ordinance provides that the .manufacturing plant must locate there because of the inducement. The city offers the inducement, and if a manufacturing concern locates there and complies with the requirements of the ordinance as to notice, etc., it is, as a matter of law, entitled' tó the exemption. The question as. to whether or not it was actuated in locating there by-reason of the passage of the ordinance does not enter into the consideration at all. The ordinance is for the benefit of any manufacturing concern that may locate there and conform to its requirements. "While the proof in this case shows that this company did locate its factory within the city limits, because it believed that it would be granted the benefit of this ordinance, still, in the absence of such proof we would hold that, when it is etstablished that it is a new manufacturing concern and that it has located in the city of Louisville since the passage of the ordinance, and- has complied with the requirements of the ordinance as to notice, etc., it is entitled as a matter of law to the benefits of the provisions of that ordinance. Under the Constitution all laws must be general in their application. Section one of the ordinance in question provides that any manufacturing- establishment which shall have been permanently located and conducted within the limits of the city of Louisville, shall be exempt from taxation for a period of- five years. The invitation extended by the city was to all or any manufacturing concerns that would' locate within its limits and conform to the requirements of the ordinance. -"With the character of business done by the company the city was not concerned. Its sole object was to induce business enterprises to locate there, and it therefore held out the broad invitation to all, and, under that invitation, any who- responded to the call are entitled to the benefits of the ' ordinance. True, the ordinance was passed for the purpose of inducing manufacturing concerns to locate there, but when such concerns .have located -there the reason- for their having done so is not open to inquiry. Whether the benefits which would
We are aware that the Supreme Court of Maryland, in the case of Frederick Electric Light & Power Co. v. Frederick City, 84 Md. 599, expressed a contrary view when considering a question in many respects similar to that before us, but we are unwilling to follow the rule announced in that opinion, for in order to do so we would have to read into the ordinance the words “except public service corporations” following the word “establishment.” This we are neither willing nor authorized to do, as the ordinance is plain, unambiguous and certain. Had the G-eneral Council desired to limit the ordinance in its operation and effect to all manufacturing concerns other than those operated for the benefit of public service corporations, it could easily have done so. The very fact that it did not is persuasive that it was intended that the provisions of the ordinance should apply to all manufacturing concerns alike, without regard to the character of business in which they were engaged.
This conclusion disposes effectually of the contention that, because appellant is a public service corporation, it is not entitled to the exemption. Neither the Constitution, the statute, nor the ordinance passed for the purpose of carrying it into effect, warrant such a distinction. ' As a manufacturing plant it generates electricity. As a public service corporation it sells the product of its factory to the public in the city of Louisville. Its product, the electricity, is delivered to its patrons through wires, either run beneath the ground in conduits or above the ground on poles. It is not necessary or essential to the conduct of its business that its factory be located within the city. It could locate just outside the city limits, or across the river even, in Jeffersonville -or New Albany, and transmit the electricity over itá wires to the city of Louisville. It could still be a public service 'corporation in the city of Louisville and' manufacture its product at another point.
This view of the question very much simplifies the
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.