116 Ky. 885 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion op the court by
Appirming.
The appellants, who are citizens and taxpayers of Louisville, Ky. (a city of the first class), instituted this action for the purpose of enjoining the collection and disbursement of a tax of three cents on each $100 worth of taxable property for the purpose of sprinkling the streets of the city. They claim the sprinkling of the streets is not a public purpose, and that, therefore, so much of the ordinance as provides for the tax is unconstitutional and void. This is the question involved in this litigation.
Section 171 of the Constitution provides: “The General Assembly shall provide by law an annual tax, which, with other resources, shall be sufficient to defray the estimated expenses of the Commonwealth for each fiscal year. Taxes shall be levied and collected for public purposes only. They shall be uniform upon all property subject to taxation within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax; and all taxes shall be levied and collected by general laws.” Section 181: “The General Assembly shall not impose taxes for the purposes of any county, city, town, or other municipal corporation, but may, by general laws, confer on the proper authorities thereof, respectively, the power to assess and collect such taxes. . . .” These two sections comprise the constitutional provisions regulating the subject in hand. The charter provisions applicable to the question are as follows:
“Sec. 2980. Each city shall raise a revenue from ad va*887 lorem taxes, and a poll tax and license fees, and to that end the common council of each city is hereby authorized and empowered to provide each year, by ordinance, for the assessment of all real and personal estate within the corporate limits thereof subject to taxation for State purposes, and shall levy an ad valorem tax on same, not exceeding the rate and limits prescribed in the Constitution, and fjr school purposes not exceeding fifty cents on each one hundred dollars of taxable property therein, or such portion of poll tax or license fees as the council may designate; to levy a poll tax not exceeding one dollar and fifty cents on each adult male inhabitant thereof. . . .
“Sec. 2981. In the ordinance fixing for any year' the tax rate, the general council shall subdivide its levy as follows: A levy for schools, a levy for the sinking fund, a levy for police purposes, a levy for the fire department, a levy for street and sewer cleaning, a levy for sprinkling streets, a levy for reconstruction of streets, a levy for street repairs, a levy for construction and repairs of sewers, a levy for the house of reform, a levy for charitable institutions, a levy for parks, a levy for library purposes, and a levy for general purposes and a deficit tax. The council shall cause the foregoing levies to be made for the purpose stated by an ordinance fixing the tax rate each year.”
“Sec. 2825. The board of public works shall have exclusive control over the construction, reconstruction, cleaning, repairing, platting, grading, improving, sprinkling, lighting and using of all streets, alleys, avenues, lanes, market-houses, bridges, sewers, drains, wells, cisterns, ditches, culverts, canals, streams and water courses, sidewalks, curbing and the lighting of public places.”
It will thus be seen that there is ample statutory author
The Constitution forbids the collection of any tax except for a public purpose. Is the sprinkling of the streets a public purpose? If so, the city has a right to' collect the tax; if not, the ordinance, to the extent to which it authorizes a levy for this purpose, is void. Cooley, in his work on Taxation' (3d Ed.), vol. 1, p. 211, says: “It is not dpubted that the preservation of the public health is a public purpose of prime importance. Sanitary regulations are indispensable in large towns, but they may be made for every locality. The right to provide for draining low lands for the purpose is well settled, and the right to protect low lands from overflow may also be justified on the same reason.”
It can not be doubted, at this day, that whatever is necessary for the preservation of the public health and safety is a public purpose, within the meaning- of section 171 of the Constitution. For the purpose of furnishing the citizens with pure water, waterworks may be established, and public wells dug and maintained. That the public highways may, without peril, be traveled at night, they may be lighted at the public expense. That the people may have convenient and wholesome places for resort, public parks may be established and kept. For the education of the young, public schools are conducted. For the support of the indigent aged, almshouses are provided. For the reformation of vicious youth, reformatories are maintained. For the relief of the sick, hospitals are provided. For the protection of the public health, nuisances are abated, streets and sewers are flushed and cleaned. As a protection against conflagration, fire departments are established; and as a safeguard for life and property, police departments are
The cases cited by counsel for appellants are not pertinent to the question in issue. Clark v. Louisville Water Company (90 Ky., 515; 12 R., 309) 14 S.W., 502, establishes the principle that the property of that corporation is subject to State taxation; but it does not thereby follow that the city may not contract with the corporation for the furnishing to its citizens pure water. This reasoning on the part of counsel confounds the public service with the instrumentalities by which that service is effectuated. Whatever public service the municipal corporation may itself perform it may hire others to perform for it, if it appears that the latter method is the cheapest and the best, unless there be some constitutional or statutory inhibition. In the case of City of Louisville v. Commonwealth, 1 Duv., 295, 85 Am. Dec., 624, it was held that the fire engines of the city of Louisville were not exempt from State taxation; but no one has ever doubted that the maintenance of a fire department for the purpose of preventing conflagrations is a public service, or that the levy of taxes for its maintenance is authorized.
It is the duty of cities to clean its public highways, that they may not become a nuisance. If, in their wisdom, they see fit to hire others to perform this service, it does not follow that the carts used by the contractors are exempt from taxation; nor can it be deduced therefrom that because they are not exempt the cleaning of the streets is not a public service. And yet this is the sole contention of
The owners of property abutting upon the highways sprinkled may get some local advantage distinguishable from that of the traveling public; but this always happens in the performance of public duties. If a park is established, those who own property near by enjoy an increased value thereof by reason of its proximity to the public pleasure ground; but it does not follow that the establishing of parks is any less a public purpose for this reason. The-establishing of a State college in a,given city affords that city a local advantage not enjoyed by other cities of the Commonwealth; but no one would question that education is a public purpose because of this fact. All the citizens have a right to travel the public streets, and, in order that their health and convenience may be conserved, the city may provide that they are reasonably safe, clean, and free from substances deleterious to the public health.
As sprinkling the public ways clearly comes within the constitutional requirement of a public purpose, the judgment of the lower court dismissing the petition seeking to enjoin the levy and collection of the tax for that purpose is affirmed.