8 Ga. 23 | Ga. | 1850
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This writ of error is brought to test the validity of an ordinance of the corporation of Savannah, laying a tax upon income ; and the single question I propose to discuss is, Have the Mayor and Aldermen of that City the power, under their charter, to impose this tax ?
It will not be disputed that income is a legitimate subject of taxation. The State of Georgia, in the exercise of its law-making power,- may assess such a tax, and may delegate the authority to d'o so to a municipal corporation. The only inquiry here is, Has the right been conferred in- the present instance % Now, the burden is upon the corporation to show the grant,, by express .words, or necessary implication. For, otherwise,, it cannot be justified in the exercise of this high prerogative of sovereignty, o£ taxing private-property without the. consent of the owner..
We will proceed, then,, to examine,-in their chronological order, the several Acts of the Legislature, passed in reference to this subject, to ascertain what taxing power has been bestowed by the Legislature upon this corporation. There are four Statutes upon this subject; the first, the Act of 1787, (Mar. & Crawford, 121;) the second, the Act of 1805, (Clayton, 243;) the third, the Consolidation Act of 1825, (Dawson, 464;) and the fourth, the Act- of 1838, (Pamphlet Laws, p. 64.) It is conceded that these Acts are all in force; and, consequently, if the power is in either of them, it may be rightfully exercised by the Mayor and Aldermen.
The 4th section of the Act of 1787 provides, “ that it shall and’ may be lawful for the said Wardens,, or a majority of them, yearly and every year, and oftener, if occasion may require, to make, lay and assess one or more rate or rates,, assessment or assess
The construction of this Act came directly before the Convention of Judges, in the case of the Bank of the State of Georgia vs. The Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Savannah, in 1832, {Dudley, 136;) and that able Bench there held, that the Act of 1787, “ authorized a tax only upon lots of ground or buildings within the City, or upon persons, in respect to this species of property, by reason of their owning, occupying or inhabiting the same.” This interpretation we believe to be correct; and the procurement of the passage of the subsequent Acts of 1805, authorizing a tax upon "all persons and property,”- and of 1825, to tax “ all real and personal estate,” is conclusive that the corporation itself put this restrictive meaning upon its own powers under the previous charter. We conclude, then, that the power to tax income is not found in this Act.
The 1st section of the next Act, of 1805, authorizes the Mayor and Aldermen to raise and establish a regular watch, and for the purposes of paying and maintaining the same, the second section declares that they may “assess and levy an annual tax on allpersons and property within the said City, liable to pay tax, by the general tax law.” Here it is admitted, power is conferred to tax all persons and property ; but the power to tax property, is expressly limited to such property as was liable to pay tax, by the general tax laws of the State. But income was not liable to pay tax, by the general tax laws of the State, in 1805; nor, indeed, at any other time. Therefore, the power to tax income, .was not included in this grant.
The 7th section of the Act of 1825, authorizes the Mayor and Aldermen, for certain purposes therein enumerated, to raise any sum or sums of money, “ by a poll tax, or by tax and assessment, upon all real and personal estate, within the corporate limits of the City.” Does this power to tax property, generally,
Again, There is a locality given to the real and personal estate to be taxed. It must be within the corporate limits of the City — . that is, visible possessions; and by the repetition of the same terms, in the very next section, a key is furnished to the understanding of the Legislature, in the use of the words, “ real and personal estate.” In construing Statutes, Courts will look to the language of the whole Act, and take it for granted, that, the same expressions import the same sense, whenever they occur in the same Act, unless there be something which requires them to be used in a different meaning. Now, in the very next section (8th) power is given to the City of Savannah, and the hamlets thereof, “ to purchase any real or personal estate, for the use and benefit of the corporation.” Here, undoubtedly, income was not intended to be included in the expression, real and personal estate; hence, we infer, that it was not in the mind of the law-maker, when the same phraseology was employed in the preceding section. Taking the two sections together, we cannot resist the belief, that it was the design of the Legislature to authorize a tax merely on real and personal property, which was visible — which was located within the City — and which, too, was the subject matter of sale and transfer. Such are the words, in their ordinary sense, and such the spirit of the Act.
We will hold that the Legislature intended nothing beyond what their language, in its fair and usual meaning, will indicate; and, if the terms of their enactment have not embraced the object contended for, the power is with them, by additional Act or Acts, to extend them. The construction which would confound income with property in a tax law, is quite too refined and subtle, when designed to operate upon the public at large, and where they are supposed to be used in the senses belonging to the popular language of common life and every-day business.
In construing these several Statutes, we have confined our examination to the subject matter only. But we must not overlook the objects for which the taxing power is conferred; for, while the Legislature may have been willing to grant the right to tax, for one purpose, it may have refused to bestow it for another and different object. Hence, wefind that each of the three Acts which we have had under consideration, are limited as to the.objects for which the tax authorized to be levied was to be imposed. The Act of 1787 empowered the assessment of the taxes therein specified, “ to carry into effect such regulations as might be conducive to the good order and government of the Town of Savannah, and the hamlets thereof.” The Act of 1805, was to assess and
Now, it is disclosed to this Court, in the record before us, that one of the main puz-poses of this income tax, was to meet the heavy liabilities of the City, on account of its subscription to the stock of the Central Rail Road. This is distinctly set forth in the ordinance of January, 1842, of which the ordinance of November of the same year, and a portion of which is transcribed izz the bill of exceptions, is amendatory. The presiding Judge certifies that he pronounced his judgment in view of all the tax ordinances passed by the corporation. Concede, then, that the power had been given to the Mayor and Aldermen to impose an income tax for any or all of the various objects enumerated in the Acts of 1787, 1805 and 1825. Admitting, in other words, that the power was delegated over the subject matter of this tax, still it would not be allowable to tax income, to meet the liability of the City for its subscription to the stock of the Central Rail Road; there being neither a specific nor general grant, in any of these Acts, to that effect.
In 1838, however, the Legislature conferred on the corporation, authority to obtain money on loan, “ on the faith and credit of the City, for the purpose of contributing to works of internal improvement.” What does this grant imply 1 Not only the right to pledge the property of the City, but to resort to all the legitimate means of taxation bestowed by their charter, to maintain and redeem this faith and credit.” Still, the right to tax income, even for this purpose, has not, as we have attempted to show, been delegated, however necessary and proper it may appear to be to the City Authorities, to meet their engagements.
Let the judgment below stand affirmed.