109 Ga. 73 | Ga. | 1900
The Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association made application to the judge of the superior court of Richmond county, to enjoin the City of Augusta from proceeding to collect from it certain taxes and license fees which the city alleges that petitioner and the agent of the petitioner doing business in the City of Augusta are due to it. By an ordinance duly passed, the city imposed a tax of. one and a quarter per centum “on the gross premiums of every insurance company not located in this city,” and under this ordinance executions have been issued against plaintiff in error for the years 1894, 1895, 1896, and 1897. In addition to the tax so levied, the city through its officials demands of petitioner that it pay into the city treasury an annual license tax of one hundred dollars. Petitioner alleges that the ordinance imposing the tax on its gross premiums is unconstitutional, illegal and void, and that its agent in the City of Augusta is its employee, and not a broker representing different life-insurance companies, and the license fee of one hundred dollars is demanded under an ordinance of said city which provides that a license tax shall be assessed “upon every agent of a fire or life insurance company, for each company, of one hundred dollars,” and that under said ordinance it is not legally liable to pay said sum. It was admitted that one and one quarter per centum, the rate charged on the gross premiums of insurance companies not located in Augusta, is the same as the rate charged upon real and personal property in said city, and that there is no insurance company with its principal office in the City of Augusta. It was also admitted that the petitioner had been licensed to do business in the State of Georgia as a mutual life association furnish
In order to properly determine whether the plaintiff in error is liable for the payment of the tax imposed upon its gross premiums, it may be well to consider whether such a tax is to be classed as a tax on property or a tax on business. The history of the legislation of this State, since the present system of taxation was adopted, will show that the General Assembly has invariably treated a tax upon sales or receipts as a business tax. In each of the general tax acts since the adoption of the present constitution, and for a number of years prior to that time, a tax has been imposed upon the gross receipts of insurance, sleeping-car, telegraph, and express companies, and at a rate different from that which is imposed by the State upon property in general. If these provisions of our general tax laws should be considered as a property tax, there would be but little question that they would be obnoxious to the provisions of our constitution, which declares that taxation shall be uniform and ad valorem. But if they are to be considered as a business tax, then, under previous adjudications made by this court, if all subjects belonging to the same class were made subject to the same rate of. taxation, such provisions would ,not come within the constitutional inhibition. Leading text-writers, and adjudications of other States, with a considerable degree of unanimity, declare such a tax to be a business tax and not a property tax. 1 Desty on Taxation, 229, 303, 304, 375, citing a large number of adjudicated cases. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has directly passed upon the questions involved, and held, in the case of Insurance Company of North America v. Commonwealth, 87 Pa. St. 181, that a tax upon the gross premiums of insurance companies was a business and not a property tax.
There is, however, a seeming conflict in some of the cases passed upon by this court, where this question was involved. In one case, that of Pearce, Wheless & Co. v. Augusta, 37 Ga. 597, it was apparently held, that a tax on gross sales of cotton,
In the case of Joseph v. Milledgeville, 97 Ga. 513, a tax upon all gross sales of goods, wares, and merchandise was treated and considered as a business tax, and the effect of that decision is to practically hold it as such. As bearing on the point, see also the following decisions of this court: Burch v. Savannah, 42 Ga. 600; Bohler v. Schneider, 49 Ga. 195; Home Ins. Co. v. Augusta, 50 Ga. 530; Wright & Hill v. Atlanta, 54 Ga. 645. In the case of Waring v. Savannah, 60 Ga. 93, Chief Justice Jackson so pertinently deals with the question as to make his remarks valuable here. He, says: “But are gross earnings and interest, coming in from any source, labor, capital, investment of any sort, money loaned, — are these things property in the sense of the constitution, and to be taxed as real, genuine property — such as real estate and personal effects, — or are these really income? Certainly the gross earnings of a laboring man are nothing but his income; so, it would seem, the earnings of a salaried officer are income; and so the income from capital employed in a bank, or railroad, or manufactory, would seem to be income only.” In the case of Mayor &c. of Savannah v. Hartridge, 8 Ga. 28, Judge Lumpkin said that “The subject of taxation has been, very properly, divided into three classes capitation, property, and income; and when one or more is mentioned or treated of, the other is never intended.” And it was ruled in that case that a. charter which authorized a municipal corporation to tax real and personal estate does not necessarily confer the right to tax income. We think, from the authorities to which reference has been made, that it may now be regarded as settled ip this State that a tax imposed upon gross premiums of an insurance company is a business tax and not a property tax,
In construing the constitutional provisions as to the uniformity and ad valorem system to be enforced in this State, this court has repeatedly held that one business may be taxed and not another. But the requirement as to this kind of taxation is, that it shall be uniform upon all business of the same class. Cutliff v. Albany, 60 Ga. 599; Burch v. Savannah, 42 Ga. 600; Bohler v. Schneider, 49 Ga. 195; Home Ins. Co. v.
Judgment reversed.