99 N.H. 517 | N.H. | 1955
To the House of Representatives:
The undersigned Justices of the Supreme Court return the following answer to the question contained in your resolution adopted the second of March, 1955, with reference to House Bill No. 356, An Act relative to tax on the sale of cigarettes and on the sale of tobacco products.
R. L., c. 79, presently provides for a tax at the rate of 15 per cent upon the value of all tobacco products suitable for human consumption sold at retail, measured by the usual selling price. Included within the products subject to taxation are all “kinds and forms of tobacco, prepared in such manner as to be suitable for chewing or smoking ... or both for chewing and smoking” specifically including cigarettes and cigars. R. L., c. 79, s. 1 XIV, as inserted by Laws 1947, c. 133, s. 1.
In Havens v. Attorney-General, 91 N. H. 115, the present tax was held to be a validly imposed sales tax. The classification of tobacco products, to the exclusion of other commodities, as the subject of the tax was sustained as not being so arbitrary or unreasonable as to violate the legal requirements of classification.
In 1951, we were requested to give our opinion as to whether the Legislature could constitutionally provide “for a tax only upon the sale of all cigarets sold at retail . . . thereby not taxing the sale of other tobacco products.” In our affirmative answer, we stated that “cigarettes are a distinctive class of property” and concluded that a selection of them as a class by themselves, for the purpose of taxation, was neither unreasonable nor arbitrary. Opinion of the Justices, 97 N. H. 543, 545.
However, the taxation of cigarettes at a higher rate than other tobacco products in the absence of a regulatory or just reason therefor would not appear to produce the practical equality demanded by the Constitution. Opinion of the Justices, 97 N. H. '546. Accordingly, it is our advisory opinion that House Bill No. 356 would not be constitutional.
March 25, 1955.