25 A.2d 466 | Md. | 1942
The question raised by this case is whether the Housing Authority of Baltimore City is exempt from the State Recordation Tax Acts. Acts of 1937, Sp. Sess., Ch. 11, Sec. 4; Acts of 1939, Ch. 277, Sec. 6; Code, 1939, Art. 81, Secs. 220, 221.
M. Luther Pittman, Clerk of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, appellant, refused to record a deed dated July 15, 1941, conveying real estate to the Housing Authority of Baltimore City, without payment of $1.50 for the recordation tax. The Housing Authority thereupon filed a petition in the Baltimore City Court for mandamus to compel him to record the deed without such payment. After his demurrer to the petition was overruled, the parties entered into a stipulation, from which it appears that the Housing Authority has paid the recordation tax on 4,839 instruments under protest. From the order granting the mandamus this appeal was taken.
No claim is made here for federal exemption, as there was in the case of a mortgage to the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, which is expressly exempted by Act of Congress. Act of June 13, 1933, Ch. 64, Sec. 5, 12 U.S.C.A., Sec. 1464; Pittman v. HomeOwners' Loan Corporation of Washington, D.C.,
It is a firmly established principle of law that exemptions from taxation are not favored, but are strictly construed in favor of the State. Chief Justice Marshall said of the taxing power: "It is granted by all, for the benefit of all. It resides in government as a part of itself, and need not be reserved, when property of any description, or the right to use it in any manner, is granted to individuals or corporate bodies. However absolute the right of an individual may be, it is still in the nature of that right that it must bear a portion of the public burdens; and that portion must be determined by the Legislature."Providence Bank v. Billings, 4 Pet. 514, 563, 7 L. Ed. 939, 956. Therefore, before any claimant can obtain an exemption, it is encumbent upon him to show affirmatively that the alleged exemption has been clearly allowed by law. If there is a real doubt upon the subject, that doubt must be resolved in favor of the State. It is only where the deliberate purpose of the Legislature to grant an exemption is expressed in clear and unequivocal terms that a claim to an exemption can be maintained.City of Baltimore v. Grand Lodge of Masons,
It was argued that the rule of strict construction does not apply to Housing Authorities. Undeniably they are public agencies and their property is public property, and the Legislature has the unquestioned power to exempt them from taxation. Matthaei v.Housing Authority of Baltimore City,
In some States the property of Housing Authorities is exempt by general law from State, county and municipal taxation because their property is held for a public purpose. Wells v. HousingAuthority of City of *462 Wilmington,
It is stated as a general rule that exemptions from taxation apply primarily to annual property taxes and ordinarily do not apply to excises or taxes which are imposed not in lieu of property taxes, but upon the enjoyment of a privilege. Knoxville Ohio R. Co. v. Harris,
Thus an exemption from all State and local taxes would not relieve from some taxes where the intention of the Legislature to restrict the scope of the exemption can reasonably be inferred.Hendrie v. Kalthoff,
Under the Maryland Act, the Baltimore Housing Authority is exempt from "all taxes and special assessments" on condition that it will pay to the city for each project a sum not exceeding an amount equal to "the regular taxes levied upon similar property." The court must construe the Act by giving effect to the legislative intention as expressed in the Act as a whole. It is recognized that the meaning of the plainest words in a *464
statute may be controlled by the context. A statute should be so construed that all its parts harmonize with each other and render them consistent with its general object and scope. Crescent Mfg.Co. v. South Carolina Tax Commission,
The contract between the Mayor and City Council and the Housing Authority provided that the payment to be made by the Housing Authority to the city would be reduced in case the city and State exemptions for any year should aggregate an amount less than 20 per cent. of the federal contribution for that year. The scope of the State exemption was defined in this contract as the amount the State would levy "by means of taxes and special assessments for or with respect to any project or projects if such project or projects were operated by private enterprise and subject to normal taxation and assessment." It is obvious that the Mayor and City Council and the Commissioners of the Housing Authority did not contemplate the recordation tax as an element in determing the amount of the State exemption.
As the Housing Authorities are not exempt from the recordation tax, the appellant rightly refused to record the deed in this case without the payment of the tax. The order for the mandamus will therefore be reversed.
Order reversed, and petition dismissed, with costs. *465