230 Pa. 407 | Pa. | 1911
Opinion by
By its charter the plaintiff company is authorized to do business as a trust and life insurance company. In 1908 the company paid a state tax of five mills on its capital stock, appraised for the purpose at $12,700,000, a four mill tax on certain securities held in trust, aggregating $10,799,707, and also a tax on its gross premiums. Under protest the company made a return of bonds, mortgages and other securities aggregating $45,010,962.45, which it alleged and the court below found were owned by it in its own right and, therefore, not subject to taxation. The
The question raised in this proceeding was decided, under like facts, in 1905 against the contention of the defendants, this court holding in Provident Life & Trust Co. v. Durham, 212 Pa. 68, that the securities in question were not taxable. That decision was followed by the court below in the present case, and it held that the securities were exempt from taxation. It is conceded by the appellants that the decree of the court below is right under our former decision, and that the securities are not taxable unless they are made so by the Act of June 7, 1907, P. L. 430. The appellee company, however, contends (a) that the statute has not changed its liability from what it was when this court passed uppn the question before, and (b) that the act of 1907 is unconstitutional and void. These are the objections relied on by the appellee to prevent the taxation of the securities in question.
We are of the opinion that the act of 1907 cannot be sustained, and that this court having settled the law against the claim of the appellants in the former case, the decree below in the present case must be affirmed.
It is claimed on the part of the appellee company that the act of 1907 violates art. Ill, sec. 3, of the constitution which provides as follows: “No bill, except general appropriation bills, shall be passed containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title.”
The language of this provision of the present constitution is substantially the same as the amendment of 1864 to the prior constitution. In construing the amendment this court in Dorsey’s App., 72 Pa. 192, said (p. 195): “Another purpose (of the amendment) was to give information to the members or others interested, by the title of the bill, of the contemplated legislation, and thereby prevent the passage of unknown and alien subjects, which might be coiled up in the folds of the bill. The amendment was found necessary to correct the evils
These authorities indicate the purpose and the proper interpretation of the constitutional provision in question as understood in this state. So far as the writer is advised, the word “clearly” in this connection is omitted from the constitutions of most of the other states of the Union. The decisions in those states, therefore, cannot be relied upon as precedents in determining the construction of our constitutional provision. As said by Judge Cooley (Const. Lim., 7th ed., 205): “One of the purposes of the provision was to prevent hodge-podge or Tog rolling’ legislation which had become prevalent in most if not all the states of the Union.” Our state was not an exception, and “omnibus bills,” containing almost everything except what the title indicated, brought about the constitutional amendment of 1864. These evils which had crept into the legislation of the state could only be eradicated by drastic measures, and hence the plain
In the light of these well settled principles let us examine the title to the act of June 7, 1907. It reads as follows: “An act to further amend section twenty-one of an Act entitled 'An Act to provide revenue by taxation’ approved June twenty-seventh, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-nine.”
The act of June 7, 1879, was supplemented but not amended by the Acts of June 10, 1881, P. L. 99, June 30, 1885, P. L. 193, and June 1, 1889, P. L. 420. None of the sections of the act of 1879 are now in force. While some
The Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 353, has one section, and as appears by the title, it is supplemental to the act of June 7, 1879, and amends the amendment of the supplement thereto approved June 1, 1889, which amendment therein amended was approved June 8, 1891, P. L. 229, “relating to the tax on capital stock.” This act of 1891 has eight sections and amends the twenty-first section of the act of June 1, 1889, and repeals all acts inconsistent therewith or supplied thereby.
The title and the body of the act of 1907 refer to sec. 21 of the act of June 27, 1879, as the act to be amended, while the marginal note to the act of 1907 inserted by the statute clerk shows the section and the act to be amended to be “Section 21, act June 8, 1893;” and it is claimed by the appellants that the act of 1893 was intended to be amended by the act of 1907. As noted above, the act of 1893 has but one section and it cites sec. 21 of the amended act of June 1, 1889, for amendment. The title of the act of 1907 is: “An act to further amend section twenty-one of an act entitled 'An act to provide revenue by taxation/ approved June twenty-seventh, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-nine.” What is there in the title of the bill which became the act of 1907 to show that the act of 1893 was the subject of legislation in the amendatory act, or to direct attention to the act of 1893 as the act to be further amended? Certainly it is not, as the title declares, that the act is “to further amend” the act of 1879, as that act has never been amended, and it is equally certain that the date of approval of the act to be amended given in the title gives no assistance in ascertaining the act sought to be amended. Neither is the act of 1893 nor any other act referred to in terms in the title. It is manifest, we think, that there is nothing whatever in the title of the act of 1907 that directs attention to the act of 1893, which its title declares to be an act “relating to
It is suggested that the marginal note to the act of 1907 in the pamphlet laws possesses curative powers and relieves the otherwise defective legislation of its constitutional infirmities. The note is on the margin of page 430 of the pamphlet laws of 1907 and reads: “Section 21, act of June 8, 1893, cited for amendment.” We know of no law authorizing the secretary of the commonwealth or his statute clerk to insert in the pamphlet laws this or any similar note as a part of the act in question. The secretary is required to publish the acts of assembly as they appear by the original rolls, but he has no authority to add any explanatory matter to an act by marginal note or
The contention that the marginal note to an act can have any relevancy in determining the sufficiency of the title of a bill overlooks entirely the language and the purpose of the constitutional provision. It provides that “no bill .... shall be passed containing- more than one subject which shall be clearly expressed in its title.” The purpose of the provision, as all our cases declare, is to give information in the title of the bill to the members of the legislature or other interested parties of the contemplated legislation. How can a marginal note in the pamphlet laws published after the enactment of the statute “give information of the contemplated legislation?” The constitutional mandate is that the bill, before and not after it becomes a law, shall contain but one subject which shall be clearly expressed in the title. An act of assembly is void because the title to the bill which by legislative sanction becomes a law offends the constitutional provision. It is apparent, therefore, that an explanatory marginal note in the pamphlet laws, and especially one that incorrectly cites the section of the act to be amended, cannot aid the title of a bill otherwise constitutionally defective.
We have cited above our cases announcing the general principles applicable in the construction of this constitutional provision. As already observed, the provision is more pronounced than that of most of the other states in its requirement that the subject of a bill shall be clearly expressed in the title, and hence decisions on the subject in other jurisdictions cannot be regarded as authority in construing this provision of our constitution. The similar provisions in the constitutions of New Jersey, Indiana, Texas, Oregon and Michigan, whose decisions are cited by the appellants, do not contain the word “clearly”
We think the title of the act of 1907 is misleading and also defective in that it fails to clearly express the subject of the legislation, and for this reason the decree of the court below is affirmed.