107 S.E. 476 | S.C. | 1921
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action under th'e statute, to recover $33.54, alleged to be excess taxes paid by the plaintiff on his property located in the City of Columbia. The complaint alleges that the excess tax was levied under the act of 1919 (31 St. at Large, p. 273). It is alleged that this act violates section 17 of article 3, and section 3 of article 8, in 'that, first, the title does not conform to the body of the act, and, second, that there is no limitation on the power of cities to levy taxes.
“An act to amend section 2937, volume 1, Code of Laws of South Carolina, as amended by an act entitled ‘An act to amend section 2937, volume 1, Code of Laws as amended by an act entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to amend section 2937 of volume 1, Code of Laws of South Carolina 1912, relating to the right of municipalities to impose a tax for municipal purposes,’ so as to include the City of Greenville,” approved the 11th day of February, 1915, so as to exclude the City of Greenville' from the op*196 eration of said act.’ Approved February 11, 1916, with reference to municipal tax levy of the City of Spartanburg. * * *
“Section 2937. All municipal corporations containing more than five thousand inhabitants shall have power to impose by ordinance an annual tax sufficient to méet all expenses of the municipality, including current expenses, any school tax provided by law, fixed charges in the way of interest and sinking fund on bond, and any other matter for which such municipality may be now or hereafter liable: Provided, that-ten days’ public notice thereof shall be given, setting forth the amount levied for the several purposes for which levy may be made: Provided, the levy in the City of Spartanburg shall not exceed fifteen (IS) mills, and out of the taxes so levied the City Council of Spartan-burg is authorized to appropriate such amount as may be necessary to pay the rents due by the said city under its contracts for rental of certain lands used by United States Government for camp purposes.”
•The judgment'is reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusions reached by the other members of this Court, but I feel that the far-reaching effect of this judgment justifies a separate statement, expressing in somewhat different form the grounds of my concurrence.
The plaintiff, a citizen of the City of Columbia, paid the amount of taxes levied by the city authorities upon his property for the year 1919, $123.65, under protest, and within the proper time brought this action to recover the sum of $33.45, that being the difference between the amount collected upon the basis of a 27J4-mill levy and the amount which should have been collected upon a 20-mill levy; his contention being that under the law the City of Columbia was limited to the latter levy.
The plaintiff relies upon the Act of 1893 (21 Stat. 678) as a limitation upon the authority of the City of Columbia to levy a tax in excess of 20 mills. The defendant relies upon the Act of 1919 (31 Stat. 273) as removing all limitations upon the authority of the City of Columbia to levy taxes for municipal purposes.
The plaintiff contests the validity of the Act of 1919, and attacks it upon two grounds: (1) That it violates the provisions of the Constitution, art. 3, § 17, in that the subject of the act is not expressed in the title; (2) that it violates the provisions of the Constitution, art 8, § 3, in that it contains no restriction upon the authority of the cities affected by it to levy municipal taxes.
The matter is quite complicated and requires a consideration of the statute law as it was in 1912 (the date of the adoption of the Code of Raws), the amendments thereto, and the Act of 1919 above referred to.
Section 2950, vol. 1, Code of Laws, A. D. 1912, as amended by the Act of 1912 (27 Stat. 635), contains a limitation upon the authority of cities and towns of over 6,000 inhabitants, in the levying of taxes, of 12)4 mills, allowing them in addition thereto- to levy such taxes as might be necessary to pay interest upon bonds and to provide for a sinking fund to retire such bonds. This was a general act, applying to all municipalities of the class stated, except the cities of Anderson and Chester, as to which special provision was made in sections 2937 and 2938; Anderson being given, as we shall see, unlimited authority, and Chester being limited to 15 mills.
Section 2937 opens up as a general act conferring unlimited authority upon all municipalities of the 5,000 and over class, but closes with a proviso that it shall apply only to the City of Anderson; the effect of which is that this section was made a special act applying only to the City of Anderson, while all other municipalities of the class stated, with the exception of the City of Chester, limited to 15 mills by section 2938, were subject to the limitations of 12)4 mills contained in section 2950.
The Act of 1915 (29 Stat. 71') amended section 2937 by including the City of Greenville along with the City of Anderson, conferring upon Greenville also unlimited authority. So that upon its enactment only the cities named possessed this unlimited authority.
The Act of 1918 (30 Stat. 851) amended section 2937, as amended by the, Acts of 1915 and 1916 above referred to (relating only to the City of Greenville, and which practically canceled each other), by including the City of Spartanburg, to which was applied a limitation of 15 mills. So that upon its enactment the City of Anderson remained still the only city with unlimited authority; the City of Spartanburg by that act being limited to 15 mills, the City of Chester .by section 2938 being limited to. 15 mills, and all others of the stated class being subject to limitations contained in section 2950. This was the status of the law when the bill was proposed which became an Act of 1919 (31 Stat. 273).
This act, with a lumbering, ungrammatical and practically unintelligible title, purports to amend section 2937, as amended by the Acts of 1915, 1916, and 1918, above referred to. The body of the act strikes out the proviso which limited the application of section 2937 to the City of Anderson, and retains the limitation of 15 mills upon the City of Spartanburg. So that by its terms upon every municipality in the State, with the exception of the City of Spartanburg, there was conferred unlimited authority in the matter of levying taxes. To mjake this possible a little clearer: Section 2937, apparently general in its terms, contained a proviso limiting its application to the City of Anderson; by striking out this limiting proviso the section was necessarily made general, applying to all municipalities of the stated class, the limitations, however, upon the City of Spartanburg being retained.
The question for determination is whether or not this result can be accomplished by an act the title of which purports simply to amend an act local in its nature, without any suggestion in the title that it was proposed to give to a local act a general application.
The Constitution provides in article 3, § 17:
“Every act or resolution having the force of law shall relate to but one subject and that shall be expressed in the title.”
The Courts have been extremely liberal in the interpretation of this constitutional requirement, to the end. that legislation be not embarrassed and that the apparent legislative will be not thwarted. The purpose of the provision is said to be:
“(1) To prevent hodgepodge or ‘log-rolling’ legislation; (2) to prevent surprise or fraud upon the- Legislature by means or provisions in bills of which the title gave no intimation, and which might therefore be overlooked and carelessly and unintentionally adopted; and (3) to fairly apprise the people, through such publication of legislative proceedings as is usually made, of the subjects of legislation that are being considered, in order that they may have opportunity of being heard thereon, by petition or otherwise, if they shall so desire.” Charleston vs. Oliver, 16 S. C. 47, 56.
And the Court adds:
“This provision of the Constitution should be so enforced as to guard against the evils intended to be remedied, but*201 at the same time legislation should not be crippled or embarrassed by an unnecessary strictness of construction.” Id.; Aycock vs. Railroad Co., 76 S. C. 332, 57 S. E. 27; State vs. O’Day, 74 S. C. 449, 54 S. E. 607; Johnson vs. Commission, 97 S. C. 205, 81 S. E. 552.
Accordingly it has been held that the details of the proposed legislation need not be expressed in the title, so long as the title is not misleading or calculated to mislead and gives a fair intimation of the subject to be legislated upon; and it has also been frequently held that a reference in the title to a certain section of the Code proposed to be amended is sufficient without other identification, though this is opposed by other decisions.
Tested by the above principles, I have no doubt but that the act in question is violative of the constitutional requirements.
If section 2937, instead of being apparently a general act with a proviso limiting its application to the City of Anderson, had contained a specific and direct grant to the City of Anderson of unlimited authority in this matter, I do not think that it can admit of question but that an act which would confer upon all other cities the same authority should contain in its title notice to that effect. An act purporting simply to amend this special act for the City of Anderson would give no notice other than that it was intended simply to amend such local measure; the amended act still retaining its local character.
Any one reading the title of the act would be attracted by the indication of its purpose to amend section 2937 of (he Code. By reference to that section he would find that it was a local matter, applying only to the City of Anderson; and unless he were specially interested in that city his attention would be withdrawn entirely from the act. There was no intimation in the title that any other city than Anderson and Spartanburg would be affected. The title concludes with the words “with reference to municipal tax
If there had been no amendments at all to sectiqn 2937, and it had been the legislative intent to entirely remove the limitations imposed by section 2950, the result could have been readily accomplished by an amendment striking out the proviso limiting the application of 2937 to the City of Anderson, and in order to give other cities which would be affected by such a radical amendment notice thereof, it is only fair that the title of such an amendatory act should give some intimation, at least, of such purpose.
My conviction is that where it is proposed to convert a statute local in its operation into one of general application, it is essential that the title give notice of such purpose. Pollock vs. Sowers, 137 Mich. 368, 100 N. W. 598.
In view of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider the other constitutional questions raised in the argument of appellant.
Lead Opinion
May 31, 1921. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action under the statute, to recover $33.54, alleged to be excess taxes paid by the plaintiff on his property located in the City of Columbia. The complaint alleges that the excess tax was levied under the act of 1919 (31 St. at Large, p. 273). It is alleged that this act violates section 17 of article 3, and section 3 of article 8, in that, first, the title does not conform to the body of the act, and, second, that there is no limitation on the power of cities to levy taxes.
I. Does the title conform to the body of the act? It does not. It would serve no good purpose to cite authorities for this holding. This unconstitutionality is too clear. A simple statement of case is sufficient. Section 2937, Code of Laws of South Carolina, Vol. 1, is a special act and applies only to the City of Anderson. That section was amended to include the City of Greenville; again amended to exclude the City of Greenville; then amended to include the City of Spartanburg. The act in question in 1919 amended the Spartanburg act so as to make it general. The act reads as follows:
"An act to amend section 2937, volume 1, Code of Laws of South Carolina, as amended by an act entitled `An act to amend section 2937, volume 1, Code of Laws as amended by an act entitled "An act to amend an act entitled `An act to amend section 2937 of volume 1, Code of Laws of South Carolina 1912, relating to the right of municipalities to impose a tax for municipal purposes,' so as to include the City of Greenville," approved the 11th day of February, 1915, so as to exclude the City of Greenville from the operation *196 of said act.' Approved February 11, 1916, with reference to municipal tax levy of the City of Spartanburg. * * *
"Section 2937. All municipal corporations containing more than five thousand inhabitants shall have power to impose by ordinance an annual tax sufficient to meet all expenses of the municipality, including current expenses, any school tax provided by law, fixed charges in the way of interest and sinking fund on bond, and any other matter for which such municipality may be now or hereafter liable: Provided, that ten days' public notice thereof shall be given, setting forth the amount levied for the several purposes for which levy may be made: Provided, the levy in the City of Spartanburg shall not exceed fifteen (15) mills, and out of the taxes so levied the City Council of Spartanburg is authorized to appropriate such amount as may be necessary to pay the rents due by the said city under its contracts for rental of certain lands used by United States Government for camp purposes."
The title to the act and the title on the cover to the act are not the same, and the respondent seeks to sustain the act by showing that certain words, to wit: "by striking out certain provisions therein contained," had, by a clerical error, been omitted from the title. That does not cure the defect. There were three statutes amending Section 2937; all of them were special statutes, and even if omitted words could be supplied (it is elemental that they cannot), they gave no notice that the object of the act was to change a special law into a general law. It is true that the title to an act should contain all of the provisions of the act, but it must indicate the subject of the proposed legislation. The act to amend an act relating only to Anderson and Spartanburg by striking out certain provisions therein contained gives notice of a change that affects only Anderson and Spartanburg, and this act affected neither, but made a general law out of a special law. *197
II. The decree from which this appeal is taken says: "The last ground, however, was not relied upon by plaintiff." There is nothing in the case to show that this statement is erroneous. The second ground cannot be considered. It is now academic any way.
The judgment is reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and JUSTICES WATTS and COTHRAN concur.
MR. JUSTICE COTHRAN: I concur in the conclusions reached by the other members of this Court, but I feel that the far-reaching effect of this judgment justifies a separate statement, expressing in somewhat different form the grounds of my concurrence.
The plaintiff, a citizen of the City of Columbia, paid the amount of taxes levied by the city authorities upon his property for the year 1919, $123.65, under protest, and within the proper time brought this action to recover the sum of $33.45, that being the difference between the amount collected upon the basis of a 27 1/2-mill levy and the amount which should have been collected upon a 20-mill levy; his contention being that under the law the City of Columbia was limited to the latter levy.
The plaintiff relies upon the Act of 1893 (21 Stat. 678) as a limitation upon the authority of the City of Columbia to levy a tax in excess of 20 mills. The defendant relies upon the Act of 1919 (31 Stat. 273) as removing all limitations upon the authority of the City of Columbia to levy taxes for municipal purposes.
The plaintiff contests the validity of the Act of 1919, and attacks it upon two grounds: (1) That it violates the provisions of the Constitution, art. 3, § 17, in that the subject of the act is not expressed in the title; (2) that it violates the provisions of the Constitution, art 8, § 3, in that it contains no restriction upon the authority of the cities affected by it to levy municipal taxes. *198
The action was instituted in the County Court of Richland County and upon trial there the county Judge rendered a decree in favor of the city upon the first objection of the plaintiff, stating that the second was not pressed at the trial before him. The plaintiff has appealed, and by exceptions raises the same questions in this Court.
The matter is quite complicated and requires a consideration of the statute law as it was in 1912 (the date of the adoption of the Code of Laws), the amendments thereto, and the Act of 1919 above referred to.
Section 2950, vol. 1, Code of Laws, A.D. 1912, as amended by the Act of 1912 (27 Stat. 635), contains a limitation upon the authority of cities and towns of over 6,000 inhabitants, in the levying of taxes, of 12 1/2 mills, allowing them in addition thereto to levy such taxes as might be necessary to pay interest upon bonds and to provide for a sinking fund to retire such bonds. This was a general act, applying to all municipalities of the class stated, except the cities of Anderson and Chester, as to which special provision was made in sections 2937 and 2938; Anderson being given, as we shall see, unlimited authority, and Chester being limited to 15 mills.
Section 2937 opens up as a general act conferring unlimited authority upon all municipalities of the 5,000 and over class, but closes with a proviso that it shall apply only to the City of Anderson; the effect of which is that this section was made a special act applying only to the City of Anderson, while all other municipalities of the class stated, with the exception of the City of Chester, limited to 15 mills by section 2938, were subject to the limitations of 12 1/2 mills contained in section 2950.
The Act of 1915 (29 Stat. 71) amended section 2937 by including the City of Greenville along with the City of Anderson, conferring upon Greenville also unlimited authority. So that upon its enactment only the cities named possessed this unlimited authority. *199
The Act of 1916 (29 Stat 736) amended the amendatory act of 1915 by practically repealing it, excluding the City of Greenville from the provisions of section 2937. So that upon its enactment section 2937 was restored to its original form and only the City of Anderson possessed the unlimited authority.
The Act of 1918 (30 Stat. 851) amended section 2937, as amended by the Acts of 1915 and 1916 above referred to (relating only to the City of Greenville, and which practically canceled each other), by including the City of Spartanburg, to which was applied a limitation of 15 mills. So that upon its enactment the City of Anderson remained still the only city with unlimited authority; the City of Spartanburg by that act being limited to 15 mills, the City of Chester by section 2938 being limited to 15 mills, and all others of the stated class being subject to limitations contained in section 2950. This was the status of the law when the bill was proposed which became an Act of 1919 (31 Stat. 273).
This act, with a lumbering, ungrammatical and practically unintelligible title, purports to amend section 2937, as amended by the Acts of 1915, 1916, and 1918, above referred to. The body of the act strikes out the proviso which limited the application of section 2937 to the City of Anderson, and retains the limitation of 15 mills upon the City of Spartanburg. So that by its terms upon every municipality in the State, with the exception of the City of Spartanburg, there was conferred unlimited authority in the matter of levying taxes. To make this possible a little clearer: Section 2937, apparently general in its terms, contained a proviso limiting its application to the City of Anderson; by striking out this limiting proviso the section was necessarily made general, applying to all municipalities of the stated class, the limitations, however, upon the City of Spartanburg being retained. *200
The effect of the act, therefore, if allowed to stand, would be to repeal the provisions of section 2950, containing the limitation of 12 1/2 mills applicable to all municipalities of the stated class, and section 2938, containing the limitation of 15 mills upon the City of Chester, and leave all municipalities of the stated class with unlimited authority, except the City of Spartanburg.
The question for determination is whether or not this result can be accomplished by an act the title of which purports simply to amend an act local in its nature, without any suggestion in the title that it was proposed to give to a local act a general application.
The Constitution provides in article 3, § 17:
"Every act or resolution having the force of law shall relate to but one subject and that shall be expressed in the title."
The Courts have been extremely liberal in the interpretation of this constitutional requirement, to the end that legislation be not embarrassed and that the apparent legislative will be not thwarted. The purpose of the provision is said to be:
"(1) To prevent hodgepodge or `log-rolling' legislation; (2) to prevent surprise or fraud upon the Legislature by means or provisions in bills of which the title gave no intimation, and which might therefore be overlooked and carelessly and unintentionally adopted; and (3) to fairly apprise the people, through such publication of legislative proceedings as is usually made, of the subjects of legislation that are being considered, in order that they may have opportunity of being heard thereon, by petition or otherwise, if they shall so desire." Charleston vs. Oliver,
And the Court adds:
"This provision of the Constitution should be so enforced as to guard against the evils intended to be remedied, but *201
at the same time legislation should not be crippled or embarrassed by an unnecessary strictness of construction." Id.; Aycock vs. Railroad Co., 76 S.C. 332,
Accordingly it has been held that the details of the proposed legislation need not be expressed in the title, so long as the title is not misleading or calculated to mislead and gives a fair intimation of the subject to be legislated upon; and it has also been frequently held that a reference in the title to a certain section of the Code proposed to be amended is sufficient without other identification, though this is opposed by other decisions.
Tested by the above principles, I have no doubt but that the act in question is violative of the constitutional requirements.
If section 2937, instead of being apparently a general act with a proviso limiting its application to the City of Anderson, had contained a specific and direct grant to the City of Anderson of unlimited authority in this matter, I do not think that it can admit of question but that an act which would confer upon all other cities the same authority should contain in its title notice to that effect. An act purporting simply to amend this special act for the City of Anderson would give no notice other than that it was intended simply to amend such local measure; the amended act still retaining its local character.
Any one reading the title of the act would be attracted by the indication of its purpose to amend section 2937 of the Code. By reference to that section he would find that it was a local matter, applying only to the City of Anderson; and unless he were specially interested in that city his attention would be withdrawn entirely from the act. There was no intimation in the title that any other city than Anderson and Spartanburg would be affected. The title concludes with the words "with reference to municipal tax *202 levy of the City of Spartanburg." It is impossible to tell, without reference to the body of the act, whether these words, not in quotation, were intended to indicate the purpose of the act then in passage, or were a part of the title of the act proposed to be amended. The title is not only defective in not containing a statement of the subject to be legislated upon, but is actually misleading in the indication of its local character.
If there had been no amendments at all to section 2937, and it had been the legislative intent to entirely remove the limitations imposed by section 2950, the result could have been readily accomplished by an amendment striking out the proviso limiting the application of 2937 to the City of Anderson, and in order to give other cities which would be affected by such a radical amendment notice thereof, it is only fair that the title of such an amendatory act should give some intimation, at least, of such purpose.
My conviction is that where it is proposed to convert a statute local in its operation into one of general application, it is essential that the title give notice of such purpose.Pollock vs. Sowers,
In view of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider the other constitutional questions raised in the argument of appellant. *203