Lead Opinion
Opinion by
. . On December 1, 1961, the City of Johnstown in Cambria County, pursuant to the authority given by
The pertinent provision of the ordinance is as follows: “Beginning on the first Monday of January, 1962, each individual engaged in an occupation in which his earnings are $600.00 or more gross, as hereinbefore defined, within the corporate limits of the City of Johnstown shall be required, to pay an annual occupation and occupational privilege tax at a flat rate of-$10.00.” -
On March 1, 1962, the Borough of Franklin, in the same county, enacted an identical ordinance.
Separate actions in equity were instituted by individuals employed within the aforesaid city and borr ough, challenging the validity of the ordinances. In due course, the court below entered judgment on the pleadings for the plaintiffs in both actions, ruling that the ordinances were void, and entered orders restraining collection of the tax imposed. The municipalities filed separate appeals. . .
Since the same legal questions are involved, it was agreed that the cases should be considered and disposed of together.
The legal power of a municipality to levy a true occupational privilege tax under the Act of 1947, supra, has recently been sustained by this Court in Gaugler v. Allentown,
Sections 1 and 2 of Art. IX of the Constitution of Pennsylvania require that “All taxes shall be uniform,
It may be argued that the tax involved in Kelley, supra, was a property tax as distinguished from an excise or privilege tax with which we are here concerned, and that an excise tax need not conform to the constitutional provision.
The question of whether or not the constitutional requirement of uniformity applies to a particular kind of tax depends upon the peculiar wording of the requirement itself. The Pennsylvania Constitution specifically states that “All taxes shall be uniform, upon the same class of subjects.” (Emphasis supplied). This language is as broad and comprehensive as it could possibly be and must. necessarily be construed to include all kinds of taxes, be they in the nature of property or excise levies. The Pennsylvania constitutional provision is all inclusive and is clearly not limited to requiring uniformity on property taxes alone. See Banger’s Appeal,
Therefore, the tax levied by the ordinances before us lacks uniformity and is in violation of the constitutional provision. While different subjects may be reasonably classified for tax purposes (see, Jones & Laughlin Tax Assess. Case,
It is urged that we should construe the ordinances before us as imposing the tax on all individuals enjoying an occupation within the municipalities involved, and ignore the unconstitutional effort to excuse those earning less than $600 per year. In other words, we are asked to interpret the enactments as containing two separate and distinct provisions, one of which would be valid and the other violative of the constitutional uniformity requirement. If so interpreted, it is argued that the latter invalid provision would not affect the former, particularly since a severability clause is included.
It is true that a statute or ordinance may be partially valid and partially invalid, and that if the provisions are distinct and not so interwoven as to be inseparable, that the courts should sustain the valid portions. See, Fister v. Kubztown Boro.,
In the present ordinances, there are not two separate and distinct provisions. The tax is not imposed on all individuals enjoying an occupation within the municipalities. It is clearly restricted to and imposed only on those earning more than $600 a year. In fact, those earning less are not mentioned and for us to accede to appellants’ argument in this respect, and say that the individuals in this class are subject to the tax imposed, would constitute judicial legislation and a rewriting of the ordinances.
Nor is the fact that the ordinances contain a severability clause controlling. As stated by Mr. Justice Brandeis in Dorchy v. State of Kansas,
Judgments and orders affirmed. Costs on appellants.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
Johnstown has imposed a $10 tax for the year 1962 on each person engaged in occupations within Johns-town for the privilege of engaging in his occupation as long as his gross earnings therefrom total $600. In
Has Johnstown in imposing no tax upon persons who earn less than $600 from pursuit of their Johns-town occupations infringed the Pennsylvania Constitution’s requirement that taxes be uniform upon the same class of subjects? In Kelley v. Kalodner,
In any event, are the principles of Kelley v. Kalodner controlling here? In that case the tax was on income earned and unearned. The court there felt that no reasonable basis existed for classifying income according to amount and taxing the different amounts at different rates. Here, the tax is on the privilege of engaging in an occupation. Is it so obviously unreasonable to state that the privilege may be taxed only if its exercise produces a return above a certain amount, that the receipt of less than such amount indicates that exercise of the privilege provides either an insufficient basis for taxation or is too “de minimis” to require en
Classification, if reasonable, is permissible. Jones and Laughlin Tax Assessment Case,
The flaw in the majority opinion is in its immediate jump from concluding that the uniformity clause applies to privilege as well as property taxes thus concluding that the tax levied here lacks uniformity. Even assuming the former, we do not, ipso facto, determine the latter. The subject of taxation must be analyzed; and, here, unlike in Kelley v. Kalodner, the income is not the subject of tax. It is, rather a device of classification and, I believe, a reasonable one under the circumstances. Nothing presented by appellee here indicates otherwise.
In Turco Paint & Varnish Company v. Kalodner,
I dissent.
