Appellants seek relief from a decision of the Administrative Hearing Commission denying their claims for refunds of Missouri individual income taxes for the years 1986-1988. They contend that taxing retirement benefits derived from employment by private nongovernmental employers, while exempting retirement benefits derived from governmental employers, is not constitutionally permissible. 1 In support, they assert no rational basis or legitimate state interest exists for the state’s separate classification of governmental and nongovernmental retirees in derogation of their rights under the Equal Protection Clauses of the Missouri and United States Constitution. U.S. Const., amend. 14, § 1, and Mo. Const., art. I, § 2. Affirmed.
Appellants cite article X, section 3, of the Missouri Constitution, which mandates uniformity of taxation on the same class or subclass of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, to argue that the Missouri income tax is not being uniformly applied to the class of persons receiving retirement benefits.
In
Mid-America Television v. State Tax Comm’n,
Uniformity of taxation does not require that all subjects of taxation be taxed, and it does not mean universality; it only requires that taxes be uniform as to each class upon which they fall.... The power of the state to classify for the purpose of taxation is broad. For income tax purposes, the taxpayer may be classified upon the reasonable basis of legal organization or the amount or source of income.
Id. at 680. Here, taxes are uniformly applied to retirees. Retirement benefits from governmental employment are exempted from taxation. Reasonable classifications of governmental and nongovernmental retirement benefits are created. Taxes among each class are uniformly applied. Under the state’s broad power to classify for the purpose of taxation, the legislature’s classification of governmental and nongovernmental employees’ retirement benefits is reasonable.
When the constitutionality of a statute is attacked, constitutionality is pre
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sumed,
State ex rel. Missouri State Board of Registration v. Southworth,
Appellants rely on
Davis v. Michigan Department of Treasury,
This case is similar to
Streight v. Rag-land,
The decision to provide an exemption to individuals receiving governmental retirement benefits is that of the legislature and is not a decision to be made by the courts.
Streight,
Notes
. The General Assembly provides the income tax exemptions in the statutes that create the various retirement systems.
See Hackman
v.
Director of Revenue,
