In 1910 article 229 of the Constitution of 1898, authorizing the Legislature to levy a license tax on trades, professions, vocations, and callings (provided the amount of such tax should be graduated), was amended by authorizing the Legislature to levy a license tax on those engaged in the business of severing natural resources, such as timber and minerals, from the soil or water. The amendment provided that the amount of the license tax to be imposed on those engaged in the business of severing natural resources from the soil or water might be either graduated or fixed according to the quantity or value of the product at the place where severed. The amendment was retained as the second paragraph of article 229 in the Constitution of 1913.
Pursuant to the constitutional amendment, the Legislature adopted Act No. 209 of 1912, levying an annual license tax of one-half of 1 per cent, of the gross value of the total production, on every person, firm, association, or corporation engaged in the business of severing natural products, including all forms of timber, turpentine, and minerals, including oil and gas, sulphur, and salt, from the soil. The Legislature excepted from the gross value of the production on which the license tax is computed the royalty interest accruing to the owner of the land. See State v. Stiles,
In 1914 the Legislature adopted Act No. 296, authorizing the police juries of the several parishes to levy an annual license tax, not to exceed the amount levied by the state, on each person, association, firm, or corporation pursuing the business of severing minerals, including oil, gas, sulphur, and salt, from the soil.
On the 7th of April, 1915, the police jury of the parish of Red River adopted an ordinance levying a license tax of one-half of 1 per cent, of the gross value of the total production (less the royalty interest thereon) upon each person, association, firm, or corporation pursuing the business of severing minerals, including oil, gas, sulphur, salt, and water from the soil.
The plaintiff is engaged in the production of oil and gas from wells in the parish of Red River, and was required by the tax collector of that parish, acting under the ordinance of the police jury, to pay a license tax of $368.32. The plaintiff paid the license tax under protest and instituted this suit to recover the amount and to have the ordinance of the police jury and the Act No. 296 of 1914 declared unconstitutional, null, and void. From a judgment rejecting its demand, the plaintiff has appealed.
The requirement of article 226 of the Constitution, that taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax and that all property shall be taxed in proportion to its value to be ascertained as directed by law, has no application to a license tax. Article 229 provides that the amount of a license tax shall be graduated. The amendment of that article of the Constitution of 1913 makes an exception of the license tax to be imposed on those engaged in the business of severing natural resources, such as timber and minerals, from the soil, and provides that the amount of that particular license tax may be either graduated or fixed according to the quantity or value of the product. In support of the contention that article 225 of the Constitution applies to license taxes, as well as property taxes, the learned counsel for the plaintiff refers us to the cases of State v. O’Hara,
The second paragraph of article 229 of the Constitution does not require that the Legislature shall impose a license tax upon those engaged in the business of severing timber and minerals from the soil. It provides that those engaged in the business of severing natural resources, such as timber and minerals, from the soil, may be rendered liable to a license tax, from which it follows that the Legislature might have imposed the license tax only upon those engaged in the business of severing timber, or only upon those engaged in severing minerals from the soil. In the Act No. 209 of 1912 the Legislature imposed the license tax upon those engaged in severing timber, as well as upon those engaged in severing minerals, from the soil. But that act did not require the Legislature to authorize police juries to levy a license tax for parochial purposes upon those engaged in the business of severing timber from the soil, when the Legislature authorized police juries to levy a license tax upon those engaged in severing minerals from the soil. The argument that the Legislature could not authorize police juries to levy a license tax on the business of severing minerals from the soil, without at the same time authorizing them to levy the same license tax on the business of severing timber from the soil, or that the police juries, under such authority, could not levy the license tax on the one business without levying the same tax on the other, is not supported by authority or reason. There is a great difference between the timber and the mining industries of this state. They are in such different classes that it is not an arbitrary classification or discrimination to impose a license tax upon the one business without imposing it upon the other.
There was no arbitrary discrimination in exempting from the license tax the share of minerals due to the landowner as a royalty. The landowner is not engaged in tbe business of severing minerals from the soil merely because he receives a part of the production as a royalty. In the case of State v. Stiles,
The judgment appealed from is affirmed, at the cost of the appellant.
