149 N.E.2d 24 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1957
This is an action in mandamus filed in this court seeking a peremptory writ to require the respondents and each of them concurrently and simultaneously to enter into and execute a reciprocity agreement with the Michigan Highway Reciprocity Board. Attached to the petition are Exhibit B (subsequently admitted in the record as relators' Exhibit No. 15) and Exhibit C (subsequently admitted as relators' Exhibit No. 14). The prayer of the petition also states that in the event the court should find that Exhibit B and Exhibit C do not effectually carry out the exemptions to the Ohio Axle Mile Tax Law provided for in Section
This case was referred to a Special Master Commissioner, Sidney D. Griffith, who heard the evidence and, on December 28, 1956, filed his report together with his findings of fact, and reported his conclusions of law. He concluded his report with the following statement:
"In conclusion, with the readiness and willingness of the officials of the state of Michigan to enter into reciprocal contracts and agreements with the designated officials of the state of Ohio and with all other conditions and circumstances prescribed by Sections
"It is further recommended that execution of Exhibit B and Exhibit C, attached to the petition, will accomplish this purpose."
Briefs had been filed by both relators and respondents during the time the Master Commissioner was considering the evidence and the law.
On March 15, 1957, the relators filed a motion for affirmance and adoption of the Special Master Commissioner's Report. The respondents, being the members of the Reciprocity Board created under Section
"1. Exception is taken to the Special Master's conclusion that Sections
"2. Exception is taken to the Special Master's conclusion that relators have a clear legal right such as is necessary to support an action in mandamus.
"3. Exception is taken to the Special Master's conclusion that the relators have a right to the benefits of the exemptions provided by Sections
"4. Exception is taken to the Special Master's conclusion that Michigan levies a `Highway Use Tax.'
"5. Exception is taken to the Special Master's recommendation that mandamus should issue to respondents ordering them to enter into agreements to effect the exemptions provided in Sections
"6. Exception is taken to the Special Master's conclusion that the respondents should be ordered to enter into reciprocity agreements with the state of Michigan and that Exhibits B and *312 C attached to the relators' petition should be executed to accomplish this purpose."
It appears from the record that a reciprocity agreement was executed about 1937 between Ohio and Michigan under Section 6306-1, General Code, which is substantially the same as Section
"The owner of every motor vehicle which is duly registered in any state, district, country, or sovereignty other than this state is exempt from the laws of this state pertaining to registration and licensing and the penal statutes relating thereto, provided the owner thereof has complied with the law in regard to motor vehicles in the state, district, country, or sovereignty of his residence and complies with such law while operating and driving such motor vehicle upon the public roads or highways of this state. Such exemption shall be operative only if the law of such other state, district, country, or sovereignty makes substantially like and equal exemptions to the owners of motor vehicles registered in this state.
"Reciprocal agreements between this and any other state, district, country, or sovereignty necessary in administering this section shall be made as provided in Section
Section
It may be observed that Section
"Such exemption shall be operative only as the law of such other state * * * makes substantially like and equal exemptions to the owners of motor vehicles registered in this state."
Then follows a provision that "reciprocal agreements between this and any other state * * * necessary in administering this section shall be made as provided in Section
Sections
The relators claim, in effect, that because the state of Michigan has a mileage rate with the minimum of one mill and a maximum, for larger trucks, of two mills exacted only from common carriers and contract motor carriers of passengers or property, Ohio citizens are, by their own laws, required to forego collection of the Axle Mile Tax on Michigan carriers, in an amount up to 25 mills, levied under Section
It should be kept in mind that the Ohio Highway Use Tax, levied under Section
It might be well, also, to keep in mind that if this permanent writ of mandamus is granted, the entire Axle Mile Tax levied on interstate carriers may be defeated by the simple process of these carriers establishing headquarters and paying a token mileage tax of less than one-tenth of that required by Ohio law, as happened while Ohio had a reciprocity agreement with Michigan. It would seem strange to say that the Ohio Legislature intended to raise revenues to construct and maintain Ohio highways and then, in the same act, defeated itself on purpose when it created a Reciprocity Board.
It appears to us that it would be more plausible that this board, created under Section
The respondents argue that reciprocity connotes a mutuality, an interchange of favors between persons or nations or, in our case, between states; and they cite Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
v. Boys, Dir.,
Respondents urge also that reciprocity is not a right which has been extended to the relators in this case or to any other citizens of this or other states, but is a privilege which the Legislature *315
in its wisdom may make provision for. Respondents cite considerable authority in their briefs, which seem to us to sustain that position. We, therefore, hold that this is not a right extended either to the relator from Michigan or to the relator from Ohio. In other words, the board created by Section
It is our opinion that under Section
While there may be some doubt that respondents' exception 4 to the Report of the Special Master Commissioner can be sustained under the ruling of the Supreme Court in InterstateMotor Freight System v. Bowers, Tax Commr.,
Writ denied.
BRYANT and MILLER, JJ., concur. *316