125 Minn. 67 | Minn. | 1914
The Minneapolis, St. Paul & Suburban Railroad Co. is subject to the payment of a gross-earnings tax, in lieu of other taxes, as provided for by chapter 454, p. 552, Laws 1909. The tax is paid to the state treasurer and by the statute referred to becomes the property of and is distributed to the municipalities and taxing districts through which the line of railroad extends. The report of gross earnings is made in conformity with the provisions of the general statutes upon the subject (section 1003, et seq., R. L. 1905), and the tax collected by the state treasurer. Chapter 454, supra, provides that the money when so reported and paid shall be by the state tax commission ap
The money is then distributed by the county auditor to the municipal subdivisions entitled to it and in accordance with the apportionment made by the tax commission. The railroad company duly reported its gross earnings for the years 1909, 1910, 1911 and 1912, in compliance with the statute, and paid the tax computed thereon to the state treasurer. The apportionment thereof was duly made by the tax commission, and the amount due to the municipalities of Washington county fixed and determined. The county auditor reported the per cent of the state tax assessed in such municipalities, and thereafter demanded of the state auditor a warrant on the state treasury for the amount of the earnings tax due that county, after deducting the per cent thereof due the state. The state auditor refused to issue the warrant, and this proceeding to comp'el him to do so was thereafter commenced. The facts are not in dispute and the trial court directed the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus for the relief demanded. The state appealed.
It is the contention of the state, and herein is found the basis for the auditor’s refusal to issue his warrrant on the treasury for the
“No money shall ever be paid out of the treasury of this state except in pursuance of an appropriation by law.”
And it may be said too that the statutes upon the subject of the authority of the auditor to issue warrants on the state treasury limit his authority in this respect to instances where express appropriations have been made by law.
If the provisions of the Constitution and the general statutes referred to have any application to the situation here presented, and it be held that an express appropriation is necessary to justify the issuance of a warrant on the treasury, and that the particular statute cannot be construed as an appropriation of the money, a position many of the authorities sustain (16 L.R.A.(N.S.) 631), the auditor in his refusal to issue the warrant was right and he cannot, by mandamus or otherwise, be compelled to do so. But our conclusion in the matter, after due consideration, is that neither the Constitution nor the statutes limiting his authority to issue warrants on the treasury, properly construed, have any application to the facts here presented. The statute imposing this tax and providing for its apportionment, construed in the light of the obvious intention of the legislature, does not vest in the state title to the money so raised, and it does not rightfully belong to the general revenue fund of the state. The intention of the legislature ivas tó impose this tax for the joint benefit of the state and the municipal divisions through or .into which the railroad extends. Each is thereby vested with an independent right to that part of the tax which shall be apportioned to it by the tax commission. No discretion in respect to apportionment is left to the commission; on the contrary, the statute imposes that as a duty, and the members of the commission have no alternative but to make it in harmony with the spirit and purpose of the law. The
Our conclusion therefore is that the constitutional provision referred to does not apply to the statute, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.