This appeal arises out of a dispute as to state income taxes to be paid by Northwestern States Portland Cement Company, a foreign
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corporation. A judgment was entered in 1955 in favor of the State of Minnesota in the amount of $102,536.82 with interest at the rate of 4 percent per annum on the sum of $70,578.31 from December 1, 1953. The decision of the trial court was affirmed in State v. Northwestern States Portland Cement Co.
In January 1909 this court in State v. New England Furniture & Carpet Co.
In In re Petition of S. R. A., Inc.
It should be noted that § 277.15 appeared in G. S. 1913 as § 2090 among provisions headed “Delinquent Personal Property Taxes.” In G. S. 1923 and in Mason St. 1927 this section appeared as § 2102 among the same provisions under the same heading; and in M. S. A. 1941, 1945, 1949, 1953, and 1957 as § 277.15 in a chapter entitled “Delinquent Personal Property Taxes; Defenses.”
The Minnesota Income Tax Law was enacted in 1933. For approximately 20 years prior thereto, § 277.15 was carried on the statute books of this state as a part of the procedural provisions relating to delinquent personal property taxes. There is nothing in the foregoing revisions of general statutes or in any of the session laws to indicate that anyone, and that includes the members of the legislature, has seriously considered that section as applying to the newer state Income Tax Law.
The state in its brief notes as a point in favor of its contention that § 277.15 is of general application that the title of L. 1909, c. 448 (now § 277.15), was “An Act providing for interest upon judgments for the recovery of taxes in certain cases.” (Italics supplied.) However, this merely indicates that the legislature clearly intended that the statute was not to be of general application, and subsequent treatment of that statute would also so indicate.
In addition to the distinction already noted between personal property taxes and real estate taxes, we have the following Minnesota statutes: § 296.15, subd. 2, providing that judgments for unpaid gasoline taxes are to draw interest at 6 percent; § 291.15 providing that inheritance taxes not paid within 18 months after assessment shall draw interest at 6 percent; § 290.53 providing for interest on delinquent income taxes at 4 percent, but prior to 1945 (M. S. A. 1941) this rate was 6 percent; § 293.11 providing that the tax imposed on income reserved to the donor from property given to an educational institution shall draw interest at the rate of 12 percent per annum 30 days after due and that judgment when obtained and docketed be a lien bearing interest at the rate of 1 percent per month after docketing; and *165 § 299.10, as amended by Ex. Sess. L. 1959, c. 70, art. IX, § 8, providing for an immediate penalty of 10 percent of iron ore royalty taxes not paid before July 15 of the year when due, and an additional penalty of 1 percent per month, a judgment for such tax and penalties when docketed to be a lien bearing interest at the rate of 1 percent per month. The aforesaid acts of the legislature in regard to interest charges as to certain specified taxes do not indicate legislative approval of the theory that § 277.15, made an interdependent part of c. 277, applies to all taxes without specific direction to that effect.
The state contends that the trial court lacked legal as well as statutory justification for placing reliance upon the heading of c. 277, either originally or as it now stands: “Delinquent Personal Property Taxes, Defenses,” or that the present construction of § 277.15, pursuant to the provisions of L. 1945, c. 67, is determinative even though the enabling act reads as follows (M. S. A. 1957, p. 4):
“Providing that the compilation and revision of general statutes of the State of Minnesota of a general and permanent nature, prepared by the Revisor of Statutes under the provisions of Laws 1943, Chapter 545, and filed in the office of the Secretary of State on December 28, 1944, be adopted and enacted as the ‘Minnesota Revised Statutes.’ ”
We think it clear in the instant case that the legislature by enacting and approving the 1945 revision reaffirmed that § 277.15 is limited to delinquent personal property taxes. When the legislature adopted the 1945 revision it became the law of Minnesota. State ex rel. Bergin v. Washburn,
The state has quoted State v. Village of Pierz,
The state contends that § 290.53 is not applicable to a judgment for unpaid income taxes because a judgment is different from a claim
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for unpaid income taxes and cites as authorities several Minnesota cases. None of those cases are in point. None involve a judgment for unpaid taxes entered by the state against a taxpayer who has become delinquent in the payment of a tax which the state exacts. The rule is well established in this state that a tax remains a tax whether it has been reduced to judgment or not. In State v. New England Furniture & Carpet Co.
supra,
the state had recovered a judgment for unpaid taxes and sought to collect interest upon it pursuant to a statute providing for a specified rate of interest upon judgments. This court rejected the claim for interest on the basis that a judgment for unpaid taxes is not different from an ordinary unpaid tax, stating (
“* * * A tax remains a tax, whether entered in a judgment or upon the tax rolls, and all rights and liabilities of the taxpayer are fixed and prescribed by the .statutes relating to taxation.”
If we apply this principle to the present case, it is clear that the judgment for unpaid income taxes against the taxpayer retains its identity as an unpaid income tax. There is no ambiguity in the wording of § 290.53, which requires that the taxpayer who is delinquent in his income tax is required to pay interest thereon at the rate of 4 percent until paid.
The rule stated by the trial court that the title of an act may be considered in ascertaining legislative intent finds support in the following cases: Underhill v. State,
Section 277.15 and § 290.53, subd. 1, contradict each other, the former dealing with personal property taxes and the latter dealing with income taxes. This court in the early case of Heath v. Hall,
In Underhill v. State,
“In construing a legislative act, a section thereof is not to be considered apart from the other sections of the act. The act is to be read and construed as a whole. * * * ‘The court in construing a statute is required to consider it as a whole and to give effect to all of its parts.’ * * * The title may be resorted to in order to arrive at the intention of the legislature. * * * ‘For the purpose of ascertaining the legislative intention, we may look to the title as well as to the body of the statute.’ Attention has already been called to the restrictive character of the title.”
As to the rule that the provisions of a complete and specific act in and of itself control a prior and general provision, and that if there is conflict between different statutes as to the same matter, the later statute prevails, see Beck v. Groe,
In the light of the foregoing authorities this court must conclude, as did the trial court, that § 290.53 controls the case at bar; that the delinquent income taxes and penalties involved bear interest at the rate of 4 percent per annum until paid; and that the mere fact that the delinquency with interest has been reduced to judgment does not render applicable the 6-percent interest rate provided for under § 277.15.
Affirmed.
