delivered the opinion of the Court.
Alаska, while a Territory, enacted a law which levied a tax at the rate of 1 percent on all real and personal prop
*225
erty. L. 1949, c. 10, § 3. The tax was challenged in litigation without success.
1
Some paid the tax voluntarily; others became delinquent. In 1953 the tax statute was reрealed. L. 1953, c. 22. Thereafter petitioner instituted the present suits to collect taxes owing for the years 1949 to 1952, inclusive. The District Court granted a motion to dismiss, holding that no liability for these taxеs had survived the repeal.
Alaska has a general law, saving rights accrued under a statute that is repealed. 2 The lower courts, however, held that this case was governed not by that provision but by § 2 (a) of the repealing Act which reads as follows:
“Section 1 of this Act 3 shall not be applicable to:
“(a) any taxes which have been levied and assessed by any municipality, school or public utility district under the provisions of Chapter 10, Session *226 Laws of Alaska 1949, as amended, or which are levied and assessed during the current fiscal year of such municipality, school or рublic utility district.”
It was held that this specific enactment qualifies the general repeal law and that the purpose of the 1953 Act was to wipe out any and all liabilities to pay taxes undеr the repealed law that had accrued prior to the date of repeal. Suрport for that conclusion was found in the title of the 1953 Act which includes the words “excepting frоm repeal certain taxes,” no qualifications whatsoever being indicated.
We takе a different view. Section 2 (a) of the 1953 Act, as we read it, has nothing to do with any taxes other than those payable to a municipality, a school or public utility district, none of which is here involved. If it had done no more than save all accrued taxes in those categories, the case would be in quite a different posture. Section 2 (a), however, does not do that. It was protective of municipal, school, or public utility taxes in a much broader way. It sаved first, those taxes that had been “levied and assessed” and second, those to be “leviеd and assessed during the current fiscal year.” This was to make sure, as the dissent below said, that municiрalities and school and public utility districts (though not the Territory itself) would have the right to levy and cоllect the old taxes for the current year 1953, whether before or after the repealing Act had taken effect. So construed, § 2 (a) carves no exception from the genеral saving statute and does not interfere with the collection of unpaid taxes which aсcrued prior to repeal.
We are reinforced in this conclusion by the legislative history of the bill
4
that became the repealing Act, a his
*227
tory of which we take judicial notice. See
United States
v.
American Trucking
Assns.,
The judgment of the Court оf Appeals is reversed and, as there are other questions which were raised by the appeal (
It is so ordered.
Notes
See
Mullaney
v.
Hess,
Alaska Comp. L. Ann., 1949, § 19-1-1, reads as follows:
“The repeal or amendment of any statute shall not affect any offense committed or any act done or right accruing or accrued or any action or proceeding had or commenced prior to such repeal or amendment; nor shall any penalty, forfeiture or liability incurred under such statute be released or extinguished, but the same may be enforced, continued, sustained, prosecuted and punished under the repealing or amendatory statute save as limited by the ex post facto and other provisions of the Constitution, in which event the same may be enforced, continued, sustained, prosecuted and punished under the former law as if such repeal or amendment had not been made.”
Section 1 of the 1953 Act provides:
“That Chapter 10, Session Laws of Alaska, 1949, as amended by Chapter 88, Session Laws of Alaska, 1949, be and it is hereby repealed.”
We refer to the Alaska House and Senate Journals and to the original bill as introduced in the House which is on file with the Secretary of Alaska, a copy being certified by him.
