Bowaters Carolina Corp. v. Smith

186 S.E.2d 761, 257 S.C. 563, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 9, 1972
Docket19365
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 S.E.2d 761 (Bowaters Carolina Corp. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowaters Carolina Corp. v. Smith, 186 S.E.2d 761, 257 S.C. 563, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 403 (S.C. 1972).

Opinion

Lewis, Justice.

This appeal involves the right of plaintiffs-respondents, Bowaters Carolina Corporation and Catawba Newsprint *568 Company, to recover certain school taxes paid under protest to the appellant, County of York, South Carolina. Respondents claim exemption from the taxes in question under the provisions of Section 65-1572 of the 1962 Code of Laws, as amended by Act No. 2 of the 1967 Acts of the General Assembly, 55 Stat. 2.

Under the provisions of the foregoing statute, certain exemptions from taxes are allowed taxpayers in York County for major industrial expansions and new manufacturing plants. The amended statute contains five subsections and grants the designated tax exemptions to taxpayers upon the basis of a ratio between expenditure for new facilities and the number of new employees. Pertinent here, subsection (1) grants an exemption from the payment of “all county taxes, except taxes for school purposes.” Subsection (2) exempts the taxpayer qualifying thereunder “from all county and township taxes.” The remaining subsections (3, 4 and 5) each contain an exemption of the qualifying taxpayer “from all county and township taxes, except taxes for school purposes.”

Respondents, admittedly, constructed major industrial expansions and manufacturing facilities in York County in 1968, which, in so far as the requirements for new facilities were concerned, entitled them to some tax exemptions under the foregoing statute. The new facilities were first subject to assessment for taxes in 1969. The exemptions claimed by respondents under the statute for the year 1969 were denied, in part, by the County. The taxes in issue for that year (Bowaters — $71,855.83 and Catawba — $255,194-.75) were then paid under protest and separate actions brought by respondents to recover the amounts so paid. The lower court held that respondents were entitled to the exemptions claimed; granted judgment for the amount paid under protest, plus interest; and issued a declaratory judgment that they were entitled to the tax exemption for years subsequent to 1969.

*569 The County has appealed from the above judgment and challenges the granting by the lower court of (1) the tax exemption, (2) interest on the amount ordered to be refunded, and (3) the declaratory judgment as to respondents’ tax status for years subsequent to 1969.

The first question to be decided is whether the lower court erred in holding that respondents were entitled to the tax exemption claimed. This question includes attacks upon the constitutionality of Act No. 2 of the 1967 Acts, supra, under which respondents claim the tax exemptions. Since we have concluded that, under a proper construction of the statute, respondents are not entitled to the exemptions at issue in this appeal, we refrain from deciding the constitutional questions. This is in accord with the established principle that constitutional attacks upon a statute will not be considered unless necessary for a disposition of the appeal.

The tax exemption denied by the County to respondent Catawba consisted of a levy of 60}4 mills, of which 56j4 mills constituted a levy in School District No. 3, in which the property is located, and 4 mills for County bond purposes. The exemption denied respondent Bowaters consisted of the same 60}4 mill levy, plus an additional levy of 5¿4 mills. The County has appealed from only so much of the judgment of the lower court as holds that respondents are entitled to a refund of the School District taxes, thereby conceding their right to a refund of the taxes paid under the above additional levies.

Therefore, the question of tax exemption involved in this appeal concerns the right of respondents to a refund of the taxes paid pursuant to the levy by School District No. 3 for school purposes. Under the present facts, exemption from these school district taxes must be found, if at all, in the provisions of subsection (2) of the above statute which, as stated, grants an exemption from all county and township taxes. The decision turns upon whether the exemption, in this subsection from county and township taxes also exempts from school district taxes.

*570 We find nothing to indicate a legislative intent to include school district taxes under the exemption limited to county and township taxes. On the contrary, we think the failure to specifically list school district taxes shows a clear intent to exclude such taxes from the exemption allowed.

The Constitution of this State recognizes counties, townships, and school districts as separate and distinct political subdivisions, and each may be authorized to levy taxes for educational purposes. Article 10, Sections 5 and 6, and Article 11, Section 6, of the South Carolina Constitution.

Legislative enactments show conclusively that, both prior and subsequent to the enactment of the legislation in question, countywide taxes have been levied in York County for school purposes, separate from and in addition to the taxes levied in School District No. 3. The 1969 Notice of County Tax Levies in York County included a County Wide School Tax of 20 mills and a Supplementary School Tax of 4 mills.

In each instance, the statutes show that the Legislature has designated the particular taxes involved by reference to the political subdivision in which they are levied. If the tax was levied countywide, it was designated a county tax; and if levied only in a school district, it was designated a school district tax. The terms “county taxes,” “township taxes,” and “school district taxes,” therefore, clearly refer to the taxes levied by each of the separate political subdivisions.

Subsection (2), in question, specifies the political subdivisions whose taxes are included within the exemption granted, and negatives the application of the exemption to taxes levied by any other separate political subdivision— here, the school district.

Applicable is the following principle stated in Hull v. Hull, 2 Strob. Eq. 174, 21 S. C. Eq. 174, quoted with approval in Greenville Baseball, Inc. v. Bearden, 200 S. C. 363, 20 S. E. (2d) 813:

*571 “Where the words of a Statute, in their primary meaning, do not expressly embrace the case before the Court, and there is nothing in the context to attach a different meaning to them, capable of expressly embrasing it; the Court cannot extend the Statute, by construction, to that case, unless it falls so clearly within the reasons of the enactment as to warrant the assumption that it was not specifically enumerated among those described by the Legislature, only because it may have been deemed unnecessary to do so.”

In view of the clear meaning of the language used in subsection (2) and the unmistakable distinction between county, township and school district taxes, the omission of school district taxes clearly indicates a legislative intent that such taxes were not embraced within the exemption granted. Under these circumstances, we must assume that, if it were intended to include school district taxes within the exemption granted, the statute would have so stated.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.E.2d 761, 257 S.C. 563, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowaters-carolina-corp-v-smith-sc-1972.