City of Minneapolis v. Armson

246 N.W. 660, 188 Minn. 167, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 980
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 29,236.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 660 (City of Minneapolis v. Armson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Minneapolis v. Armson, 246 N.W. 660, 188 Minn. 167, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 980 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

*168 HOLT, Justice.

The court overruled interveners’ demurrer to the complaint, certifying the questions involved to he important and doubtful. Inter-veners appeal.

From the complaint it appears that plaintiff’s assessor included in his assessment of personal property for taxation new and unused motor vehicles owned by certain dealers in the city-on May 1, 1931, of the assessed valuation of $121,945, which was extended upon the tax lists of the auditor against said dealers for an ad valorem tax; that these dealers against whom such tax had been extended have filed with defendants certain applications for reductions in the taxable value of their personal property, basing such claims upon G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) § 2674(b), as amended by L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, Mason, 1931 Supp. § 2674(b) ; that defendants unless restrained will grant the applications; that the reductions, if granted, will reduce the taxes receivable by the city in the amount of $9,109.29; that the budgets for the city have been made up and are based upon the assessed valuation and include the said sum expected to be received by the city from the taxes extended against said dealers on account of the motor vehicles so assessed; and that now to rebate the amount stated will necessitate an increase in the rate of taxation on other property and irreparably damage other taxpayers. The complaint then avers that said L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, contravenes art. 1, §§ 2 and 7, and art. 9, § 1, of the state constitution.

G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) § 2674, relates to the taxation of motor vehicles using public streets and highways, placing upon them a more onerous tax than upon other personal property by virtue of art. 16 of the constitution, the trunk highway amendment. Subdivision (b) of said § 2674, here involved, prior to the enactment of L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, read:

“Motor vehicles not subject to taxation as provided in the foregoing section, but subject to taxation as personal property within the state of Minnesota, shall be assessed and valued at thirty-three and one-third per cent of the true and full value thereof and be taxed at the rate and in the manner provided by law for the taxa *169 tion of ordinary personal property; provided, that if the person against whom any tax has been levied on the ad valorem basis because of any motor vehicle shall, during the calendar year for which such tax is levied, be also taxed under the provisions of this act, then and in that event, upon proper showing, the Minnesota tax commission shall grant to the person against whom said ad valorem tax was levied, such reduction or abatement of assessed valuation or taxes as was occasioned by the so-called ad Valorem tax imposed.”

The proviso above quoted was construed as not applying to new vehicles owned by a dealer on May 1 which were afterwards sold by the dealer to persons who upon such sale paid the license tax for the balance of the year. It was held applicable only to cars which had been assessed upon the ad valorem basis against a dealer on May 1, and which thereafter, in the same year, the dealer concluded to use upon the public highway and therefore paid the license tax thereon. State ex rel. Byers-Prestholdt Motor Co. v. Minnesota Tax Comm. 178 Minn. 300, 227 N. W. 43. That proviso lent itself to construction, and we think it was properly construed in that case, so that there was not a duplication of a tax against the same person, even though the same property had been subject to two different taxes during one year. That decision was filed in October, 1929.

The next legislature by L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, added this second proviso to subd. (b) of said § 2674 of the code:

“and provided further that, if said ad valorem tax upon any automobile has been assessed against a dealer in new and unused motor vehicles, and the tax imposed by this act for the required period is thereafter paid by the owner, then and in that event, upon proper showing, the Minnesota Tax Commission, upon the application of said dealer, shall grant to such dealer against whom said ad valorem tax was levied such reduction or abatement of assessed valuation or taxes as was occasioned by the so-called ad valorem tax imposed.”

There can be no doubt that the proviso was enacted to grant the relief to dealers which by our construction of the first proviso the *170 dealers were excluded from. It is also very clear that the 1931 proviso leaves no room for construction. It plainly enacts that if an ad valorem tax upon any automobile has been assessed against a dealer in new and unused motor vehicles and the license tax, for a required period of the tax year, is thereafter paid by the owner, the dealer, on proper showing, shall be entitled to a reduction of the ad valorem assessment or tax occasioned thereby. The attack on L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, must therefore be confined to the contention that it violates some provision of the constitution of this state. Although the complaint alleges this law to be violative of art. 1, §§ 2 and 7, as well as of art. 9, § 1, neither the oral argument nor the brief attempted to point out wherein any provision of L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, is repugnant to either of the two specified sections of art. 1. We therefore need only consider the arguments made touching the alleged conflict of the proviso added in 1931 with art. 9, § 1.

The first contention is that c. 58 impinges upon this sentence in the section of the constitution last mentioned:

“The poAver of taxation shall never be surrendered, suspended or contracted away.”

After so declaring, the same section exempts from taxation certain property devoted to certain purposes and authorizes the legislature to exempt other property Avithin prescribed limits. It is therefore argued that any statute is unconstitutional that purports to exempt from taxation property other than that so declared by this § 1 of aid. 9; hence, L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, is unconstitutional, for its effect is to exempt certain motor vehicles of dealers from taxation. It may be conceded that a law Avhich exempts from taxation property not exempted by or under the constitutional provision referred to is void. Le Duc v. City of Hastings, 39 Minn. 110, 38 N. W. 803; State v. Pioneer S. & L. Co. 63 Minn. 80, 65 N. W. 138; State v. Bishop Seabury Mission, 90 Minn. 92, 95 N. W. 882. But Ave think the contention is untenable that L. 1931, p. 59, c. 58, exempts the motor vehicles therein described from a tax. By art. 16, § 3, of the constitution, motor vehicles using public highways may be subjected to a more onerous mode of taxation than other *171 personal property. It is true that this is in part a privilege tax, but it is also, by the section of the constitution referred to, a lieu tax. Plainly it ivas not intended, under the constitutional provisions referred to, to let the same motor vehicle bear the burden of the two kinds of taxes during the one tax period or year. Neither legislatures nor courts aim for duplicate taxation. Bd. of Co. Commrs. of Rice County v. Citizens Nat. Bank, 23 Minn. 280. When by L. 1931, p. 59, c.

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 660, 188 Minn. 167, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-minneapolis-v-armson-minn-1933.