Clark v. Louisville Water Co.

14 S.W. 502, 90 Ky. 515, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 502 (Clark v. Louisville Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Louisville Water Co., 14 S.W. 502, 90 Ky. 515, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 118 (Ky. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinions

CHIEE JUSTICE HOLT

delivered the opiirioit of the court.

The real estate and improvements thereon of the appellee, the Louisville Water Company, were assessed for State and county taxes for the year 188?, at the value of two million two hundred and fifteen thousand dollars. The taxes amount to eleven thousand three hundred and seventy-one dollars and seven cents; and the tax-bills therefor being in the hands of the sheriff, and he about to seize and sell thereunder certain property of- the appellee in use in its business, it, by this suit, enjoined him from so doing, the principal ground upon which it claims relief being that its property is by law exempt from assessment and taxation. This • claim is based • upon an act of the Legislature of April 22, 1882, and which reads as follows:

“1. That it shall be the duty of the Louisville Water Company to furnish water to the public fire cisterns and public fire-plugs or hydrants of the city of Louisville for fire protection free of charge.

“2. The sinking fund of the city of Louisville' being [518]*518the owner of the stock of the Louisville Water Company, and said water company, by virtue thereof, is the property of the city of Louisville, therefore, the Louisville Water Company is hereby exempted from the payment of taxes of all kinds, of whatever character, State, municipal and special.”

Upon the hearing in the lower court the appellee moved to make the temporary injunction, which had been granted, perpetual, while the appellant, inasmuch as the property of the company in use can not be seized and sold, thus depriving the local public of the benefits derived from it, moved that it be compelled by rule to pay the taxes into court, or failing to do so, that its property be placed in a receiver’s hands until enough should be realized to pay them. This relief was also asked in the answer, to which a demurrer was sustained. The motion of the appellant was overruled, and the injunction perpetuated, the court not only holding that the property of the company could not be seized and sold, but that it was not liable for the taxes.

The constitutionality of the act supra is involved. It is claimed for the company that it has a vested right to the exemption resting in contract. That by the passage of the act of the Legislature, and its acceptance by the company, a contract was entered into ■which entitles it to the exemption. As such a privilege is in derogation of the common right; as the exemption of one person from taxation places an additional burden upon the other tax-payers of the State, it will not be presumed, but must appear by clear grant.

[519]*519It is true, as has often been said, that exemption is the exception and not the rule. Upon the other hand, however, where the Legislature clearly grants this privilege, or attempts to do so, its action must be presumed constitutional.

As the language of the act in this case is plain, it becomes the delicate duty of this court, keeping in mind the presumption in favor of legislative action, to determine whether, in its enactment, the Legislature has gone .beyond the constitutional limit.

The first section of our Bill of Rights provides that “no man or set of men are entitled to exclusive, separate public emoluments or privileges from the community, but in consideration of public services.”

The appellant contends, first, that if it were true the Legislature was moved to the passage of the act upon the idea of the rendition of a public service, yet, in fact, the company renders no such public servicé as the Constitution contemplates; and, second, that this was not the reason for its enactment, and that it is altogether unsupported by any valid consideration, or such as the Constitution recognizes.

We shall pass- by the question whether the rendition of a local public service, as to furnish the city of Louisville with water, is a valid consideration for an exemption from State taxation, thereby imposing an additional burden upon all the balance of the people of the State, or whether it is a governmental duty of the State to furnish to a city water for fire protection and sanitary purposes free of charge, either by direct taxation upon all the people of the State, or indirectly by an exemption from taxation in favor [520]*520of the one doing so ; and if so, being, therefore, a valid consideration for such an exemption. This is a question as to which there is a difference of opinion; and in view of the conclusion we have reached as to the second position taken by the appellant, it is unnecessary to consider it.

We think it evident that the furnishing of water by the company to the city for fire protection free of charge was not what induced the passage of the. act. Its recitals, aside from the express statement in it of the reason, make this quite plain. It says:

“The sinking fund of the city of Louisville, being the owner of the stock of the Louisville Water Company, and said water company, by virtue thereof j, is the property of the city of Louisville, therefore, the Louisville Water Company is hereby exempted from the payment of taxes of all kinds, of whatever character, State, municipal and special.”

According to the legislative recital the sinking fund of the city owns the entire stock of the water company. There is nothing in the record showing otherwise, and it must, therefore, be assumed to be true. While the sinking fund department is a separate corporation from that of the city proper, yet it is merely the moneymaking branch of the municipal government. It has charge of its funds and its investments, whether in bank, railroad, water company stocks, or other valuable and money-making securities.

We see, therefore, that the property and rights of the water company belong to the city. While, therefore, the act recites that it shall be the duty of the water company to furnish water to the public fire [521]*521cisterns and public fire plugs or hydrants of the city for fire protection, yet this could not have been the consideration that induced the passage of the act, since it made no difference to the city whether a million of dollars or a penny might be paid for this service, because it was the owner of the rights and property of the water company, and it would, therefore, be but a payment to itself. It can not be supposed, therefore, that the Legislature intended to relinquish over ten thousand dollars of taxes annually in consideration that the city would not charge itself for water furnished by itself. It is useless to inquire why the act declared that the water company should furnish water to the city free of charge. Perhaps, as suggested by counsel, it was merely to avoid the trouble of keeping an account between the sinking fund department and the city proper. The reason which induced the attempted granting of the exemption must, therefore, have been, as indeed the act recites, that the sinking fund of the city, or in other words the city itself, owned all the water company stock. It says: “The sinking fund of the city of Louisville being the owner of the stock of the Louisville Water Company, and said water company, by virtue thereof, is the property of the city of Louisville, therefore the Louisville Water Company is hereby exempted from the payment of taxes of all kinds, of whatever character, State, municipal and special.”

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 502, 90 Ky. 515, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-louisville-water-co-kyctapp-1890.