Commonwealth v. Rosenfield Bros.

80 S.W. 1178, 118 Ky. 374, 25 Ky. L. Rptr. 2229, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 31, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 80 S.W. 1178 (Commonwealth v. Rosenfield Bros.) 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
Commonwealth v. Rosenfield Bros., 80 S.W. 1178, 118 Ky. 374, 25 Ky. L. Rptr. 2229, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 52 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinions

Opinion- or the couet by

JUDGE BARKER

Reversing :

The appellees, Rosenfield Bros. & Co., are the owners and proprietors of a distillery bonded warehouse in this State, wherein was stored during the fiscal years from 1898 to 1903, inclusive, distilled spirits; and this is a proceeding on the part of the Commonwealth, by the Auditor’s agent, to collect interest alleged to be due on the taxes assessed for State and county purposes during the bonded period. Without entering into a detailed statement of the pleadings, we can materially abbreviate the opinion by a simple statement of the issues, which are adequately presented in the record. ■No question is raised as to the regularity of the assessment of the distilled spirits, or of the payment by appellees of the principal of the taxes due thereon at the proper time. The questions presented are: First, whether or not the taxes due from appellees to the Commonwealth do or do not bear interest under the statute regulating the taxation of distilled spirits. Second, if so, is, or not, the Commonwealth estopped from now collecting the interest by reason of the fact that the Auditor received the principal sum of the taxes [380]*380from appellees, without interest. And, third, whether-the 'five-years statute of limitation applies to the claim of the 'Commonwealth under this proceeding.

The latv regulating the subject in hand is contained in article 5, c. 108, Ky. St., 1903, sections 4105 to 4114, inclusive. The following sections, relating to the payment of the tases, are peculiarly applicable to the subject under discussion:

“Section 4109. Any person or corporation having the custody of such spirits on the fifteenth day of September in the year the assessment is made, shall be liable for all taxes due thereon, together with all interest and penalties which may accrue; and any warehouseman or custodian of such spirits, who shall pay the taxes, interest or penalties on such spirits, shall have a lien thereon .for the amount so paid, ■with legal interest from day of payment.

“Section ,4110. Taxes on distilled spirits- which may be assessed while in a bonded warehouse, and on which the United States Government tax has not been paid, or will not become due before the first day of March after the assessment, shall be due on the second day of January, May and September next after the said government tax becomes due or be paid, or when the spirits are removed from the warehouse; and the taxes on each year’s assessment shall bear legal interest until paid.

“Section 4111. Every owner or proprietor of a bonded Warehouse in which distilled spirits may be stored, as contemplated in the preceding section, shall, on the first day of January, May and September next after said government tax shall have been paid, become due, or be removed from the warehouse, make and transmit to the Auditor of Public Accounts, and the clerk of the county court in which the spirits may have been at the time of assessment, a [381]*381Statement sworn to by tlie person whose duty it is to make the report, showing the quantity of spirits on which the ■government tax has been paid or has become due, and what spirits have been removed from the warehouse during the preceding four months; the years in which such spirits were assessed for taxation, and the county, city, town or taxing district in which the warehouse is situated in which ihe Spirits were .stored at the time of the assessment, and shall, at the same time, pay all taxes and interest on such spirits due the State, county, taxing district, city, or town to the officers entitled to receive the same.

“Section 4112. On the failure of any owner or proprietor of any such warehouse to pay the taxes and interest within five days after the same becomes due, he shall be deemed delinquent, and a penalty of eight per cent, on each year’s taxes due on the spirits shall attach, and the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall at once cause such proceeding to be instituted for the collection of such taxes, with such interest and penalties as may be provided by law for the collection of other delinquent taxes,”

These sections are substantially the law as enacted in 1S92 (Laws 1892, p. 312, c. 103, section 6), except that the following language, with which section 4110 closes, “ and the taxes on each year’s assessment shall bear legal interest until paid,” was originally as follows, “and the taxes on each year’s assessment shall bear interest as other taxes;” the change having been made in 1902 (Laws 1902, p. 321, c. 128, section 6).

The first question for adjudication is whether or not, under the laws as existing from 1892 to 1902, the taxes in question bore interest. It will be observed that in each of the foregoing sections, wherever the payment of taxes is mentioned, it is also provided that the payment of interest [382]*382shall be made; and if it be true, as contended for by appellant, that the taxes under consideration do not bear interest during the bonded period, then it must be confessed that the Legislature has taken great pains to insert into every section relating, to the subject-matter words which mean nothing. In section 4109 it is provided that the “person or corporation having the custody of such spirits on the fifteenth, day of September in the year the assessment is made, shall be liable for all taxes due thereon, together with all interest and penalties which may accrue,” and “when payment shall be made by the warehouseman of the taxes, interest or penalties, he shall have a lien for the amount so paid, with intei'est from the date of payment.” Section 4110 (prior to 1902) : “And the taxes on each year’s assessment shall bear interest as other taxes.” Section 4111 provides how and when the State taxes shall be paid, and that the proprietor of the warehouse “shall, at the same time, pay all taxes and interest on such spirits due the State, county, taxing district, city, or town to the officer entitled to reveive the same.” Section 4112: “On the failure of any owner or proprietor of any such warehouse to pay the taxes and interest within five days after the same becomes due, he shall be deemed delinquent,” etc. We do not know how ihe Legislature could have made it plainer that State taxes on whisky m bond should bear interest than by the language used in the sections aforesaid.

It is contended, however*, that inasmuch as the language of section 4110 is, “and the taxes on each year’s assessment shall bear interest as other taxes,” and because other taxes do not bear interest, therefore all of the language used by the Legislature in providing for interest on deferred payment of taxes assessed against whisky in bond is nullified. To this, we can not agree. If there is anything plain [383]*383in tbe statute in band', it is that tbe taxes shall bear interest, and. it can not be consonant with any known or sound principle of statutory construction that tbe three words, “as other taxes,” because they are incorrectly used, shall nullify all of the other parts! of the statute, which make it perfectly clear that the Legislature intended that the taxes should bear interest.

It may be conceded, as urged by counsel for appellees, that taxes do not bear interest without a special requirement therefor. We think that the sections quoted plainly show that the Legislature intended to require the deferred payments of taxes on whisky in bond should bear interest.

Let us see, now, what the statutory requirement on the subject of interest on other taxes is.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W. 1178, 118 Ky. 374, 25 Ky. L. Rptr. 2229, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-rosenfield-bros-kyctapp-1904.