Crafts v. Ray

46 A. 1043, 22 R.I. 179, 1900 R.I. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 20, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 A. 1043 (Crafts v. Ray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crafts v. Ray, 46 A. 1043, 22 R.I. 179, 1900 R.I. LEXIS 74 (R.I. 1900).

Opinion

Stiness, C. J.

The plaintiff sues to recover a tax paid by hito in 1899, under protest, upon the ground that it was-illegal. The case was submitted to the District Court upon an agreed statement of facts, and certified to this court under Gen. Laws, cap. 239, § 1. The facts show that the assessors of taxes of East Providence intentionally omitted from assessment the manufacturing property of the Grosvenordale Company and the American Electrical Works, and that they did so under a vote of the town council, authorized by the electors of said town, whereby said properties were exempted from taxation for a period of ten years from and after April 11, 1892, and March 22, 1893, respectively; said corporations-having agreed to locate and having subsequently located manufacturing property in said town in consequence of such exemption.

The right to make such an exemption was given in Pub. Laws cap. 1088, May 21, 1892 ; but it was held in McTwiggan v. Hunter, 19 R. I. 265, that the statute was not retroactive- and, hence, did not authorize the contract of April 11, 1892, previous to its passage, no further action having been taken. By Pub. Laws, cap. 386, January session, 1896, the action of the town of East Providence was ratified by the General Assembly, and the property of the Grosvenordale Company was expressly exempted from taxation for a period of ten years from April 11, 1892 ; and by chapter 387 the same action was taken with reference to the property of the American Electrical Works for the period of-ten years from March 22, 1893.

(1) The question raised is whether the acts were unconstitutional and void, upon the ground that tire constitution of the State provides, article 1, section 2, that “the burdens of the State ought to be fairly distributed among its citizens.” It-is also claimed that the effect of the acts was to take the property of citizens under the guise of taxation and to use it in *183 aid of the enterprises of others which are not of a public character, thus perverting the right of taxation, which can only be exercised for public purposes, to aid individual interests and private purposes of profit and gain.

The question presented is one of great importance. The taxing power is one of the most delicate, difficult, and far-reaching functions of government. It affects all classes and all property. Under our form of government, however, it is, theoretically, a self-imposed burden. Since the days of the Revolution, taxation has been recognized as a representative act.

The power to tax necessarily implies a power to exempt. Taxation being a legislative power, it is not the province of a court to review it, except in cases where the power is limited by constitutional restrictions. The court is then to say whether the legislature had power to pass a given law ; not whether it should have passed it.

The provision of our constitution which the plaintiff claims to be a limitation on the taxing power is the clause quoted above : ‘£ All laws, therefore, should be made for the good of the whole; and the burdens of the State ought to be fairly distributed among its citizens.” The form of this clause is advisory; not mandatory. Ames, O. J., In the Matter of Dorrance Street, 4 R. I. 230, 249, spoke of it as ££ addressed rather to the General Assembly, by way of advice and direction, than to the courts, by way of enforcing restraint upon the law making power.” But he added : “ We do not mean to say that a law, purporting to impose a tax or burden of some sort upon the citizen, may not be in its distribution of the burden, both in design and effect, so outrageously subversive of all the rules of fairness, as not to come so far within the provisions of this general clause, as to enable the court to save the citizen from oppression by declaring it to be void. But evidently a wide discretion with regard to the distribution of the burdens of the State amongst the citizens was intended to be reposed in the General Assembly by the will of the people, as signified in this clause of the constitution. The *184 form is ‘ought to be,’ the word is fairly distributed, not ‘equally’ even, — unless equality be fair, which is not always in any sense, and never in some senses; and especially the words are not ‘equally upon property,’ or words to that effect, as in the constitution of Louisiana, . . . Indeed, the language in question can hardly be said to impose any restriction upon the General Assembly at all, except what would be imposed by the fact of our free institutions, and the general principles of constitutional law, here and everywhere in this country prevalent. Had the constitution been wholly silent upon this subject, a greater latitude could not have been given by these principles than seems to have been studiedly implied in the form, spirit, and general terms of the sentence.”

The case in which these words were used was different from the case at bar in this — -that it involved an assessment for a benefit arising from the opening of a street, and not an ordinary tax. But the words quoted are entitled to great weight as an interpretation of the constitution, not only from the eminence of Judge Ames as a jurist, but also from his-prominence as a member of the General Assembly when the constitution was adopted giving him a peculiar opportunity to know the intended scope of its provisions. Further evidence that the clause in question has been understood to be directory merely is found in the fact that in the proposed revision of the constitution, reported to the General Assembly in 1898, the commission recommended a change from the directory form of “ought to be fairly distributed among its citizens,” to the mandatory form of “shall be fairly distributed.”

(2) Historically, therefore, the clause has been treated as directory rather than mandatory. Nevertheless, a declaration of right or duty which has been deemed sufficiently important to be embodied in the constitution should not be put aside as a mere generality, if it is of such a character that effect can be given to it as the equivalent of a more positive statement. But suppose the clause in question to *185 be equivalent to the mandatory form: can we hold it to be a limitation on the power of exemption ? Undoubtedly taxation may be included among the burdens which are to be fairly distributed. From this postulate the plaintiff argues that an exemption is contrary to the practical direction of the constitution, and, hence, unconstitutional. This conclusion does not follow. There are burdens of citizenship besides taxation. Indeed, taxation is not strictly a burden incidental to citizenship, since persons not citizens of the State may be taxed for property within it. Jury and military duty at once come to mind as among the burdens of the State. Hence, if it be held that because taxation is a burden which “ ought to be fairly distributed ” the legislature has no power to make exemptions, it must follow that no exemptions from jury or military duty could be made. But immediately following the adoption of the constitution the act relating to jurors exempted some, but not all, State and town officers, and some who had no public duties, such as cashiers of banks, and all persons over sixty-five years of age.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 1043, 22 R.I. 179, 1900 R.I. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crafts-v-ray-ri-1900.