Dooley v. City of Detroit

121 N.W.2d 724, 370 Mich. 194, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 374
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1963
DocketCalendar 53, 54, Docket 49,973, 49,954
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 121 N.W.2d 724 (Dooley v. City of Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dooley v. City of Detroit, 121 N.W.2d 724, 370 Mich. 194, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 374 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Souris, J.

By today’s decision we uphold the validity of Detroit’s income tax ordinance. 1 The only *199 other city in Michigan which previously had attempted to raise revenues for municipal purposes by taxing incomes was Saginaw, whose submission to electors of a proposal authorizing an income tax was declared invalid by this Court in 1952 in House v. City of Saginaw, 334 Mich 241, for failure of compliance with procedural requirements. The issues presented to us in this appeal are, therefore, issues of first impression.

In 1962, by ordinance adopted by its city council and approved by its mayor, Detroit imposed for municipal purposes a net income tax, at the rate of 1%, upon income earned and income received by residents and nonresidents of the city, such taxable income of nonresidents being limited, however, to income earned from work done, services rendered; or other business activities conducted in the city and to income received from sale or rental of real and tangible personal property located in the city.- Before the ordinance could be implemented, 2 suits for declaratory and injunctive relief were instituted, 1 by residents and the other by affected nonresidents of the city. Both suits were class actions and other members of the respective classes were accorded opportunity to intervene. The suits were consolidated for hearing below, and later were ordered *200 submitted together for appellate purposes. They were submitted to the chancellor upon stipulations of facts and comprehensive briefs, the chancellor ultimately upholding the validity of the tax and denying the injunctive relief sought. The tax has been collected by the city since July 1, 1962.

Plaintiffs’ attacks upon the validity of the income tax ordinance are on 3 principal fronts. First, they contend that cities have not been granted necessary legislative authority to levy income taxes. Second, assuming that cities have been granted such authority, plaintiffs claim Detroit’s income tax ordinance violates existing statutory tax rate limitations and restrictions claimed by them to be applicable to municipal income taxes as well as to ad valorem taxes on property. Finally, plaintiffs claim that the income tax ordinance denies them due process of law as guaranteed by our State and Federal Constitutions.

The Constitution of 1908 authorizes specific, as well as ad valorem taxes, article 10, §§ 3 and 4, but apart from such authorization, it does not explicitly authorize the legislature or cities to impose income taxes, nor does it designate any other specific taxes included in its general grant. For its statutory authority to impose its income tax, the city relies upon section 4i of the home-rule cities act, PA 1909, No 279, as amended (CL 1948, § 117.4Í, subd [1], as amended by PA 1957, No 131 [Stat Ann 1961 Cum Supp §5.2082, subd (1)]). It reads, in its entirety:

“Each city may in its charter provide:

“(1) For laying and collecting rents, tolls and excises.”

Pursuant thereto, Detroit’s charter, title 3, chapter 1, § 12 (m), delegates to its common council author *201 ity “to provide for the laying and collecting of rents, tolls, and excises.”

Plaintiffs do not claim that the legislature exceeded its powers under article 10, §§ 3 and 4 by permitting cities in section 4i of the home-rule cities act to lay and collect excises. Instead, they claim that income taxes are not excises and, in' the alternativé, that even if such taxes properly may be' classified as excises, a far more detailed legislative grant of express authority to tax incomes is’ required before a city can claim the right to do so.

It is our conclusion that Detroit’s income tax is an excise and that the statutory authority relied upon to support its levy is legally sufficient. There was a time in the recent history of this nation when respected authorities insisted that income is property, at least for some purposes, and that a tax upon net income is thereby a property tax subject to at least some of the constitutional limitations imposed upon such taxes. See Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company (1895), 158 US 601 (15 S Ct 912, 39 L ed 1108); see, also, E. Blythe Stason, “The Fifteen Mill Tax Amendment Limitation,” 31 Mich L Rev 371, 379 (1933). However, contrary views were early expressed, as Dean Stason acknowledged in his article. Ludlow-Saylor Wire Co. v. Wollbrinck (1918), 275 Mo 339 (205 SW 196); Hattiesburg Grocery Company v. Robertson (1921), 126 Miss 655 (89 So 369, 25 ALR 755); Sims v. Ahrens (1925), 167 Ark 557 (271 SW 720); and Featherstone v. Norman (1930), 170 Ga 370 (153 SE 58, 70 ALR 449). Today, however, it is generally said that income taxes are excises and not property taxes. See 16 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed), § 44.193; Brown, “The Nature of the Income Tax,” 17 Minn L Rev 127; and Hale v. *202 Iowa State Board of Assessment and Review (1937), 302 US 95 (58 S Ct 102, 82 L ed 72). Mr. Justice Cardozo, in the Hale Case, 104, 105, noted that “many, perhaps most, courts hold that a net income tax is to be classified as an excise.” He also took occasion, at p 107, to repeat the supreme court’s earlier clarification of the Pollock decision by referring to and quoting from Brushaber v. Union Pacific R. Co. (1916), 240 US 1 (36 S Ct 236, 60 L ed 493, LRA 1917D, 414, Ann Cas 1917B, 713) :

“In line with that conception of the Pollock Case is Brushaber v. Union P. R. Co. supra, where the court pointed out (240 US at pp 16, 17), that ‘the conclusion reached in the Pollock Case did not in any degree involve holding that income taxes generically and necessarily came within the class of direct taxes on property,’ but that to the contrary such taxes were enforceable as excises except to the extent that violence might thus be done to the spirit and intent of the rule governing apportionment.”

Significantly, Justice Cardozo, at pp 106, 107, also referred to New York, ex rel. Cohn, v. Graves (1937), 300 US 308 (57 S Ct 466, 81 L ed 666, 108 ALR 721), decided at the term preceding decision in Hale. In Cohn, where it was claimed New York’s income tax as applied to a resident’s income from rents of land and interest on bonds was in substance and effect a tax on property, Mr. Justice Stone wrote for the Court, at p 314, that:

“Neither analysis of the 2 types of taxes, nor consideration of the bases upon which the power to impose them rests, supports the contention that a tax on income is a tax on the land which produces it. The incidence of a tax on income differs from that of a tax on property. Neither tax is dependent upon the possession by the taxpayer of the subject of the other.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W.2d 724, 370 Mich. 194, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dooley-v-city-of-detroit-mich-1963.