First Suburban Water Utility Dist. v. McCanless

146 S.W.2d 948, 177 Tenn. 128, 13 Beeler 128, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 19
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 948 (First Suburban Water Utility Dist. v. McCanless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Suburban Water Utility Dist. v. McCanless, 146 S.W.2d 948, 177 Tenn. 128, 13 Beeler 128, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 19 (Tenn. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By this suit it is sought (1) to recover certain State taxes paid under protest to the defendant Commissioner, and (2) to enjoin the County Trustee from collecting *131 taxes assessed by the Railroad and Public Utilities Commission. The Suburban Company is a ‘ ‘ Utility District, ’ ’ organized under Chapter 248, Public Acts of 1937, which provides for the creation of Public Corporations to be styled “Districts,” with power of perpetual succession, “for the purpose of conducting’ and operating a water, sewer, or fire protection system or two or more of such systems and to carry out such purpose it shall have power and authority to acquire, construct, reconstruct, improve, better, extend, consolidate, maintain and operate such system or systems within or without the district and to purchase from, and furnish, deliver and sell to, any municipality, the State, any public institution and the public, generally, any of the services authorized by this Act. ’ ’ Section 5.

Broad powers are conferred for the accomplishment of all proper purposes, including many powers usually enjoyed by municipal corporations, including power to sue and be sued, contract and convey, borrow and mortgage, acquire, hold and improve property, particularly ■such as is required for its utility services-and development, also power of eminent domain, “but,” as expressly provided, “without any power to levy or collect taxes.” The act provides that all the expense of construction, acquisition, upkeep and operation of the system shall be provided for by (1) service charges and (2) interest bearing bonds, payable from revenue only.

The defendants by demurrer challenged the constitutionality of the Utility Act of 1.937 which the Chancellor overruled and this is the sole question before us on this appeal. If this act is constitutional the District is exempt from taxation by the express terms of Section 15 of the Act, as follows:

“Systems and Bonds Exempt From Taxation. Be it *132 further enacted, That so long as a district shall own any system, the property and revenue of such system shall he exempt from all State, county and municipal taxation. Bonds issued pursuant to this Act and the income therefrom shall he exempt from all State, county and municipal taxation, except inheritance, transfer and estate taxes, and it shall he so stated on the face of said bonds.”

And the Bailroad and Public Utilities Commission is excluded from jurisdiction of it by Section 16', as follows:

“Begulation. Be it further enacted, That neither, the Bailroad and Public Utilities Commission nor any other board or commission of like character hereafter created shall have jurisdiction over the district in the management and control of any system, including the regulation cf its rates, fees, tolls or charges.”

The first and chief insistence of the appellants is that this exemption from taxation is, as expressed in the first ground of demurrer, ‘ ‘ invalid, void and of no effect, it being in direct contravention of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee and particularly ¡Section 28 of Article 2 of said Constitution, the pertinent part of which is as follows:

“ ‘All property, real, personal or mixed, shall be taxed, but the Legislature may except such as may be held by the State, by counties, cites or towns, and used exclusively for public or corporation purposes.’ ”

If this incorporated Utility District is property of the State, or of any one of the arms of the State government, then it is well settled that it may be exempted from taxation by the Legislature. State ex rel. Fort, Commissioner, et al., v. City of Jackson, 172 Tenn., 119, 110 S. W. (2d), 323, and numerous cases there cited. It is said that it does not come within this classification and is not an operation for a State, governmental or public *133 purpose. We think the act quite clearly so classes and characterizes it. We have quoted its declaration of “Corporate Purpose.” And, in Section 3, it is declared to he a “ ‘Municipality’ or public corporation in perpetuity under its corporate name,” etc. A municipal corporation is a body established by law, ‘ ‘ chiefly to regulate the local internal affairs of the city, town, or district incorporated,” adopting defining words from State v. Knoxville, 115 Tenn., 175, 90 S. W., 289, 293, and italicizing “district.” And it was held in Redistricting Cases, 111 Tenn., 234, 80 S. W., 750, that municipal corporations are “arms of government,” are “means or instrumentalities of the State government,” etc. (Headnote 12). It is elementary that the Legislature may call such bodies what it pleases, and may give and take away as it chooses their powers and privileges. Here it has chosen to make provision for the creation and operation, in the manifest interest of the public, in these days of necessity for water, light, fire and sewer protection, of a somewhat new and quite limited in scope corporate instrumentality. We find no restriction upon legislative authority as to the size, powers or field of operations, in the creation of one of its arms or instrumentalities. We have various illustrations of analogous agencies which this Court has recognized the power of the legislation to create, which necessarily had exemption from taxation. For instance, discussing the organization of a drainage district, in his opinion in Pritchard v. Johnson-Toby-Construction Co., 155 Tenn., 571, at page 576, 296 S. W., 17, at page 19, Mr. Justice Swiggaet said:

“It is our opinion that the board of directors of the drainage district, appointed under the authority of the statute, and vested with the general control and manage *134 ment of the business affairs of the district, with power to make contracts for improvements, etc., must be considered as a quasi public corporation, charged with the duty of executing a governmental purpose as a governmental agency. Miller v. Washington County, 143 Tenn., 488, 226 S. W., 199; Board of Park Commissioners v. Nashville, 134 Tenn., 612, 635, 639, 185 S. W., 694.”

The cases he cites are in point, one a road district and the other a park. And see Knoxville Housing Authority v. Knoxville, 174 Tenn., 76, 123 S. W. (2d), 1085; University of Tennessee v. People’s Bank et al., 157 Tenn., 87, 6 S.W. (2d), 328,

Counsel argue a second proposition under this ground of demurrer even more confidently. They call attention to a.provision in Section 5 to the effect that the District may-'extend itself beyond its corporate boundaries, in acquisition of property and furnishing of its services. Counsel cite Knoxville v. Park City, 130 Tenn., 626, 172 S. W., 286, L. R. A., 1915D, 1103, but as far as that case went was to declare taxable the outside services. There was no holding .that the charter of the City was thereby rendered unconstitutional.

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146 S.W.2d 948, 177 Tenn. 128, 13 Beeler 128, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-suburban-water-utility-dist-v-mccanless-tenn-1941.