Greaves v. Houlton Water Co.

59 A.2d 217, 143 Me. 207, 1948 Me. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 22, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 59 A.2d 217 (Greaves v. Houlton Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greaves v. Houlton Water Co., 59 A.2d 217, 143 Me. 207, 1948 Me. LEXIS 11 (Me. 1948).

Opinion

Murray, A. R. J.

This case comes to the Law Court on report on an agreed statement of facts. It is an action of debt by the plaintiff as Collector of Taxes of the town of Hodgdon to collect a tax assessed for the year 1944 against the defendant as owner of certain poles and wires constituting the transmission line along the highways in the town of Hodgdon, used for the purpose of supplying electric light and power to the town of Hodgdon and the inhabitants thereof.

The agreed statement makes all of the special acts of the Legislature, which are applicable, part of the case, and admits the assessment and commitment to be regular. It shows the defendant to be a corporation engaged in the distribution of light and power in several towns, including Hodgdon and Houlton. No other person or corporation is engaged in generating or distributing electricity, nor does any other person or corporation own any transmission line or facility within Hodgdon. The town of Hodgdon has so few inhabitants that it is economically impracticable to generate and distribute electricity solely to it and its inhabitants. The lines were extended into Hodgdon upon re[209]*209quest of its inhabitants. All of the stock of the company is owned by the town of Houlton. Its directors are elected at the town meeting of Houlton. They must be citizens of Houlton. It is the only electric light company the capital stock of which is owned by a municipality in Maine.

The history of the defendant follows:

The Houlton Water Company was given a charter in the year 1880 to supply water to the town of Houlton and its inhabitants, and to issue capital stock.
Later it was given authority to merge with the Houlton Sewerage Company and conduct sewers. It was given the power of eminent domain. The town of Houlton was given the privilege of buying the capital stock. Its directors had to be elected from the citizens of Houlton at its town meeting.
Its charter was amended by P. & S. L. 1943, C. 26, by adding: “and said corporation shall hereafter be deemed for all purposes of taxation a public municipal corporation.”

The statute which applies to the exemption from taxation of public municipal corporations follows:

R. S. 1944, Chap. 81, Sec. 6, Par. I.
“The following property and polls are exempt from taxation:
I. The property of the United States and of this state and the property of any public municipal corporation of this state appropriated to public uses if located within the corporate limits and confines of such public municipal corporation, and also the.....fixtures.....of public municipal corporations engaged in supplying.....power or light if located outside the limits of such public municipal corporations.”

The defendant contends that the Legislature, by the amendment of 1943, made the defendant, as to taxation, a public municipal corporation and, therefore, the taxed property, is exempt. Both sides assume in argument that the [210]*210Legislature in the 1943 amendment, as to this case at least, also means exemption from taxation. With this we agree.

To this defense the plaintiff answers that P. & S. L. of 1943, C. 26 is unconstitutional, because it is repugnant to equal and impartial taxation, — Maine Constitution Amendment, Article XXXVI, and because the Legislature by such act suspended its sovereign power of taxation. Maine Constitution, Article IX, Sec. 9.

He says further, if the act is constitutional, it does not exempt the taxed property; at most, it exempts property within Houlton.

We shall consider the second defense first, because some of the arguments used in this connection may be useful in deciding as to the constitutionality of the act.

These parties were before this court for a tax assessed on this same property before the 1943 amendment. Greaves v. Houlton Water Co., 140 Me. 158; 34 Atl. (2nd) 693.

The court decided at that time that the corporate entity of the Houlton Water Company had been continued; that by legislative enactment and intendment,

“the corporation has been endowed to act in a dual capacity, one as a public municipal corporation so far as the town of Houlton and its inhabitants are concerned, and the other as a private enterprise in furnishing electric current to a dozen other towns and their inhabitants for their convenience and its private gain..... There is no reason, under the circumstances of this case, why the Houlton Water Company should be exempt from taxation upon its property used solely in the transmission and distribution of electricity outside the limits of the town of Houlton.”

The Houlton Water Company still maintains its corporate entity, but the Legislature, by the act of 1943, for all tax purposes, deems it to be a public municipal corporation. This is true, not only as to Houlton but also as to the other towns, including Hodgdon.

[211]*211Is the taxed property appropriated to public uses? The lighting of public streets, public and private buildings, is a public purpose. The Legislature can authorize this to be done by any appropriate means which it may deem expedient. Laughlin v. City of Portland, 111 Me. 486-493; 90 Atl. 318.

The usual method, in early municipal history, of obtaining a supply of water, was through the agency of stock companies performing a joint, public and private service for private gain. Dillon Mun. Corp., 5 Ed., Vol. III, Sec. 1298. Laughlin v. City of Portland, 111 Me. 486. The purpose of these companies is admittedly public. Laughlin v. City of Portland, 111 Me. 486; 90 Atl. 318; Portland v. Portland Water Company, 67 Me. 136; Riche v. Bar Harbor Water Co., 75 Me. 91; Hamor v. Bar Harbor Water Co., 78 Me. 127.

The case, City of Portland v. Portland Water Company, before cited, is one in which the Legislature had exempted the property of the defendant, a stock company, from taxation. The court decided that this could be done, and that the property of the defendant had been appropriated and devoted to a public use, and may be exempted from taxation for the same reason that town houses, schoolhouses and railroad tracks are.

Taxation is legislative. What money shall be raised by taxation, what property shall be taxed, what exempted, rests exclusively with the Legislature to say, without any limitations, except such as are imposed by express constitutional provision. Re: Maine Central R. R., 134 Me. 217; 183 Atl. 844.

Whether such taxation, or exemption, is wise or unwise, is not for the judiciary, but for the Legislature. Inhabitants of Whiting v. Inhabitants of Lubec, 121 Me. 121; 115 Atl. 896.

We say this property attempted to be taxed is property of a public municipal corporation of this state appropriated [212]*212to public uses, and we feel that the Legislature in enacting the act of 1943 meant to exempt the property of this corporation appropriated to public uses within the towns served by it. It meant to do this, or its passage was an idle ceremony, and meant nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A.2d 217, 143 Me. 207, 1948 Me. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greaves-v-houlton-water-co-me-1948.