Levi v. City of Louisville

30 S.W. 973, 97 Ky. 394, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 973 (Levi v. City of Louisville) 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
Levi v. City of Louisville, 30 S.W. 973, 97 Ky. 394, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 196 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR

deliyeked tiie opinion oe the coukt.

The appellants, Levi, Reed and Ketclium, are the owners of real estate in the city of Louisville, and decline to pay the taxes on their realty by reason of the discrimination made by the ordinanefe levying the tax between real and personal estate, applying the ad valorem system, to the one ^(realty) and a license tax to the other.

Levi and Reed, two of the appellants, filed a petition seeking an injunction to prevent the collection of tax on their real estate upon the ground that the levy ordinance imposing the license tax on personal property made the entire ordinance or levy void. A demurrer was filed to their petitions by the city, and on the hearing the chancellor adjudged the levy as made unauthorized and invalid, but refused to grant the injunction on the ground that this irregularity in the imposition of the tax, if illegal, afforded no reason for the chancellor’s interference.

[399]*399The appellant Ketchum filed his action in a different-branch oí the Jefferson Circuit Court, asking relief on the same grounds assigned by Levi and Reed, and to this petition the appellee (the city of Louisville), instead of demurring filed an answer alleging, in substance, that the burden of taxation had been equalized by the additional tax imposed by the city upon trades, occupations, and professions, and, therefore, nothing was lost to the city, or the burden of taxation on realty increased, by reason of the discrimination made as to the manner only of imposing the burden.

To this answer a demurrer was filed by Ketchum and overruled, and his petition dismissed, and all three of the tax payers have brought the Case here .for revision.

The relief sought is based on the ground that the ordinance levying this tax is void, for the reason the city council failed and refused to follow the mandate of the constitu-' tion, requiring all taxation to be uniform within the territorial limits in which the burden is imposed, and for the still greater reason of their failure to levy an ad valorem tax upon the personal as well as the real estate located within the city, and subject to taxation.

It is alleged in the petitions of Levi and Reed that the system adopted by the city of assessing personal property, by imposing upon it a mere license tax, increases the burden upon the realty, and in effect relieves from taxation personal property of the value of fifteen or twenty millions, that under the ad valorem system would be required to discharge its portion of the burden.

It is insisted by the city that no provision of the constitution is mandatory as to the mode of assessing personal prop-’ erty for taxation, and that the ad valorem system is to be, applied alone to the assessment of real estate. That the, power to classify property for taxation exists now with [400]*400those authorized to impose the burden, as it did under the former constitution, and, therefore, as to personalty, the substitution of a license tax in lieu of the ad valorem system upon the goods, wares a!nd merchandise of the wholesale and retail merchants in the city, as well as other business and associations owning such property liable to taxation, may, by ordinance, be required to pay a license tax upon all their property, except their realty.

It is further contended by the attorney for the city that the provisions of the constitution in relation to the general /system of taxation applies only to taxation for State and 1 * county purposes, and not to cities of the first class; and that as to the municipal governments of the first class the mode of imposing the tax is left (except as to real estate) to the judgment and discretion of the general council, the latter having the right to apply the ad valorem system to the one, and the license tax to the other.

The questions arising in these cases are of the highest importance to both the State and municipal governments, and if the system and mode of assessment' of property for taxation is to be followed as it existed under the former organic law of the State, there is then but little difficulty in sustaining the right of the city to substitute as to personalty the license tax, instead of the ad valorem system, while, on the other hand, if there has been a fundamental change in the mode of assessment, in ascertaining the value of real and personal property, it must be followed, and the suggestion or argument that the mode adopted differing from the provisions of the organic law will produce the same result, that of uniformity and equality in imposing the burden, can not be permitted to control the decision of this question, even if more just and equal in its results.

The present constitution is more definite and specific in [401]*401its provisions in relation to taxation than our former constitution, and to such an extent as to leave but little for the legislature to do in having them executed. The exercise of legislative power is dispensed with as to the mode of assessment, and the mode of taxation regulated by constitutional enactments that under former constitutions was left to the .will of the legislature.

There is but one general system of assessment as to all property, under the present constitution, for the purposes of government, whether State or municipal, and in addition taxation may be based on income, on licenses, and on franchises, and a head or poll tax. The ad valorem system relates to the assessment and taxation of all property, the income tax to the product or income from property, or from business pursuits.. The license tax is one imposed on the privilege of exercising certain callings, professions, or vocations, that when collected go into the State treasury, and when applied to municipal taxation is termed license fees.

A license based on franchises includes the ascertainment of its value, and the mode of determining that value. The power to impose an income tax, a license or franchise tax, is expressly given by the constitution to the legislature, and the exercise of such powers by municipal governments must be derived from legislative enactments, but there is no authority, express or implied, conferred by the constitution on either the ¡State or municipal legislature to substitute a license tax in lieu of the ad valorem system. No income tax has been imposed by the legislature, but a license tax has been imposed for State and county purposes, and the'power conferred upon municipalities to exact license fecu'. which is in effect a license tax. /

The contention, however, is that the city government, by certain provisions of the constitution,- can impose a license [402]*402tax upon personalty, and if legislative authority is required the general provisions of its charter confer such power and it becomes, therefore, necessary to examine the ordinance under which this license tax has been imposed by the city, and the provisions of the organic law from which it is claimed that power is derived, as well as the various sections of the constitution directing the mode of assessment and taxation.

The ordinance relating to the taxes for the fiscal year ending August 31, 1894, is-as follows:

“Be it ordained by the general council of the city of Louisville that the following ad valorem

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 973, 97 Ky. 394, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levi-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1895.