Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. City of Louisville

136 S.W. 611, 143 Ky. 258, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 611 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad 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
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. City of Louisville, 136 S.W. 611, 143 Ky. 258, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 391 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

Finding its work and repair shops in Louisville inadequate, the Louisville & Nashville B. R. Co. bought a tract of land in South Louisville, erected new buildings thereon, equipped them with the necessary machinery, and [259]*259abandoned its old shops. Conceiving that its new shops were exempt from taxation for local purposes for five years, it refused to pay same, and this litigation is the outgrowth of such refusal. The case was tried out before Hon. Shackelford Miller, Judge of the Jefferson Circuit Court, 'First Chancery Division. The facts are accurately stated by him and the conclusion reached so perfectly in accord with our views that his opinion is adopted as the opinion of this court. It is, as follows:

“To this action by the City of Louisville to recover City taxes regularly assessed against the new shops of the defendant Railroad Company for the years 1905 and 1906, there is interposed the single defense of exemption. Sec. 170 of the Constitution reads as follows:
“ 'The General Assembly may authorize any incorporated city or town to exempt manufacturing establishments from municipal taxation, for a period not exceeding five years, as an inducement to their location. ’
“The act of 1898 amending the charter of cities of the first class, and passed pursuant to the constitutional authority above quoted, provides as follows:
“ ‘The General Council shall have power by ordinance to exempt from municipal taxation, for a period not exceeding five years, manufacturing establishments, as an inducement to their location, within the city limits. ’
“(Ky. Sts. Sec. 2980 A.)
“Acting under this authority, the General Council of the City of Louisville, in 1898, adopted an ordinance, the essential portion thereof reading as follows:
“ ‘That in order to induce the location of more manufacturing establishments within the city limits, any such establishments, owned and operated by any person, firm, or corporation, which shall have been, after the passage of the act authorizing this ordinance, permanently located and conducted within the limits of the City of Louisville, shall be and the same is hereby exempted for a period of five years after such location and the commencement of the business of manufacturing thereat, from all taxation whatever by the City of Louisville, on all property, real or personal, tangible or intangible, owned, employed and used by such person, firm or corporation, in conducting the business of such manufacturing establishment, and which would otherwise be subject to city taxation. ’
“For many years prior to 1905 the defendant company had maintained its principal repair and construe[260]*260tion shops at Tenth and Maple Streets in Louisville, in which it employed more than 1400 men. As early as 1881 the defendant began to acquire land in South Louisville, some three miles distant from the old shops, for the purpose of ultimately building new shops thereon. In 1902 it had acquired and then owned 131 acres at that point, for which it had paid $117,555.20, exclusive of $155,514.46 which it had expended in constructing interchange and terminal yards, roundhouse, coal bins, station, offices, etc., upon said land. As early as 1886 steps were taken by the officers of the defendant, and plans were then made for new shops to be erected upon the new site in South Louisville. Finding that the ground then owned by the company in South Louisville was insufficient for the purpose, the defendant subsequently bought sixty acres of land between 1890 and 1901. From time to time, from 1880 to 1902, as appears from the President’s letter of August 11, 1902, to the chairman of defendant’s board of directors, more or less consideration had been given to the perfection of plans for the new shops. And in February, 1902, the general manager of defendant, as told in President Smith’s letter, caused the ‘work of preparing and perfecting plans to be seriously entered upon with the view of constructing the shops at an early date. ’ The completed plans showed the estimated cost of the new shops to be $2,114,694.00; and by a resolution of the defendant’s board of directors, adopted on August 1, 1902, the President of defendánt company was authorized to proceed with the construction of the new shops at South Louisville in accordance with the plans and estimate above referred to, which had been submitted to and approved by the board of directors.' The President promptly carried out the instructions of his board, and the new shops were occupied about June, 1905. The old shops at Tenth and Maple streets were abandoned, and practically all of the old machinery was disposed of as scrap iron. Only a small part of the best of the old machinery was removed to the new shops where it was used in inferior work. The new shops were of the latest and most improved model, and are operated by electric power, and because of that fact, — the character of the old shops,— it was impossible to use any substantial part of the old machinery in the new shops. It'also became necessary to employ about 150 mechanics from other cities to operate the new machinery, although the defendant com-tinued in its service all of its old mechanics who desired [261]*261to continue, and who could adapt themselves to the new conditions. The number of men employed in the new shops has varied from 2100 to 3100; and, with one exception, the character of the work done in the new shops, does not differ materially from that done in the old shops; the new shops build locomotives while the old shop had abandoned that work many years ago. Both shops built freight and passenger cars; did brass work and flaging; made castings and frogings; prepared woodwork for use in repairing and building cars; and both had boiler shops, machine shops, pattern shops, and foundaries.
“As is aptly stated by one of the officers of the defendant company, ‘the difference is altogether one of convenience and capacity.’ The new shops do more work and better work and at a lower cost, but the character of the work of the new shops is substantially the same as that turned out by the old shops. The one is a mere enlargement and improvement over the other. Do these facts warrant the exemption of the new shops from taxation under the Constitution, statute, and ordinance above quoted?
“It should be borne in mind, that inasmuch as the Constitution requires a uniformity of taxation upon all property, exemptions fr®m taxation are, like other cases of special privileges, to be strictly construed. Trustees of M. E. Church v. Ellis, 38 Ind. 3; State v. Mills, 34 N. J. 177; Nashville R. R. Co. v. Hodges, 7 Lea, 663; Railway Co. v. Philadelphia, 101 U. S. 528; and cases cited in Cooley’s ‘Constitutional Limitations’, 7th ed. p. 396. Note 2 German Bank v. City of Louisville, 108 Ky. 383.
“The question has been considered by the Court of Appeals in the two cases of the Mengel Box Company v. City of Louisville, 117 Ky. 735, and the Continental Tobacco Co. v. City of Louisville, 128 Ky. 173.
“In the Mengel case the court sustained the exemption upon the sole ground that the old company had gone out of business before the new corporation was formed (p.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 611, 143 Ky. 258, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1911.