Louisville Title Mortgage Co. v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Commission

184 S.W.2d 963, 299 Ky. 224, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1041
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 10, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 963 (Louisville Title Mortgage Co. v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville Title Mortgage Co. v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 184 S.W.2d 963, 299 Ky. 224, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1041 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

*225 Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Reversing.

The case involves the important question of the status or rank of a lien on property to secure the payment of an employer’s “contributions” to the Unemployment Insurance Fund, 'the contributions being regarded as an excise tax. Kentucky Revised Statutes 341.010 et sep.; 42 U. S. C. A. secs. 1004, 1101; Shaw v. Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Commission, 297 Ky. 815, 181 S. W. 2d 697; 48 Am. Jur., Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, etc., secs. 4, 32. The trial court adjudged the Unemployment Compensation Commission to have such lien, first and prior to all liens except those securing State, County and City ad valorem taxes, with which it was placed as of equal rank. The claim of the Commission, which sues as relator of, the Commonwealth, rests upon the specific terms of the Unemployment Compensation Statutes and the statutes relating to liens for taxes generally. The judgment is for $1,946.48, being the aggregate of sums due over the course of five years and penalties thereon. Because both the statutes of general and particular application were amended several times during the period, it is necessary that each of them be considered somewhat separately.

The appellant, P. A. Goodman, became subject to the Unemployment Compensation Law as an employer when .it first became operative or effective on January 1, 1937. Chapter 7, Acts of the Fourth Extraordinary Session of 1936-37. He purchased and received a conveyance of. the property in which he conducted his business, and that upon which the tax lien is adjudged, on April 3, 1937. It.was subject to a vendor’s lien which is now owned by the .appellant, Louisville Title Mortgage Company. The first of the contributions did not become due and payable until August 31,1937. The last are for the quarter ending December 31, 1941.

The first Unemployment Compensation Act (Act of 1936, supra) provided for the collection of the contributions with penalties by civil suit after notice, but did not declare a lien on the employer’s property as security. It did provide that in case of distribution of the employer’s assets pursuant to an order of court by reason of insolvency or a similar condition, the claim of the Commission should be paid in full “prior to all other claims except taxes but on a parity with claims for *226 wages,” as described, and prior awards under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Section 14 (c). The claim of a lien for the period during which this Act was operative (which was until March 5, 1938) does not rest upon that Act but rests upon Chapter 21, Section 9, enacted at the same Fourth Extraordinary Session- of 1936 (effective January 18, 1937; Section 4257a-7, Kentucky Statutes, 1939 Supplement), which declared that the Commonwealth shall have a lien superior to all other liens upon all property of every kind owned by the taxpayer at the time the property or he “becomes subject to the tax, for any property tax, license tax, inheritance or estate tax, excise tax or income tax against which no exemptions shall be pleaded. ’ ’

This entire chapter deals with the collection by the Department of Revenue of taxes generally or upon omitted assessments of property. According to the title,, it repealed and amended sections of the statutes relating to revenue agents and the retroactive assessment and collection of delinquent taxes by the Department of Revenue. It did not purport to amend Section 4021, Kentucky Statutes, which gave to the “Commonwealth, and each county, incorporated city, town or taxing district” a lien for five years on property assessed for taxes due them respectively. It is true there is a general blanket provision in Section 10 of the 1936 Act that “All laws or parts of laws in conflict hereby (sic) are repealed.” But this cannot be construed to have such far-reaching effect as to place in lien every species of property owned by a taxpayer for every species of tax, particularly for unemployment compensation contributions or tax, which was then dealt with in another statute, complete in itself, and made collectible both when due and when delinquent by the Unemployment Compensation Commission and not by the Department of Revenue. By not lodging the duty of collecting these contributions in the Revenue Department the legislature recognized that, though regarded as an excise tax, it is of a peculiar character, being for a special insurance fund for the security of specified classes of employees.

This construction of nonapplicability of the general statute is fortified by the later enactment of Chapter 180 of the Acts of 1940, which did repeal and re-enact Section 4021 of the Statutes and otherwise made an. elaborate revision of the tax collecting statutes. Section *227 4021, Kentucky Statutes, 1941 Supplement. In it the powers and duties of local officers and the Department of Revenue are defined. This Act repealed,, amended and re-enacted Section 9 of Chapter 21 of the Fourth Extraordinary Session of 1936, Section 4257a-7, Kentucky Statutes Supp. 1939, quoted above. It did specify: “The Commonwealth shall have a lien of equal rank and dignity to the lien provided in section 2 of this Act on all property of a taxpayer who owes any property tax, license tax, inheritance or estate tax, excise tax, income tax, or other tax, when such taxes are not included in or covered by the lien provided in section 2 of this Act; Said lien shall accrue at the time the liability becomes fixed. The Department of Revenue may file notice of same with the- county court clerk of any county where the taxpayer has property, giving the name of the taxpayer, his address, and the amount of the lien. The clerk shall file same in the same manner as lis pendens are filed, and the file shall be designated ‘Miscellaneous State Tax Liens. ’ The notice, when so filed, shall be constructive notice to all persons of the lien on the property having a legal situs in that county, except that nothing in this Act shall be construed to alter or change in any way the law relative to the rights and duties of a holder in due course as provided in sections 3720b-l to 3720c, Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, Baldwin’s 1936 Revision, or affect the rights of any person taking the property or a lien thereon for value without actual or constructive notice. ’ ’

It is to be noted that Section 2 of the amendatory Act (Section 4021, Kentucky Statutes, 1941 Supplement) referred only to the assessment of property and only to the duties of the Department of Revenue. That the broad language of Section 9, Chapter 21, Acts of 1936, declaring a superior lien, without qualification upon all property for “any property tax, license tax, inheritance or estate tax, excise tax or income tax” was never intended to put the lien in the same category as ad valorem property taxes is made apparent by the qualification added in the 1940 Act. Section 20 (Section 4257a-7, Kentucky Statutes, 1941 Supplement) made the liens for other taxes of equal dignity but protected a bona fide or innocent purchaser or “a holder in due course” until the notice of the lien should be filed “in the same manner as lis pendens are filed. ’ ’

*228 The 1940 Act was re-enacted in 1942 in two sections in the adoption of the Kentucky Revised Statutes, namely, 132.290 and 134.420.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 963, 299 Ky. 224, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-title-mortgage-co-v-commonwealth-ex-rel-unemployment-kyctapphigh-1944.