Marson v. Philadelphia

21 A.2d 228, 342 Pa. 369, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 1941
DocketAppeal, 208
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 228 (Marson v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marson v. Philadelphia, 21 A.2d 228, 342 Pa. 369, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 537 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The question to be decided is whether the City of Philadelphia can levy a tax upon the salaries of officers and employees of the Commonwealth.

The appellant is an employee of the Department of Public Assistance, an agency of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, engaged in the performance of governmental functions. She is required to reside in Philadelphia. She brought a bill in equity praying that the court issue an injunction restraining appellees from collecting taxes on her income and on the income of others similarly situated.

Section 1 of the so-called “Sterling Act” of August 5, 1932, P. L. 45, empowers the City of Philadelphia to levy taxes on “persons, transactions, occupations, privilege's, subjects and personal property, within the .limits of such city. ...” Pursuant to the authority thus given, the City in an ordinance approved December 13, 1939, provided, inter alia, in section 2 for a tax of one and one-half per cent annually on “(a) salaries, wages, commissions and other compensation earned after January 1, 1940, by residents of Philadelphia; and (b)' salaries, wages, commissions, and other compensation earned after January 1, 1940,- by non-residents in Philadelphia for work done or services performed or rendered in Philadelphia.” Section 10 provides that the ordinance shall not apply to any person or property as to whom or which it is beyond the power of City Council to impose the tax or duties provided for in the ordinance.

Appellant contends that because the “Sterling Act” failed to specify employees of the State as being subject *371 to the. tax they are thérefore excluded. The court below held that the language-of the “Sterling-Act” was -so “comprehensive and all- embracing as to” include the appellant and all others similarly situated, and that the tax applied to State employees residing in Philadelphia-.

The question is primarily one of interpretation. The “Statutory Construction Act”-of May 28, 1937, P; L. 1019, sec. 51, at page 1023, provides, inter alia: “The object Of all interpretation and construction of laws is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the Legislature. . , .. When the words of a law are clear and free from all ambiguity, the letter of it is not to be disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” This is a statutory expression of an established canon of interpretation. 25 E. C. L. p. 962, sec. 217, says: “. . . The statute must be given its plain and obvious meaning”" (citing U. S. v. Plowman, 216 U. S. 372, and decisions of the-highest courts of many states).

When the City of Philadelphia by its ordinance- imposed a. tax on the salaries, wages, commissions and other compensation earned after January 1, 1940, by “residents of Philadelphia,” it clearly meant a7Z residents of that city.

It is the contention of appellant that “if' the traditional rule of governmental immunity is still the law in Pennsylvania, the result must be that no municipality in this State cán levy a tax upon the salaries of officers and employees of the Commonwealth.” The “governmental immunity” invoked is based on a principle applicable only to the taxing relations of the Federal and State Governments. There is a doctrine Of implied limitation of the power of the federal government to tax a state or any' of its instrumentalities, and of the power of any state to tax the federal government or any of its-- instrumentalities. The doctrine stems from McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, and has frequently received judicial recognition. In Metcalf & Eddy v. Mitchell, 269 U. S. 514 (1926) , the Supreme Court of *372 the United States referred to “those decisions holding that the very nature of our constitutional system of dual sovereign, government is such as impliedly to prohibit the federal government from taxing the instrumentalities of a state government, and in a similar manner to limit the power of the states to tax the instrumentalities of the federal government. . . . This court has repeatedly held that those agencies through which either government immediately and directly exercises its sovereign powers, are immune from the taxing power of the other.” That court cited as examples, of these, states’ or municipalities’ “obligations sold to raise public funds” (citing Weston v. The City Council of Charleston, 2 Pet. 449; Pollack v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, 157 U. S. 429), “investments of public funds in the securities of private corporations, for public purposes (United States v. Railroad Co., 17 Wall. 322), surety bonds exacted by it,in the exercise of its police power (Ambrosini v. U. S., 187 U. S. 1),” as being “all so intimately connected with the necessary functions of government, as to fall within the established exemption; and when the instrumentality is of that character, the immunity extends not only to the instrumentality itself but to income derived from it.” 1

*373 The'reason why the foregoing principle does not apply to the instant case is that here there are no competing claims between state and nation. Furthermore, the State of Pennsylvania is not crippled in Its governmental activities by this tax. If it finds itself so crippled, it can take from the City of Philadelphia at any time the authority to tax any of the city’s residents who are employees of the government of Pennsylvania. The only power that Philadelphia has to impose any tax on its residents is the power the state gives it in the “Sterling Act.” Repeal this act and the power vanishes and the tax falls.

• Cooley on Taxation, 4th ed., Vol. 1, sec. 125, says: “The municipal corporations of a state having no in *374 herent. power to tax must take such power as is conferred under the conditions and limitations that may he prescribed, and only for such purposes as may be expressed. This is fundamental. The power to tax, where delegated by the legislature to a municipality or other local subdivision, is confined to the subjects of taxation enumerated in the delegation of power, and also to the purposes designated in such delegation. . . . Municipal authorities . . . are to assume that they can tax only as the state in its wisdom has thought proper to permit, and if the state has erred in the direction of strictness, the legislature alone can correct the evil.”

In Passenger Railway Co. v. Pittsburg, 226 Pa. 419, 75 A. 662, this court said: “While taxation is an incident of sovereignty absolutely necessary to maintain government, the authority to impose taxes depends upon express legislative grant and not upon incidental governmental power. There is no such thing as taxation by implication. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
21 A.2d 228, 342 Pa. 369, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marson-v-philadelphia-pa-1941.