Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Marshall County

30 S.W.2d 268, 161 Tenn. 236, 8 Smith & H. 236, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 54
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 268 (Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Marshall County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Marshall County, 30 S.W.2d 268, 161 Tenn. 236, 8 Smith & H. 236, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 54 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

v

The bill was filed to enjoin a levy of a tax for general County purposes by the County Court of Marshall in excess of the twenty (20) cent maximum authorized by the general revenue act of 1927. The constitutionality of Chapter 873, Private Acts of 1929, which authorized Marshall County, designated by population, to levy a tax for general County purposes up to a maximum of thirty-five (35) cents, is attacked as special legislation affecting this County only, inconsistent with the general law applicable to all counties of the State, and in violation of Section 8, Art. XI, Section 8, Art. I, Sections 28 and 29, Art. II, of the State Constitution, and amendment XIV of the Federal Constitution. The Chancellor overruled these objections to the private Act of 1929 and dismissed the bill. Complainants have appealed, assigning errors based on the grounds stated.

Appellants emphasize, first, the ^historically indicated legislative policy of the state of uniformity in conferring a maximum authority upon the counties to levy taxes for general county purposes. However this may be, it must be conceded that the legislative power is not cut off by the adoption or following of any given policy in legislation. Every new General Assembly-is a law unto itself, within constitutional limitations only. This showing of legislative policy would seem to be pertinent only in construction of any ambiguity in the Act of 1929, under attack, and no ambiguity exists. The Act, clearly captioned,! expressly authorizes the Quarterly *240 County Court to levy and collect an annual tax for general County purposes not to exceed thirty-five (35) cents on each $100 of taxable property in the County, and further provides that “this authority shall exist in the Quarterly County Court regardless of the amount of such taxes authorized to be levied and collected by. the general revenue law of the State, or otherwise.” The purpose of the Legislature could hardly be made plainer, including expressly the intent to take the County affected out from under the application of the general revenue law. May this be constitutionally done?

We do not conceive it to be controverted that by special legislation, (1) Counties may be empowered to make levies of taxes for special purposes, and (2) municipal corporations of towns and cities may be empowered to make levies of taxes for special, or general, purposes; that as to all such the constitutional requirements of uniformity, either in classification or taxation, do not apply.

The logic of the argument offered to distinguish the power of the Legislature to authorize by special act a county to levy a tax in a particular amount for general purposes, from the power to authorize by such legislation levies for specially designated purposes, - does not clearly appear; nor does it appear how, in this regard, the conceded power of the Legislature to so deal specially and particularly with municipal corporations generally, is to be distinguished from its power to so deal with counties, long legally recognized, both by statute (Sec. 402 of the Code) and our decisions, as of a municipal character. “The County is idealized as a corporate body, represented by the justices, who occupy the relation of directors, exercising powers regulated by law. State v. Anderson, 8 Bax., 255 ; Gramt v. Lindsay, 11 Heisk., 666. Through the County Court thus constituted the county, *241 in its municipal character as a corporation, acts and is acted upon.” State ex rel. v. Read, 152 Tenn., 442. “A county, under our law, is a corporation; the citizens are the corporators.; the county court, the agency through which this mortal immortal acts and speaks and has its being. . . . The county is also a municipal body, and as such is an arm or instrument of the State, to carry out purposes of government.” Redistricting cases, 111 Tenn., at page 255.

In the first place, the mere designation of the specific direction which a fund raised by the tax authorized to be imposed is to’ take, does not appear to distinguish it fundamentally, in respect to the constitutional power to legislate specially, from the authority to levy the tax for general purposes without specific designation. Both to the same extent violate the principle here sought to be applied of uniformity as among the counties of the State. Both confer powers to tax on a given County, not conferred on all others.

And, in the second place, the principle is as applicable to counties as to municipalities. Both are arms of the State, alike governmental agencies on which the State may confer governmental functions, to such extent and with such restrictions as may seem to the Legislature demanded by their several corporate needs.

Touching the power of the Legislature to enact special laws affecting municipal corporations, in Furnace v. Railroad, 113 Tenn., at page 722, it was said:

‘ ‘ Since the case of State v. Wilson, 12 Lea, 246, it has been the settled law of this State that special legislation as to municipal corporations is not within the inhibition of Article SI, Section 8, of the Constitution of 1870. Since the opinion in that case (its conclusion being reaffirmed in Ballentine v. Pulaski, 15 Lea, 636), many acts *242 of the Legislature dealing* with particular municipal corporations have been passed, some of which have been before this Court, and the authority of these two cases has been uniformly recognized.” Citing Williams v. Nashville, 89 Tenn., 487, and other cases.

In Quinn v. Hester, 135 Tenn., 374, in which the validity of a private act was challeng’ed as in violation of Sec. 8, Art. XI of the Constitution, in that its provisions were inconsistent with the general school law, after observing that this section has no application to special legislation for municipal corporations, the Court, proceeded:

“This school district is not a municipal corporation under our cases in the sense that it can be authorized to impose taxes. As said of the levee district, however, in Reelfoot Lake Levee District v. Dawson, supra, it is clearly not a private corporation. It is, as said of the county in State ex rel. v. Cummings, 130 Tenn., 566, 172 S. W., 290, L. R. A., 1915D, 274, ‘but an emanation from the State.
‘ ‘Like a municipal corporation, this school district is a mere arm or instrumentality of the government, ‘created exclusively for public purposes, subject to the unlimited control of the Legislature. ’ State v. Wilson, supra.

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30 S.W.2d 268, 161 Tenn. 236, 8 Smith & H. 236, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-chattanooga-st-louis-railway-v-marshall-county-tenn-1930.