Opinion of the Justices

137 A.2d 726, 101 N.H. 549, 1958 N.H. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 16, 1958
DocketNo. 4639
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 137 A.2d 726 (Opinion of the Justices) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion of the Justices, 137 A.2d 726, 101 N.H. 549, 1958 N.H. LEXIS 72 (N.H. 1958).

Opinion

[553]*553The following answer was returned:

To His Excellency the Governor and the Honorable Council:

The undersigned Justices of the Supreme Court make the following answers to the inquiries contained in your resolution filed December 16, 1957, pertaining to the levying of taxes upon gas and electric utilities at the state level.

The resolution states in part that you “are in need of judicial advice on the applicable constitutional law in this field in order properly to determine whether it is wise and practical ... to convene the General Court in Special Session for the above-stated objective.”

As is evident from this resolution, determination of the question before the Governor and Council for decision involves considerations which are practical as well as those which relate specifically to constitutional limitations upon the power to tax. The questions of the wisdom or practicality of legislation which might be recommended or adopted to replace the statute held unconstitutional in Public Service Co. v. State, 101 N. H. 154, are not matters of judicial concern. However to the extent that our opinions upon “important questions of law” (Const., Pt. II, Art. 74th) presented by your inquiries may be of aid in the performance of your constitutional duties (Opinion of the Justices, 79 N. H. 535), we deem it proper to answer, for reasons stated in the last paragraph of this opinion.

In expressing our opinions upon the constitutional issues, we are compelled to qualify our answers because of the generality of the inquiries and the absence of any proposed or existing statutory form such as customarily accompanies like inquiries from either branch of the Legislature or the Governor and Council. “It should be understood that we arc not foreclosing any questions that may arise in the actual operation of [any proposed] act which may not [554]*554be apparent . . . under the questions submitted.” Opinion of the Justices, 97 N. H. 533, 540.

Viewed broadly the questions posed by the resolution seek definition of fundamental constitutional limitations upon any proposal to substitute for RSA ch. 83, a new statute taxing the franchises of gas and electric utilities as property in ownership, according to some new method of valuation; or in the alternative imposing a special tax measured by income derived from the exercise of such franchises, and having characteristics differing from those of a general property tax.

1. The answer to your first inquiry depends upon the interpretation to be placed upon it. If by “ad valorem property tax” is meant a “general property tax” based upon the ownership of franchises as property, and a tax of the sort which has consistently been regarded as a tax upon “estates” (Const., Pt. II, Art. 6th), our answer to the question is that a tax upon the franchises of gas and electric utilities need not take the form of an ad valorem property tax for reasons which are more fully stated in the answers hereinafter made to questions 6 through 8. Accordingly our answer to question 1 is “no.”

2 & 3. Your second and third questions suggest that the first question is intended to describe a general property tax levied because of ownership or possession of a franchise. This was the type of tax considered in Opinion of the Justices, 82 N. H. 561, and Opinion of the Justices, 84 N. H. 559. It has the characteristics of a tax upon estates, even though upon intangible property rather than property tangible in nature. So construed, your second and third questions present the issues of whether such a state tax must be levied at the average rate of taxation in cities and towns throughout the state (cf. RSA 82:2) and whether franchises must be assessed in the same proportion to full value as property is assessed in such cities and towns. Our answer to questions 2 and 3 is “no.” Boston, Concord &c. Railroad v. State, 60 N. H. 87; Wyatt v. Board of Equalization, 74 N. H. 552.

Article 5th, Part Second, of our Constitution requires that taxes shall be proportional and reasonable. This requires a uniform valuation and a uniform rate throughout the district by which the tax is levied. Boston, Concord &c. Railroad v. State, supra, 95. In other words a state tax must be uniform throughout the state, a county tax throughout the county, a town tax throughout the town. Id. Consequently if the State as a taxing district levies an [555]*555ad valorem property tax on the franchises of gas and electric utilities the Constitution does not require that this tax be levied at the average rate of taxation upon property in the cities and towns throughout the state, or that the franchises be valued in the same proportion to full value as the valuation of property in the cities and towns throughout the state bears to its full and true value. See Amoskeag Mfg. Co. v. Manchester, 70 N. H. 336.

It should be noted however that the tax currently imposed upon railroads by RSA ch. 82, supra, is in the nature of a,general property tax at the state level, and by legislative provision is presently levied at “the average rate of taxation . . . upon other property throughout the state.” S. 2. Since the tax suggested by your questions 2 and 3 would be a tax of the same class within the same taxing district, if the Legislature should decide to levy both taxes simultaneously, it would be necessary that the two taxes conform both in rate and mode of valuation. Bemis &c. Bag Co. v. Claremont, 98 N. H. 446, 451.

4 & 5. Questions 4 and 5 present the issue of whether the Legislature may provide by statute that the value of a utility franchise for purposes of a general property tax shall be determined according to formulae outlined by the questions. Whether the value of a utility franchise as property may reasonably be determined according to formulae some terms of which are undefined, depends upon information not presently before us, involving factual considerations, and the operation of economic principles upon them. Under these circumstances, we ask to be excused from answering questions 4 and 5.

6 & 7. Questions 6 and 7 in some respects may conveniently be considered together, since each proposes a tax to be measured by “net operating income” at a rate differing from that of the tax currently imposed upon dividends and interest by RSA ch. 77. Question 6 appears to relate to a general property tax or tax upon estates,, while question 7 clearly relates to a different type of tax.

If we correctly interpret question 6 as referring to a general property tax to be levied upon franchises as property in ownership, then such a tax would need to bear no relation to the tax imposed by RSA ch. 77, which is an income tax by virtue of the amendment adopted in 1955. RSA 77:1 as amended by Laws 1955, c. 309, s. 1. See Opinion of the Justices, 99 N. H. 512. The tax suggested by question 6 would however be subject to the constitutional limitations which apply to general property taxes.

[556]*556We express no opinion as to the effect of the assumption suggested by question 6 that the value of a franchise as the subject of a general property tax is proportional to net income or net operating income, since the economic facts upon which the validity of such an assumption would rest are not before us.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A.2d 726, 101 N.H. 549, 1958 N.H. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-of-the-justices-nh-1958.