People v. Central Los Caños

35 P.R. 27
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
DocketNo. 3762
StatusPublished

This text of 35 P.R. 27 (People v. Central Los Caños) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Central Los Caños, 35 P.R. 27 (prsupreme 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Audrey

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 24, 1924, The People of Porto Rico brought an action against Central Los Caños, a domestic corporation organized in accordance with our laws and engaged in the business of manufacturing sugar, to recover, under Act No. 1 of August 27, 1923, taxes amounting to $3,408.24 on 85,206 Quintals of sugar manufactured in its factory from January 32, 1924, to April 30, 1924. at the rate of 4 cents per quintal.

[28]*28The defendant admitted the allegations of the plaintiff, hut denied that it had a legal obligation to pay the taxes sned •for or any other taxes under the said act. Therefore, the issue between the parties was only a question of law and the trial court decided it against the defendant, adjudging that it should pay the amount claimed.

The defendant appealed from that judgment and the appeal was heard in this court on December 7, 1925, but the additional briefs allowed by the court were not filed by the parties until the 14th of that month.

The grounds alleged for reversal of the judgment rendered in this case are as follows:

“I. That the court erred in not holding that the tax imposed by subdivision 14 of section 20 of the Excise Tax Law of 1923 is unconstitutional, because it is a property tax and is not uniform as required by our Organic Act, inasmuch as it is a special tax on sugar and leaves other property free and exempt from the said tax.
“II. That the court erred in not declaring void and unconsti-tional the tax imposed by subdivision 14 of section 20 of the said Excise Tax Law, because it is discriminative and is imposed on the factory although the sugar cane from which the sugar is manufactured may belong to planters who are free from this tax.
‘ ‘ III. That the court erred in not holding that in accordance with the said Excise Tax Law sugar manufactured for export and actually exported may be manufactured free from the tax imposed by said subdivision 14 of section 20 of the law.
“IV. That the court erred in not adjudging null and void the tax imposed by subdivision 14 of section 20 of the Excise Tax Law if it is considered as an excise tax, ina'smuch as the defendant had already paid to the municipality of Areeibo a tax for engaging in the same industry to which the tax imposed by said subdivision 14 refers.”

These assignments of error may be summarized as follows: (1) That the tax is a property tax and is not uniform; (2) that it is not imposed on all owners of sugar — a discrimination; ' (3) that it is imposed on an article manufactured for export and actually exported; (4) that it is a double tax.

Our Legislature enacted in subsection 14 of section 20 of [29]*29Act No. 68 of July 28, 1923, the following: “That there shall be levied, collected and paid, for one time only, as an internal-revenue tax on each of the following articles:

* * * 14. — Sugar.-—On every hundredweight of sugar produced, manufactured or consumed in Porto Rico, a tax of four (4) cents; Provided, That said tax shall be required and collected by the Treasurer at the same factories where the sugar is produced or manufactured and before it is placed on the market.”

A month later, or on August 27, 1923, the Legislature, in a special session, amended said subsection 14 to read as follows: “Every factory producing or manufacturing sugar in Porto Rico shall he assessed a manufacturing charge of four (4) cents on each hundredweight of sugar manufactured or produced; Provided, That said tax shall be required and collected by the Treasury at the factories themselves where the sugar is produced or manufactured and before it is placed on the market.” This amendment took effect on the said date of its approval.

Notwithstanding the fact that the said amendment of August 27, 1923, takes the place of the amended subsection and, to all intents and purposes, forms a part of the act as if the amendment had been there from the beginning, as said by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Blair v. City of Chicago, 201 U. S. 400, and notwithstanding the fact also that it is sought to collect the tax on sugar manufactured after the amendment of August 27, 1923, went into effect, yet the first ground of appeal is not that the tax imposed by the amendment is unlawful, but that the tax imposed by the amended Act of July 28, 1923, is unlawful because it is imposed on the ownership of the sugar and for that' reason should be uniform.

Whether before being amended subsection 14 imposed a lax on property is a question that need not be decided now, because the action is not based on it, but on the act which [30]*30amended it. 'The question now is whether the tax imposed hy the amendment of August, 1923, is a property tax or an excise tax.'

The said amendment does not impose a tax on commodities and does not provide for its collection from the owners of sugar, but imposes the tax on the factories for their industry of transforming sugar cane into sugar, and as it is imposed on this business of manufacturing,. it. is clearly an excise tax and is lawful, because it is imposed on all factories that manufacture sugar and our Legislature has the power to impose excise taxes, a fact which the appellant does not deny.

Considering the clear language of the amendment showing the intention of the Legislature, the fact that the general part of section 20 providing that “there shall be levied, collected and paid, for one time only, as an internal-revenue lax on each of the following articles,” was not amended does rot preclude the conclusion that the tax is an excise tax and not a property tax.

The second ground of appeal is also untenable, for, the tax being an excise tax on the business or industry of manufacturing sugar, those who engage in it are those who have to pay the tax, although the sugar cane from which the sugar is manufactured may belong to other persons. The tax is imposed on the factories for their industry of converting’ sugar cane into sugar, and the cane delivered by the planters to the factory is not ground by them but by the factory engaged in that business.

The third ground of appeal, as we have said, is based on the proposition that as the sugar was manufactured for export it should not pay the excise tax. It is argued in this connection that inasmuch as sections 43 and 51 of the Act of July, 1923, supra, provide that articles subject to taxation in accordance with the act shall be exempt from taxation when exported from Porto Pico and that any article [31]*31taxable thereunder may be removed from the factory without paying the tax tbereon wben sueb article leaves said factory to be stored in a bonded warehouse, and that it may be withdrawn from such bonded warehouse for consumption in Porto Rico upon payment of the proper tax, or for export free of taxation; that inasmuch as the said two sections were not amended by the Act of August 27th, and that sugar is manufactured in Porto Rico almost entirely for export to the United States, the court should have held the sugar manufactured by the defendant exempt from the payment of the tax because it was intended for export and was actually exported to the United States.

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Related

Blair v. City of Chicago
201 U.S. 400 (Supreme Court, 1906)
Commonwealth v. Hillside Cemetery Co.
32 A. 404 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.R. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-central-los-canos-prsupreme-1926.