Priest v. State Tax Commission

80 S.W.2d 43, 258 Ky. 391, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 174
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 15, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 43 (Priest v. State Tax 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
Priest v. State Tax Commission, 80 S.W.2d 43, 258 Ky. 391, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 174 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The 'appellants and plaintiffs below are engaged in different sections of the commonwealth in the business •of private carriers of freight for compensation and which is conducted through the operation of motor vehicle trucks upon the public highways. They are not *392 common carrions, since they do not operate exclusively between fixed termini nor with schedule nates of charges ■ior on schedule time. The trucks employed by them, according to the 'admitted facts in the record, do not exceed 5,500' pounds in weight when empty.

’Our Legislature at its-1932 regular session enacted chapter 104, p. 514, of the Session Acts of that year (Ky. Stat. Supp. 1933, see. 2739j-42 et seq.), which was and is a statute' “regulating and governing the transportation for hire of persons and property by motor vehicles on public highways,” etc. Its section 26 (on page 534 of the Session Acts, ¡art. 4, and now section 2739-94 of the 1933 Baldwin’s Supplement)’ exempts from thei exactions of the act four classes of motor vehicles which would otherwise be burdened with them. The third class of such exempted operations was thus phrased: “Motor vehicles for hire, designed primarily for the transportation of property, provided such motor vehicles, when unloaded, weigh not more than fifty-five hundred pounds,” and which under the stated facts would exempt plaintiffs from the impositions of the statute.

The Legislature at its 1934 session amended that and other .sections of the 1932 act by enacting chapter 103, p. 489, of the Session Acts of that year, and substituted for exemption “Three” of the 1932 act (page 492) this one: “Motor Vehicles transporting* Yarm products, including dairy products .and live stock, from the farm to point of destination, or from any point to the farm, by way of the shortest practicable route. ’ ’ It was immediately followed by this: “But if this clause should be declared by the courts to be unconstitutional, then it is thei intention of the legislature that the present section two thousand seven hundred thirty-nine j-ninety-four [2739j-94] exempting truck of loaded capacity of five thousand five hundred pounds shall remain and be in force.” That exemption, it will be observed, had the effect to bring the motortrucks operated by plaintiffs within the provisions of the 1932 .act. if and when •they transported freight therein oyer the public roads .(of the commonwealth other than “farm products, including dairy products and live stock, from the farm to point of destination, or from any point to the farm, by way of the shortest practicable route-. ’ ’ None of them were ior are exclusively engaged in transporting the latter class of freight which the statute requires they *393 ■should do in order to be 'entitled to the exemption; and they brought this action against the state tax commission, its members, and other enforcement officers to enjoin them from prosecuting plaintiffs for failing to comply with the provisions of the 1932 act, and alleged as one ground therefor that it, as amended by the 1934 act, was and is invalid because in contravention with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States in denying plainiffs “the equal protection of the laws” which that amendment guarantees' to all citizens. Plaintiffs therefore averred that the 1934 exemption arbitrarily and unreasonably discriminates between them .and similar transporters who carry and transport for hire only the class of products and commodities mentioned in exemptiota. 3 of that act.

The pleadings in the case were ¡so framed as to properly present that question for determination, and, since we have concluded that the ground of attack stated is well taken, we will neither mention nor refer to any of the others relied ion. The court adjudged that exemption 3 in the 1934 ¡act did not contravene any provision of either the federal or state Constitution and dismissed the petition, to reverse which plaintiffs prosecute this appeal. Introductory to our discussion of that decisive question, we1 would first direct attention to the fact that exemption 3 in the attacked 1934 act is not directed to the farmer in the transportation of his farm products with his truck to the. initial market, or articles or products that he may transport in the .same way from the market to his farm. If the exemption had been so framed, it would have been valid, at least on one ground, i. e., that the statute in which the1 exemption is found applies to carriers “for hir©,” as is expressly stated in both the title to' and body of the 1932 act, of which the 1934 one is an amendment.

A farmer as a carrier of his own product in his own truck, or one procured by him for1 the purpose, would not, while so hauling for himself, be engaged in transporting goods or articles “for hire.” But no such case is presented to us. The attacked exemption applies to all .such carriers for hire when transporting to market for the commodities named therein for the class of person who produces them or for whoise benefit they are carried to him from the market; i. e., the farmer.

*394 The attacked exemption here does not even confine the transporting of the products named in it as one for the benefit of the farmer in marketing them, since the language is broad enough to and does embrace the transporting of such commodities “from the farm to point of destination,” which may be done for the benefit and at the instance iof -some one who has purchased them from the farmer and desires their transportation to any point he. wishes, and which would be their destination as named in the 'exemption. The distance of the transportation is not attempted to be measured by the language employed, and the same is true with reference to the commodities that may be transported to the farm from any point away from it, howsoever -distant, except that th-ei trips be made “by way of the shortest practicable route,” which, however, would in all probability be followed, though not 'Contained in the statute, since it embodies a universally observed businesslike and practical course of -conduct. So that, in its last analysis, the exemption applies to a transporter for hire of the commodities -embraced therein from and- to the farm.

All of the courts in this country, both federal and '-state, with one accord declare that it i-s competent (unless prohibited by some constitutional provision) for legislation to- make classifications for both police and taxation purposes; but with equal accord they also declare that such classification when made -shall have some reasonable basis upon which to rest and not a mere arbitrarily declared one with no factual support. The classification must -also be -sio framed as to b-ei exclusively applicable to- the person or thing sought to be embraced therein, -and in the enforcement of which, when so-, dircumscribed, others will not be unjustly and unreasonably discriminated against. Some of our domestic cases so declaring are Hager v. Walker, 128 Ky. 1, 107 S. W. 254, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 748, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 195, 129 Am. St. Rep. 238; Morrell Refrigerator Car Co. v. Commonwealth, 128 Ky. 447, 108 S. W. 926, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 1389; and Williams v. City of Bowling Green, 254 Ky. 11, 70 S. W. (2d) 967.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 43, 258 Ky. 391, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priest-v-state-tax-commission-kyctapphigh-1935.