Reeves v. Louisville Gas & Electric Co.

160 S.W.2d 391, 290 Ky. 25, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 391 (Reeves v. Louisville Gas & Electric Co.) 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
Reeves v. Louisville Gas & Electric Co., 160 S.W.2d 391, 290 Ky. 25, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 362 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Affirming.

The question before the court is whether manufacturing machinery of a public utility company in Louisville is subject to local taxation. It involves the construction of two amendments to the Kentucky -Constitution and of two statutes which respectively carry them into effect. The suit is by the appellee, Louisville Gas & Electric Company, claiming exemption of its property ■of that class, against the members of the State Tax Commission and the Attorney General, for a declaration of rights, and an injunction restraining the certification of •assessments of its machinery for local franchise and tangible taxes for the years 1935 to 1938, inclusive. Section 4077, Kentucky Statutes. The amount of the city tax, with penalties and interest for the four years, is in •excess of $1,300,000. The City of Louisville and its taxing officers and the Jefferson County Board of Education intervened and were made parties defendant. The ■circuit court adjudged the plaintiff’s manufacturing machinery to be exempt from local taxation and granted ■appropriate relief. The defendants appeal; but the argument is confined to the taxability of the property 'by the City of Louisville only. As is well-known, it is the ■only city of the first class in the state.

Prior to 1915 all property not expressly exempted Tby Section 170 of the Constitution (being of religious, •charitable and educational institutions, etc.) was required to be taxed by all local taxing districts as well as by the state on the ad valorem basis. Levi v. City of Louisville, 97 Ky. 394, 30 S. W. 973, 28 L. R. A. 480. In 1915 an amendment to Section 171 of the Constitution was adopted, the pertinent part of which is as follows:

“The general assembly shall have power to divide property into classes and to determine what class or *27 classes of property shall be subject to local taxation.”

Section 4019a-10, Statutes, relating to property subject to local taxation, was first enacted in the revision of the taxing laws at a special session of the General Assembly in 1917, following the adoption of the amendment. Chapter 11. It provides that all classes of property subject to taxation for state purposes shall be subject also to taxation by the county, city, school or other taxing district in which the same has a situs except certain enumerated kinds, which excepted classes are taxable only for state purposes. Among those exemptions is manufacturing machinery. An amendment to this statute enacted in 1922, Chapter 18, declares the publication of newspapers and the operation of public printing plants to be manufacturing within the meaning of the act. Otherwise, neither that amendment nor the re-enactment of the entire section with certain amendments in 1924, Chapter 116, affects the original act as it relates to the exemption of manufacturing machinery. The underlying-purpose of the constitutional amendment to Section 171 and the statute is, in part, to encourage manufacturing for its consequent public benefit. Illinois Central Railroad Company v. City of Paducah, 228 Ky. 65, 14 S. W. (2d) 172.

For twenty-three years the machinery of the appellee and of all other manufacturers in Louisville was regarded as exempt from local taxation as such class of pro]3erty had been and is now recognized to be exempt elsewhere. Kentucky Electric Company v. Buechel, 146 Ky. 660, 143 S. W. 58, 38 L. R. A., N. S., 907, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 714; Kentucky & West Virginia Power Company v. Holliday, 216 Ky. 78, 287 S. W. 212. It is not claimed by the appellants that machinery owned by other than a public utility company in Louisville, and in Louisville alone, is taxable. But the appellee submits the question is so far reaching as to involve also the local taxation of all machinery and all cash and securities. The claim of taxability of such property of such company in such city is rested upon the closing sentence of Section 4019a-10,, which was contained in the original act of 1917 and the re-enactments of 1922 and 1924, as follows:

“Nothing herein shall be construed to. repeal or amend chapter thirty-three of the Acts of 1904, approved March 18, 1904, entitled, ‘An act to amend' *28 the revenue laws of the cities of the first class so as to carry into effect the amendment of Section 181 of the present Constitution.’ ”

This, it is argued, makes invalid the exemption by the City of the machinery from ad valorem taxes.

■ The case is to be decided upon the construction and application of this special statutory declaration which, in turn, is dependent upon the interpretation of Section 181a of the Constitution, and the Act of 1904.

Section 181 is part of the original constitution. It prohibits the General Assembly from imposing local taxes but authorizes it, by general laws, to confer the taxing power upon counties and municipal corporations. It authorizes the legislature to provide for license fees, for special or excise taxes on certain classes of property, and to delegate like power to the subordinate taxing districts. In 1903, the constitution was amended by the re-adoption of Section 181 with additional provisions, a part of which is the following:

“And the general assembly may, by general laws only, authorize cities or towns of any class to provide for taxation for municipal purposes, on personal property, tangible and. intangible, based on income, licenses or franchises, in lieu of an ad valorem tax thereon.”

Thus far Sections 171 and 181 as amended (published as 181a), with their respective operative statutes, are easily correlated. The one declares what shall be taxed and what may be exempted locally; the other how it shall be taxed. The one relates to the subject matter ■of taxation; the other to the manner of taxation. But the amendment of Section 181 also carries the following proviso:

“Provided, Gities of the first class shall not be authorized to omit the imposition of an ad valorem tax on such property of any steam railroad, street railway, ferry, bridge, gas, water, heating, telephone, telegraph, electric light or electric power company.”

And Chapter 33 of the Acts of 1904 has the same proviso. This seems on its face to relate to subject matter and not the method of its taxation, for it denies the right of the legislature to empower a city of the first *29 class — and that class only — to exempt from ad valorem taxation any property belonging to the named public service companies. But when the proviso is read with the rest of the amendment which authorizes cities of any class to adopt a method of taxing personal property on the basis of income or by license, or as a franchise “in lien of an ad valorem tax,” and is read in the light of contemporary history, the proviso is brought into harmony with the entire section as amended and shows it deals only with the method of taxation.

First, standing alone,- the provisos, that property of the public utilities shall not be omitted from ad valorem taxation, clearly deny the city the power to exempt any class of property of such companies.

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294 S.W.2d 513 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1956)
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214 S.W.2d 248 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1948)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 391, 290 Ky. 25, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-louisville-gas-electric-co-kyctapphigh-1942.