Specht v. City of Louisville

122 S.W. 846, 135 Ky. 548, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 846 (Specht v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Specht v. City of Louisville, 122 S.W. 846, 135 Ky. 548, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 319 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

This litigation calls in question the constitutionality of section 2998, Ky. St. 1909. Its validity is assailed upon two grounds: First, that it affects only adult persons and does not apply to the property of infants, persons under the disability of coverture, or insane persons; and, second, because the rate of interest charged on tax bills is usurious and in violation of sections 2218 and 2219, Kentucky Statutes. Section 2998 of the statutes, which is as follows: “All tax bills, uncollected in whole or in part, and which remain in the hands of the tax receiver on the first day of May succeeding the date on which they were listed with him for collection against any person owning property in his own right, shall be deemed a debt from such person to said city arising as by contract and may be enforced as such (except those [551]*551against the persons under the disability of infancy, coverture or unsound mind) by all remedies given for the recovery of debt in any court of this commonwealth otherwise competent for that purpose; and those bills assessed against an administrator', executor or trustee shall be a charge against the whole succession of trust estates and may be in either case enforced accordingly, this being in addition to the other remedies hereinafter given. All tax bills remaining unpaid on the first day of May, succeeding the date .on which they were listed with the tax receiver for collection shall bear interest at the rate of one-half of one per cent, for every month, or fraction of a month, from date until the first day of the next succeeding May, and thereafter shall bear interest at the rate of one per cent, for every month, or fraction of a month, until paid”- — was, prior to its adoption-in 1906, section 2998 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, and from a comparison of the two acts it will be observed that, so far as the first objection raised by appellant is concerned, the acts are identical, in that in each act there is an express provision that the tax owing by the property owner shall be deemed a debt from such person to the city, arising as by contract, and may be enforced as such by all remedies given for the recovery of debt in any court of the commonwealth otherwise competent for that purpose.

There is an express provision in each act exempting from this method of procedure infants, married women, and lunatics. This exemption, however, is in their favor merely as to the method of procedure; whereas, the tax and interest charged for delay in its payment are the same against all property, whether owned by adults or infants, women, married or single, and per[552]*552sons sane or insane. • The statute makes no difference whatever in levy of taxes or the rate of interest that shall be charged. The only difference is that a personal judgment may be taken against an adult under no disability; whereas, infants and persons under disability can, under the express provisions and terms of the act, have no personal judgment rendered against them, and the remedy must be a proceeding against the property itself. There is no provision that the property of an infant, or a married woman, or insane person should not be held liable to the payment of the same taxes and rate of -interest as that of an adult.

In the cases of Walston v. City of Louisville, 66 S W. 385, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 1852, and Woolley v. City of Louisville, 114 Ky. 556, 7 S. W. 893, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 1357, this court passed upon the constitutionality of this act prior to its amendments in 1906, and held it to be constitutional, and, so far as the first objection raised by appellant is concerned, the acts are identical. ■ No complaint can justly be made because the Legislature saw fit to define a different mode of procedure in enforcing the payment of tax claims against the property of infants and persons under disability from that which should be applied in enforcing similar claims against adults under no disability, so long as the tax sought to be collected against each is the same; and the act in question is undoubtedly so drawn as to apply equally to all property, for, in its concluding sentence, we find the following: ‘ ‘ All tax bills remaining unpaid on the first day of May, succeeding* the date on which they were listed with the tax receiver for collection shall bear interest at the rate of one- half of one per cent: for every month, or fraction [553]*553of a month, from date until the first day of the next succeeding May, and thereafter shall hear interest at the rate of one per cent, for every month, or fraction of a month, until paid.” This is the only portion of said act which fixes the rate of interest that shall he paid, and it will be observed that it applies alike to all property without exception. We therefore conclude that the objection raised by appellant to the validity of this act, on the ground that it is not uniform in its application, is not well taken.

Appellant’s next contention is that as the act raises the tax claims which the city holds against the property owners to the dignity of a debt, and then seeks to enforce the collection of a rate of interest thereon in excess of 6 per cent., which by section 2218 of the statutes is established as the legal rate, it is in direct violation of section 2219, which provides that all contracts and assurances made for the loan or forbearance of money or other thing of value at a greater rate than the legal rate of interest, as provided for by section 2218, shall be void as to the excess of the legal rate. The trouble with, this argument is that a tax is neither a contract nor a loan nor a forebearance of money in the sense in which these terms are used in the statute referred to. It remains a tax, and it is treated as a debt merely for the purpose of defining its mode of collection. The interest charge is upon taxes remaining unpaid at a designated date and is in the nature of a penalty for their nonpayment, and it has frequently been held that it is a matter of legislative discretion as to what penalty shall he imposed by the Legislature for the nonpayment of taxes, and this legislative will has never been disturbed or interferred with so long as the penalty has not been [554]*554fixed at a figure that could be considered unreasonable, unjust, or confiscatory.

In the two cases above referred to, of Walston v. City of Louisville, and Woolley v. City of Louisville, it was expressly held that the collection of an interest charge upon overdue taxes was in the nature of a penalty. It is true that the act in force when passed upon in those cases did not authorize the imposition and collection of 12 per cent, interest, but it did authorize the imposition and collection of interest at the rate of one-half of 1 per cent, for each month, or fractional part thereof, that the tax remained unpaid, which was a higher rate than authorized by section 2218, and the principle contended for by appellant in this case would therefore apply with equal force in those cases. The court having upheld the validity of the act, even though it 'authorized an interest charge in excess of 6 per cent., settled the principle for which the city here contends, to wit, that the imposition of sn interest charge on overdue taxes is in the nature-of a penalty, imposed upon the delinquent taxpayer because of his delinquency, and, being a penalty, the amount thereof is clearly a matter of legislative discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 846, 135 Ky. 548, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/specht-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1909.