Springfield City Water Co. v. City of Springfield

182 S.W.2d 613, 353 Mo. 445, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 9, 1944
DocketNo. 39038.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 613 (Springfield City Water Co. v. City of Springfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield City Water Co. v. City of Springfield, 182 S.W.2d 613, 353 Mo. 445, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 454 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

*450 ELLISON, J.

The appellant Springfield City Water Company by its petition in equity sought in the lower court permanently to enjoin the enforcement of General Ordinance No. 301 of the respondent City of Springfield, adopted September 30, 1943, and levying an occupation tax of 5% on its gross receipts. The petition charges the ordinance is discriminatory, arbitrary and void under See. 3, Art. X of the State Constitution, which requires taxes to be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the taxing area. There is a further contention that the ordinance violates Sec. 7442. 1 Under that statute the ordinances of all cities must conform to the state law upon the same subject. The theory of the contention is that the 5% occupation tax levied by the ordinance falls in the same category as the State sales tax; and that Sec. 11408 limits the latter to 2%. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action. Appellant refused to plead further, whereupon the trial court dismissed the suit. The sufficiency of the petition is the sole issue on this appeal.

Considering first the charge of discrimination. The ordinance levies the tax on the business of every person (including corporations) engaged in supplying water for compensation through pipes laid in the streets, alleys, parkways or other publicly owned premises of the City. The appellant’s annual gross receipts are $500,000 making its tax $25,000 per year. The gross receipts by which the tax is gauged seemingly are those from all sales of water conveyed through any of its pipe lines in the city, whether delivered and consumed within or without the city. There are other utilities in Springfield upon which occupation taxes are levied in different amounts by different ordinances. The tax against the Western Union Telegraph Company is $100 per year; and that against the Kailway Express Company only $50 per year. The Springfield Gas and Electric Company through a subsidiary operates bus lines on which the annual tax is $50 per bus. All these taxes are much less than appellant’s. The tax against the last named Company for gas and electric service is 5%, the same as *451 appellant’s, but those ordinances have been interpreted by resolution of the City Council to cover only gross receipts from business within the city. Some utilities, such as refrigerating companies, pay no tax at all.

All these taxing ordinances are based on subsection XVII of Sec. 6609, in the statutory charter of cities of the second class, to which the City of Springfield belongs. It authorizes such cities "to license and tax telegraph companies, telephone companies, electric companies, street railway companies, gas companies, subway companies, conduit companies, heating companies, lighting companies, express companies, refrigerating companies, water companies and utilities of whatsoever name or character, like or unlike. ’ ’ Twelve utility businesses are specifically named. There is no express authorization in the subsection for a sub-classification of these utilities for the purposes of taxation.

The next subsection in the statute, subsection XVIII, groups over 200 businesses and callings of various natures, and provides they may be licensed, taxed and regulated. Utilities, as such, are omitted from that subsection but it does include the "poles and wires, or conduits and wires, of telegraph, telephone, electric light, street railway and electric and power companies” (five kinds of utilities). And near the end there is a provision authorizing the city "to divide the various occupations, professions, trades, pursuits, corporations . . . into different classes.” Subsection XIX provides certain other designated businesses, which are more questionable, may be "licensed, regulated, taxed or suppressed.” There is no clause in that subsection either, permitting sub-classification — though appellant concedes it may be done.

The statutory charter of second class cities, in which Sec. 6609 and the foregoing three subdivisions thereof appear, was enacted by Laws Mo., 1913, pp„ 420, 428-430. Subsection XVII then was the same as now, except that "water companies” were not included. Those words were inserted by Laws Mo., 1933, pp. 296, 298, but apparently unintentionally omitted by Laws 1933, pp. 310, 312, and then- reinserted by Laws Mo., 1939, pp. 523, 525. At any rate, the Act was originally adopted in 1913 during the same 47th Session of the General Assembly at which the public service commission law was first enacted. Laws Mo., 1913, pp. 556, 561. That Act confided to the Public Service Commission the exclusive power to regíate the same twelve utilities enumerated in subsection XVII (see now Sec’s 5578, 5592) with respect to capitalization, operation, rates, public necessity and the like.

So much for the contents of the statutes. Appellant contends that subsection XVII of Sec. 6609, supra, groups the twelve utilities there named in a single class for the purpose of licensing and taxation regardless of their nature — this last especially in view of the catchall phrase at the end of the subsection ("and utilities of whatsoever *452 name or character, like or unlike.”) Thence it is argued that under See. 3, Art. X of the Constitution any tax levied must be uniform against every member of the class, or else no tax can be imposed. It is further asserted that the inclusion of these same twelve utilities in the public service commission law at the same legislative session for the purpose of-regulation, confirms the above view by showing a fixed intention to treat them as a class. And finally appellant maintains his argument is clinched by the facts that subsection XVII contains no clause authorizing sub-classification of the twelve utilities for the purposes of licensing and taxation, whereas subsection XVIII expressly authorizes it for the purpose of licensing, taxing and regulating the 200 odd businesses there enumerated, which last is not a taxing power but a police power.

In other words, appellant thinks the maxim expressio unius est ex-clusio alterius resolves all doubts about the case — if there is any doubt. In explaining its concession that the maxim does not apply to subsection XIX which, also, lacks a sub-classification clause, appellant says the businesses, acts and thing's there named are so questionable as to be subject to suppression — a drastic power that obviously may call for separate treatment of the things suppressed according to their nature, whether expressly authorized or not.

Respondents maintain to the contrary that subsection XVII, standing alone, allows second class cities to subdivide the twelve utilities there named into classes and to levy a different tax on each, or none at all, in view of the fact that the subsection does not forbid it, and of the difference in the respective natures of the utilities. They further maintain that when the three subsections are construed together, and their history is reviewed in connection with the public service commission law, the same conclusion must be reached, forbidding the application of the maxim expressio unius, etc.

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182 S.W.2d 613, 353 Mo. 445, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-city-water-co-v-city-of-springfield-mo-1944.