State Ex Rel. Koeln v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.

292 S.W. 1037, 316 Mo. 1008, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 846
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 1037 (State Ex Rel. Koeln v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.) 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
State Ex Rel. Koeln v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 292 S.W. 1037, 316 Mo. 1008, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 846 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*1010 WHITE, J.

The plaintiff, Collector of the Revenue for the City of St. Louis, brought suit against the defendant to recover a balance claimed to be due on defendant’s income tax for the year 1921. The case was tried on stipulated facts.

The defendant filed a return for state income taxes showing its net income for the year 1921 to be $1,392,977.73. The plaintiff collector presented to defendant a bill for income taxes,for that year for $18,573.04. The defendant tendered in full payment of the bill $15,090.59. Then it was agreed' that the defendant should pay the amount tendered without prejudice to either party, that it should not prevent the State from claiming the balance of the bill, nor prevent the defendant from resisting such claim. This suit is for that balance between the amount of the tax bill and the amount paid, $3,482.45.

*1011 The difference between the parties arises on the effect of the Act of 1921 amending* Section 13112, Revised' Statutes 1919, relating to income tax of corporations. That act reduced the income-tax rate from one and one-half per cent to one per cent. The dispute between the parties is as to when that reduction went into effect.

I. Whether a tax rate may be different for different parts of a year, instead of taking the year as a unit for taxation purposes, was settled by this court in case of Smith v. Dirckx, 283 Mo. 188.

The Legislature may provide for an income tax rate prevailing part of the year with a different rate for the other part of the year. The Act of 1921 (Extra Session Acts of 1921, pages 189 and 190) amended Section 13112, Revised Statutes 1919, s0 that it contains the following:

‘Corporations, joint stock companies, insurance companies, etc.— That there shall be levied, assessed', collected and paid annually upon the total net income received in the calendar year 1919, and in each year thereafter, from all sources by every corporation ... a tax of one and one-half per cent upon such income; . . . Provided, however, that the taxes collected under this chapter shall for the years 1922 and subsequent years be levied, assessed, collected and paid annually at the rate of one per cent: Provided, further, that for that part of the calendar year 1921 which shall not have expired, at the date this act shall take effect, said taxes shall be levied, assessed and collected at the rate of one-half of one per cent.”

The act also contained an emergency clause as follows:

“The fact that until this act shall take effect income taxes must be levied, assessed and collected under the existing rates, which are excessive and continue an unreasonable burden on the taxpayer, creates an emergency within the meaning of the Constitution, and therefore, this act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage and approval.”

It is claimed by the respondent that the reduction from one and one-half to one per cent begins from August 3, 1921, when the act was approved. Appellant claims that the reduction begins from the time the act went into effect November 2, 1921. The emergency clause could not have the effect of putting the act into effect from the time of its approval, because it was not one of those laws excepted from the operation of a referendum as provided in Article 4, Section 57, of the Constitution.

The amendment provides that for that part of the year 1921, “which shall not have expired at the date this act shall take effect,” the rate shall be one-half of one per cent instead of one per cent as provided for the future. Thus by the terms of the act after the year 1921 the rate should be one per cent of the income. During *1012 the year 1921 the old rate of one and one-half" per cent should be levied and collected until the act should take effect,- and then to the end of the year the rate should be one half of -one per cent. Thus the amendment provides for two rates at different periods after the act shall take: effect. It is argued by the respondent that the intention of the Legislature was to relieve corporations of the one and one-half per cent tax -as soon as possible-, and that it should approximate as nearly as possible one per cent for the year 1921. That is, that, the reduction for that part of the year should be sufficient to make the entire year equal to one -per cent. The emergency clause could not have the effect to put the amendment in operation until ninety days after the-adjournment of Legislature. The language of Section 36 of Article 4 of the Constitution is very definite. It provides that “no law passed by the General Assembly, etc. . . . shall take effect or go into force until ninety days after the adjournment of the session at which it was enacted, unless in case of an emergency,” etc. Under the plain prohibition of the Constitution the Act of 1921 would not be effective as a law until November 2nd of that year. While it is true that the intention of the Legislature must control in the interpretation of a statute, that intention must be gathered from the language which they use in the "act. [Grier v. Railway, 286 Mo. l. c. 534.] We must gather the intention from what they said, not from what they may have intended to say, just as we interpret a deed or other instrument. So without the emergency clause there could be no doubt of the effect of the language used. It reduces the rate for that part of the calendar year 1921 which shall not have expired at the date “this act shall take effect,” using almost exactly the language of the Constitution. The act could not take effect until ninety days after the adjournment of the Legislature.

II. It is argued, however; that while the emergency clause could not have an effect as an emergency clause, and the law could not become operative as a law from the date of its approval, nevertheless the emergency clause does perform an office by showing the intention of the Legislating to have the tax amount approximately one per cent for the entire year. Infact, the construction contended for bv respondent would make it one and one-twelfth per cent during that year. Why should the Legislature desire to make the tax “approximately” one per cent when they could very easily have made it exactly one per cent by proper language in the body of the act.' That is, instead of the circuitous method, seeking to have the emergency clause perforin an office for which it was not intended, they could "Have accomplished their purpose directly.

*1013 To attempt to give the act effect from the time of its approval is to make it retrospective contrary to Section 15, Article II, of the Constitution. That was distinctly held by this court in construing this income tax law in Smith v. Dirckx, 283 Mo. l. c. 197 and 198. The law then had no force between the time of its passage and the time when it went into effect, November 2, 1921.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 1037, 316 Mo. 1008, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-koeln-v-southwestern-bell-telephone-co-mo-1927.