State ex rel. Norwood v. New York Life Insurance

171 S.W. 871, 119 Ark. 314, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 871 (State ex rel. Norwood v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Norwood v. New York Life Insurance, 171 S.W. 871, 119 Ark. 314, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 666 (Ark. 1914).

Opinions

Wood, J.

This suit was brought by the Attorney General, on behalf of the State, to recover of appellee certain excise taxes alleged to be due under the act of April 25, 1873, and certain property taxes alleged to be due under the act of February 27, 1875. (Kirby’s Digest, § 4338).

The Attorney General, in his brief, concedes here that the act of 1875, under which he seeks to recover property taxes, is unconstitutional and void, and he asks only for a decree recovering the excise taxes alleged to be due under the act of 1873, which is as follows:

“It shall be the duty of every company or association .of another State, authorized to transact business in this State, to make report to the Auditor in the month of January of each year) under oath of the president, secretary or agent thereof, showing the entire amount of premiums of every character or 'description received by said company or association in this State during the year or fraction of a year ending with the thirty-first day of December preceding, whether said premiums were received in money or in the form of notes, credits, or any other substitute for money, and pay into the State treasury a tax of three per centum upon said premiums, and the Auditor shall not have power to grant a renewal of the certificate of said company or association until the tax aforesaid is paid into the State treasury.” Kirby’s Digest, section 4365.

Article 10, section 17, of the Constitution of 1868, under which the act was passed, provides as follows:

“The General Assembly shall tax all privileges, pursuits and occupations that are of no real use to society; all ¡others shall be exempt, and the amount thus raised ¡shall be paid into the treasury.”

In State v. Martin, 60 Ark. 343, we said: “We must keep to the front certain familiar hut unvarying rules when we come to interpret the provisions of any .section of a 'Constitution. (1) Unambiguous words need no interpretation. (2) Where construction is necessary, words must be given their obvious and natural meaning. (3) The words or provisions under consideration must be construed with reference to every other provision, so as to preserve harmony in the whole instrument. (4) The intent of the framers, gathered from both the letter and spirit of the instrument, is the law.”

Applying these familiar rules in the construction of the section of the Constitution under consideration, there can be no doubt as to its meaning. The language is really so plain that it needs no interpretation. It is a positive command to the 'General Assembly to tax “all privileges, pursuits ¡and occupations that are of no real use to society,” .and .as positively inhibits the Legislature from taxing those “privileges, pursuits, and occupations,” that are of real use to society, for, after saying that the General Assembly shall tax ‘ ‘ all privileges, pursuits and occupations that are of no real use to society,” it expressly provides that “all others shall be exempt.” The section contains a mandate and an inhibition. The one is as express and positive as the- other.

Corporations are creatures of the State. But they are composed of, and are owned, controlled and managed by individuals. The special right or power conferred upon individuals to organize themselves into a corporation and to transact business in the form .and under the name of a corporation is a privilege.

In International Trust Co. v. American Loan & Trust Co., 62 Minn. 501, Judge Mitchell, speaking for the court, defined a privilege as follows: “A privilege as distinguished from a mere power, is a right peculiar to the person or class of persons on whom it is conferred, and not possessed by others. As applied to a corporation, it is ordinarily used as synonymous with ‘franchise,’ and means a special privilege conferred by the State, which does not belong to citizens generally of common right, and which can not he enjoyed or exercised without legislative authority.” See, also, 19 Cyc. p. 1452, and authorities cited in note 12, Words and Phrases, “privilege.”

(1) A foreign corporation has no right to carry on an insurance ¡business, for which it may he organized, in common with domestic corporations and the citizens of this 'State. If it is permitted, or granted a franchise or license, to do business in this State, such permission or license to exercise its corporate powers is a privilege.

(2) Learned counsel for appellant contend that the word “privileges,” as used in the Constitution of 1868, is limited hy the words “pursuits” and “occupations,” which follow it, has something of the general meaning of those terms, and that the Legislature had in mind “privileges,” “pursuits” and “occupations” of individuals, and not corporations. The plain language of the section under consideration does not warrant such construction. The words ‘ ‘ pursuits ’ ’ and £ ‘ occupations ’ ’ are synonymous, and are used in their common acceptation to denote the principal business, vocation, employment, calling or trade of individuals, that but for some constitutional or statutory inhibition, could be exercised and enjoyed as of common right. But the word “privileges” is not used in the Constitution in the same sense as the words “pursuits” and “occupations,” and it has an entirely different meaning. The word “privilege” is not defined by any literary or legal lexicographer as synonymous with the words ‘ ‘pursuit’ ’ and ‘ ‘ occupations. ’ ’ See “Privilege,” Black’s, Anderson’s, B-apalje’s, Bouvier’s Law Dictionaries, Words & Phrases, Punk & Wagnall’s Standard Dictionary, Webster’s Dictionary, Century Dictionary.

Then what sanction have we for saying that the framers of the Constitution of 1868 used the word “privileges ” in a sense different from both its literary and legal meaning. To give the word “privileges,” a different meaning from that already expressed would be doing violence to the familiar and fundamental rules of construction above referred to. The rule of ejusdem generis does not apply.

(3) The language “all privileges” is exceedingly comprehensive, and we do not feel justified in saying that it is limited to privileges enjoyed by individuals, and that it does not 'contemplate the franchise or privilege granted to corporations to transact "business in the State.

Nor, under this broad and all-embracing language, are we authorized to hold that the framers of the Constitution did not have in mind to limit the power of the Legislature to tax foreign corporations for the “privilege” of doing business in this State. To so hold would be far away from the plain language in which the provision is couched. Our present Constitution and the Constitutions adopted before the Constitution of 1868 contain, in substance, the following provision: ‘ ‘ The General Assembly shall have power from time to time to tax hawkers, peddlers, ferries, exhibitions and privileges in such manner as may be deemed proper.” Article 16, section 5, Constitution 1874; article 7 (Revenue), section 2, Constitution 1836; article 7 (Revenue), section 2, Constitution 1861; article 9 (Revenue), section 2, Constitution 1864.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 871, 119 Ark. 314, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-norwood-v-new-york-life-insurance-ark-1914.