State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Ott

61 So. 2d 872, 221 La. 1061, 1952 La. LEXIS 1291
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 10, 1952
Docket40843
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 61 So. 2d 872 (State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Ott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Ott, 61 So. 2d 872, 221 La. 1061, 1952 La. LEXIS 1291 (La. 1952).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

These two suits, consolidated in the district court and also here because of the similarity of issues, were instituted. for the purpose of recovering the sums of $481.81 .and $191.70 which plaintiff paid under protest as ad valorem taxes to the City of New Orelans and the State of Louisiana, respectively.

For. causes of action plaintiff, a foreign automobile insurance corporation qualified to do business in Louisiana, alleged that ■the assessments under which the defendants ■collected the taxes were against certain anticipated automobile insurance premiums; that the premiums were erroneously assessed'under the mistaken belief that they represented personal property in the nature of “Credits” as defined by Act 170 of 1898, as amended by Act 109 of 1921, LSA-R.S. 47:1901 et seq.; and that plaintiff extends no “credit” in the issuance of insurance policies, all premiums therefor being payable in advance.

The district court rendered judgments in favor of plaintiff, .after a trial of the merits of the cases, and the defendants appealed to the Court of Appeal of the Orleans Circuit.

Although the amount in dispute does not exceed $2,000, the Court of Appeal transferred the áppeals to this court. See 57 So.2d 798. The reason assigned for its ruling was that the legality of a tax is contested in these causes within the contemplation of that provision of Article 7, Section 10 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921 reciting that the Supreme Court “ * * * shall have appellate jurisdiction in all cases wherein the constitutionality or legality of any tax, local improvement assessment, toll or impost levied by the State, or by any parish, municipality, board, or subdivision of the State is contested, or where the legality, or constitutionality of any fine, forfeiture, or penalty imposed by a parish, municipal corporation, board, or subdivision of the State shall be in contest, whatever may be the amount thereof, * * *.” And in support of that conclusion the court cited Meyer v. Pleasant, Sheriff and Tax Collector, 41 La.Ann. 645, 6 So. 258, Williams v. Triche, Sheriff and Tax Collector, 107 La. 92, 31 So. 926 and Esto Real Estate Corporation v. Louisiana Tax Commission, *1066 13 La.App. 81, 127 So. 12, in each of which the quoted constitutional provision was construed to mean that the legality of a tax is in contest, and the Supreme Court has jurisdiction, whenever the tax debtor urges (as does the plaintiff herein) that the property is not subject to assessment and taxation.

But the construction furnished by the ■cases so relied on is, in our opinion, improper. In fact, as hereinafter shown, it has since been repudiated.

The quoted constitutional provision, it will be noticed, vests appellate jurisdiction in this court in cases where the constitutionality or legality of a levied tax or an imposed penalty (among other things) is in -contest, whatever may be the amount there•of, no distinction between the tax and the penalty being therein made.

As to the penalty our jurisprudence, from its inception, has been uniformly to the effect that the constitutionality or legality thereof is contested only when the invalidity of the ordinance imposing the penalty is asserted. Third Municipality of New Orleans v. Blanc, 1 La.Ann. 385; Ex parte Travers, 3 La.Ann. 693; Penn v. First Municipality, 4 La.Ann. 13; Parish of West Baton Rouge v. Robertson, 8 La. Ann. 69; State v. Fourcade, 45 La.Ann. 717, 13 So. 187; State v. Callac, 45 La. Ann. 27, 12 So. 119; State v. Courcier, 46 La.Ann. 907, 15 So. 360; State v. Marshall, 47 La.Ann. 646, 17 So. 202; State v. Zurich, 49 La.Ann. 447, 21 So. 977; State v. Hohn, 50 La.Ann. 432, 23 So. 966; State v. Faber, 50 La.Ann. 952, 24 So. 662; Mayor of Town of Homer v. Brown, 117 La. 425, 41 So. 711; Town of Ruston v. Fountain, 118 La. 53, 42 So. 644; Town of Minden v. Crichton, 118 La. 747, 43 So. 395; City of New Orleans v. Williams, 134 La. 421, 64 So. 229; Town of Hammond v. Badeau, 137 La. 828, 69 So. 202; City of Shreveport v. Mackie, 140 La. 724, 73 So. 842; City of Shreveport v. Nejin, 140 La. 785, 73 So. 996; City of New Orleans v. New Orleans Butchers’ Co-op. Abattoir, Inc. 153 La. 536, 96 So. 113; Town of Waterproof v. Towles, 180 La. 168, 156 So. 211; City of Shreveport v. Aaldrup, 198 La. 893, 5 So.2d 143; State v. Garrett, 218 La. 538, 50 So.2d 24.

For a number of years in its early jurisprudence this court held similarly with respect to suits involving assessments and levies of taxes, it refusing to entertain jurisdiction unless the statute or ordinance under which the tax was demanded had been attacked as being unconstitutional or illegal. First Municipality v. Pease, 2 La. Ann. 538; Charity Hospital v. Stickney, 2 La.Ann. 550; Second Municipality v. Corning, 4 La.Ann. 407; Charity Hospital v. Lammerman, 5 La.Ann. 380; Board of Health of Louisiana v. Pooley, Nicol & Co., 11 La.Ann. 743; Police Jury of the Parish of Jefferson v. Villaviabo, 12 La.Ann. 788; State ex rel. Oser v. Third Justice of the Peace of Orleans, 12 La.Ann. 789; State *1068 ex rel. Breazeale v. Frank, 42 La.Ann. 225, 7 So. 674; Pratt, Tax Collector, v. Holmes, 43 La.Ann. 1016, 10 So. 198.

Then came a departure from the latter holdings, the court in 1900 in State v. Rosenstream, 52 La.Ann. 2126, 28 So. 294, announcing and applying the doctrine that the legality of a tax is contested and the Supreme Court has jurisdiction whenever judicial interpretation of the taxing statute is necessary to determine the issues presented. This doctrine was followed in the following cases: State v. Pigot, 104 La. 683, 29 So. 335; Moody & Co., Ltd. v. Spotorno, 112 La. 1008, 36 So. 836; Monongahela River Consol. Coal & Coke Co. v. Board of Assessors, 115 La. 564, 39 So. 601, 2 L.R.A.,N.S., 637; State v. Orfila, 116 La. 972, 41 So. 227; State v. Wenar, 118 La. 141, 42 So. 726.

A greater departure from the original interpretation regarding taxes appears in the Meyer and Williams cases, cited supra and relied on hy the Court of Appeal herein, they seemingly standing for the broad principle that the Supreme Court has appellate jurisdiction of any case wherein there is offered the contention, irrespective of the grounds therefor, that the property is not assessable or taxable.

Apparently reinstating and following its early jurisprudence the court in State v. J. Foto & Bros., 134 La. 154, 63 So. 859 and State v. Serio & Messina, 149 La. 1006, 90 So. 385 (both suits to recover licenses) declined to examine issues that did not concern the validity of the taxing statute. In the latter case the following was said:

“Although one of the questions, if still an issue, which plaintiff contends it is, involves an interpretation of the license law of the state, to determine whether the defendants were wholesalers, yet this does not give this court jurisdiction, for it does not put at issue the constitutionality of the license tax levied by the state, but simply raises the question whether defendants were, for the years named, wholesalers, and whether as such, under a valid law, they, are liable for the licenses exacted by the tax collector.”

Again, in State v. Gallagher Transfer & Storage Company, Inc., 153 La. 533, 96 So.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 2d 872, 221 La. 1061, 1952 La. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mut-automobile-ins-co-v-ott-la-1952.