Streight v. Ragland

655 S.W.2d 459, 280 Ark. 206, 1983 Ark. LEXIS 1485
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 25, 1983
Docket82-217
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 655 S.W.2d 459 (Streight v. Ragland) 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
Streight v. Ragland, 655 S.W.2d 459, 280 Ark. 206, 1983 Ark. LEXIS 1485 (Ark. 1983).

Opinions

W. W. Bassett, Jr., Special Justice.

This case comes before this Court on Appeal from a Decree of Special Chancellor H. Maurice Mitchell of the Pulaski County Chancery Court, Fourth Division, wherein the Special Chancellor under the Arkansas Constitution, upheld the constitutionality of state income tax exemptions on the retirement income of government employees. Since the legislation appellants challenge herein could affect the financial interest of the regularly elected members of this honorable court, all seven Justices of this Court, as well as all regular Pulaski County Chancellors, recused themselves from hearing or deciding any portion or part of this case. In due course, seven Special Justices were duly appointed as required by law and were thereafter sworn to participate and hear this specific case and to render their decision accordingly.

The within challenged legislation provides state income tax exemptions on retirement income of state and federal pensioners derived from certain government sources.1 The Appellants, plaintiffs below, are six private retired taxpayers. They sought to have their state income tax on retirement income derived from private sources in the years 1978, 1979, and 1980 declared “illegal exactions”2 or the noted exemptions for government retirees only to be found unconstitutional.3 This taxpayers suit was properly filed in the chancery court4 for Pulaski County.5 The court found that the Appellants had standing to sue and that the Arkansas Revenue Commissioner6 could not avail himself of sovereign immunity since the suit was not against the State of Arkansas.7 The Chancellor then decreed that the challenged tax exemptions were valid under the state constitution and were otherwise valid exercises of the taxation powers. We AFFIRM.

This controversy presents issues of contemporary legal and political significance, and comes at a time when dwindling government revenues are of paramount concern not only to those who wield the sovereign power of government but to the citizenry as a whole. Special interest groups of every variety seem to increasingly haunt the halls of power seeking any favor, tax exemption or otherwise, which the government might bestow upon them. It appears to be the way and nature of our political system that persons of similar or connected interests lobby for favor in the executive and legislative chambers of government in order to acquire some affirmative benefit or otherwise obtain relief from some burden through legislation, regulation and/or governmental discretion. However, the proper sphere of the judicial power is not to supplant the decisions of legislators and government executives with our notions of economic prudence. Rather, our charge is that of jurisprudence. As other branches of government are tied to the bounds of law established by our constitution, so is the judiciary. This is not to suggest or say that legislative or executive actions are above judicial scrutiny. To the contrary, the very essence of judicial review lies in the belief of our founders that governmental actions should be (as should be all things) subject to scrutiny and questioning. It is only through scrutiny that we forestall arbitrary and capricious government and give meaning and substance to the safeguards of our state and federal constitutions. The courts are not designed to legislate and may not constitutionally do so. But, the courts are indeed responsible for insuring that those who are so empowered execute and perform their duties permissible within constitutional bounds.

In this case we are confronted with a legislative exercise of the state’s power of taxation. Such a power is, as here, properly exercised by the state legislature. It is not unbridled power however. The means are restricted by numerous specific and general prohibitions within the constitutions, both state and federal. For instance, the 14th Amendment to the federal constitution requires the state to provide procedural due process in the exercise of its powers. The taxing power may not be exercised so as to excessively burden interstate commerce. Likewise, the federal equal protection clause prohibits arbitrary classifications by the state resulting in different treatment of persons similarly situated in the exercise of its powers.

The Arkansas State Constitution imposes restrictions of its own on the power to tax and the corresponding power to grant immunities from taxation. The General Assembly is prohibited under Art. 2, § 18 from granting privileges or immunities which upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens. Also, the State’s 14th Amendment prohibits exercising state powers through local or special legislative acts.

Appellants, as private retired taxpayers, argue that the within tax exemptions constitute an immunity which does not upon the same terms apply to all citizens and further that the tax exemptions legislation are special acts, and therefore are in violation of the plain language of Art. 2, § 18 of, and Amendment 14 to, the Constitution of Arkansas. Appellants urge this Court to abandon the “rational basis” and “reasonable distinction” tests as outdated exceptions to Art. 2, § 18 and likewise to declare the “arbitrary separation” exception to Amendment 14 invalid. Although not raised or argued on appeal by Appellants, we will also consider if federal equal protection is infringed sua sponte. (see footnote 3)

To accomplish our examination, we must first determine what standard is to be applied and the extent of our own constitutional power of judicial review.

We have reviewed the numerous decisions issued by this Court in the past as well as those of the United States Supreme Court involving constitutional challenges based on equal protection type arguments as here. And, although we find the courts employing varying standards of review to legislation depending upon the circumstances of its enactment and operation, we find that tax legislation is generally reviewed under the traditional rational basis test. This standard continues to find acceptance in contemporary jurisprudence. We think the following commentary written ninety years ago explains the standard well:

“The Court can only disregard the Act of the legislature when those who have the right to make laws have not merely made a mistake, but have made a very clear one — so clear that it is not open to rational questioning. That is the standard of duty to which courts bring legislative acts; that is the test which they apply — not merely their own judgment as to constitutionality, but their conclusion as to what judgment is permissible to another department which the constitution has charged with the duty of making it. This rule recognizes that having regard to the great, complex, ever-unfolding exigencies of government, much which will seem unconstitutional to one man, or body of men, may reasonably not seem so to another; that the constitution often admits of different interpretation; that there is often a range of choice and j udgment; that in such cases the constitution does not impose upon the legislature any one specific opinion, but leaves open this range of choice; and whatever choice is rational is constitutional.” JAMES THAYER, The Origin and Scope of the American Doctrine of Constitutional Law, 7 Harv. L. Rev. 129, 143-44 (1893).

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Bluebook (online)
655 S.W.2d 459, 280 Ark. 206, 1983 Ark. LEXIS 1485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/streight-v-ragland-ark-1983.