Woodward v. Philadelphia

3 A.2d 167, 333 Pa. 80, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 813
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 19, 1938
Docket447; 109, Miscellaneous Docket, 7
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 A.2d 167 (Woodward v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodward v. Philadelphia, 3 A.2d 167, 333 Pa. 80, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 813 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Kepi-iaet,

Plaintiff, as a taxpayer and on behalf of other tax- . payers, has been granted leave to file a bill in equity in this Court, and we have assumed original jurisdiction in the matter, involving the finances of the City of Philadelphia.

The purpose of the bill is to secure a decision from this Court interpreting issues arising under Sections 1, 2 and 3 of Article XVII, of the City Charter Act of June 25, 1919, P. L. 581. The plaintiff avers that under this Article the defendant City Controller does not have any authority to estimate for the Council of the City of Philadelphia the receipts for 1939 from taxation of any kind, but that it is the duty of the Council of the City of Philadelphia to make and use its own estimates of the receipts from taxes in ordaining the budget as required by Article XVII, Section 2 of the Chartér Act. It asks that the City and the members of the City Council be enjoined from adopting a budget for the year 1939 until the Council shall have made its own estimates of receipts from taxation, and that the City Controller be enjoined from compelling the Council to accept his estimate for the receipts from taxes. It is further asked that this Court review the estimates made by the City Controller of receipts other than from taxation.

The financial Article of the Charter Act 1 was intended to embrace all the considerations necessary for á complete budget for the City of Philadelphia. It groups the receipts of the city into three classes: (a) receipts from taxation; (b) money proposed to be borrowed; and (c) receipts from sources other than taxation and loans, hereinafter designated as miscellaneous receipts. It is *83 because of the interpretation of this Act by administrative officers in the past, and its application to these various items of controversy detailed by the bill, that the questions which are now presented to us have arisen.

In addition to the authority and duty of the various officers, we will discuss the Charter Act as it relates to the disputed items, that is, receipts from taxation and miscellaneous receipts. It is evident by an examination of Article XVII of the Act that the difficulty in determining the duties of the Mayor, the City Council and the City Controller, comes from apparently conflicting provisions in the Article. Stripping it of all unnecessary language as it applies to the problems involved, Section 1 reads: “On or before the fifteenth day of October . . . the mayor shall furnish to the council ... a statement of the estimated receipts, other than from taxation. . . .” — and—“. . . The estimates of receipts . . . shall be furnished to the mayor by the city controller. ...” Up to this point it is evident that receipts from taxation should not be included in any statement or estimate submitted by the Controller or the Mayor. The Charter Act goes on: “Such statements shall be made up by the city controller from the best available data, and the receipts from sources other than taxation . . . shall be estimated at the average of such receipts for the preceding three years. ...” [Then follows a provision for the treatment of new sources of receipts not existing during all or a part of that period, and for sources which have existed during all or a part of that period which will not be available for the ensuing year, and further, for other factors not previously existing.] We shall discuss this paragraph later, but it is plainly apparent that it applies only to miscellaneous receipts which shall be “estimated at the average . . . for the preceding three years,” and not to receipts from taxation. Then follows this provision: “The estimates [which the Mayor transmits to Council] . . . shall also contain a statement of the average proportion of *84 taxes uncollected at the end of each of the three preceding years. ...” This also is reserved for later discussion, but it will be noticed there is no direction as to what is to be done with this “statement” of the Controller as to the average proportion of taxes uncollected for three years, or how it is to be applied.

Under the Act neither the Mayor nor the Controller has any authority to submit any binding or controlling estimate or statement of receipts from taxation. The estimation of revenue which Council expects to derive from taxation is purely an administrative matter and it was nbt intended that the Controller should supervise, direct or usurp the responsibility of Council either in selecting the form of taxation or determining the amount of revenue to be derived therefrom. The Act makes this plain when it restricts the estimate of the Controller to “receipts other than from taxation.

Council’s judgment in arriving at the return of ensuing taxes may be guided or assisted, but not limited by the Controller’s statement of the “average proportion of taxes uncollected at the end of the three preceding years ” As we stated above, the Act does not direct Council to accept this statement as final and conclusive; it directs that the statement be made, and, in view of what precedes this paragraph, it was inserted .in the Act for the information of Council to enable them, as far as they deem wise, to determine the possible revenues from the forms of taxation which have been in use for three years. If, in the judgment of Council, the stated proportion of uncollected taxes for the last three years is too high, this proportion may be reduced by them; if it is too low it may be raised, and on that basis Council may make a final determination as to what the probable revenues will be from taxation. It is argued that the difficulty comes, not from the interpretation of Section 1 or Section 2, as they apply to taxation, but from what is stated in Section 3 as to the average of uncollectible taxes for three years.

*85 Before discussing Section 3, it may be noted that Section 2 states that after the receipt of the Mayor and Controller’s statement, Council shall consider (deliberate or discuss) it in open sessions, and shall thereupon adopt by ordinance a financial program showing the estimated receipts from all sources — clearly, this included the receipts from taxation as estimated by Council, the miscellaneous receipts and receipts from borrowed money. Thus far the path is clear; as an illustration, take revenue from real estate taxes — plaintiff: in his bill avers that the stated proportion of uncollected real estate taxes for the three years is too high, because in past years it has been demonstrated by actual collections that the proportion certified as uncollectible has been far in excess of the uncollected taxes at the end of the year. In the year 1937 — it was estimated, and so certified, that uncollectible revenues for that year would be $9,600,000. As a matter of fact, at the end of 1937, there was only some $4,600,000 outstanding. Guided by the actual facts, it is urged, that Council could well disregard the Controller’s statement of averages, and it would be well within the realm of safety if it adopted a budget shoAving uncollectible real estate taxes of about $4,243,000.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.2d 167, 333 Pa. 80, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-philadelphia-pa-1938.