Culliton v. Chase

I dissent.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court for Thurston county, holding unconstitutional *Page 385 chapter 5, Laws of 1933 — commonly known as the income tax act — being initiative measure No. 69. The holding is based on the theory that, under the fourteenth amendment to the state constitution, the tax imposed is a property tax, and, being graduated in relation to income, lacks uniformity, as defined in the amendment.

Before considering the amendment and its meaning, it is well to consider not only its historical background, but the social and economic condition of the state when article VII (which is repealed by the amendment) was written into the constitution.

In 1889 the major portion of the wealth of the state lay in its lands and their produce — agricultural, mineral and timber. Taxation was a fairly simple process. Its subjects were tangible, visible — easy to evaluate. The functions of government were also fairly simple. Relatively speaking, in those days the value of tangible property was great and the cost of government little. The burden of taxation was nothing compared to the benefits the owner of real property received as the result of his comparatively small contribution to the organized state, which protected him in his ownership and use of property.

But, even then, the economic complexion of the country was changing. More and more of the country's wealth was going into intangibles — into stocks, bonds, securities of various sorts — indicia of property which could easily elude the search of the tax collector. In the light of subsequent history, even then it should have been obvious that powers of taxation must be elastic. It was only a few years after the adoption of the state constitution (1894) that the income tax theory ran afoul of constitutional inhibition. Pollock *Page 386 v. Farmers Loan Trust Co., 157 U.S. 429, 158 U.S. 601.

This, however, was a new state, whose vast resources of wealth that lay in and on the land seemed inexhaustible. After the depression of the middle nineties, a tide of immigration started, which continued until toward the end of the first decade of this century. As a result of this influx of people, and the still popular belief that wealth lay in the land, values of real property increased amazingly and kept relatively well ahead of increasing taxes. But in the latter part of that decade the tide of immigration began to ebb rapidly, and real property values receded with equal celerity.

In the meantime, due to a growing complexity in organic society, the state had been called upon to take over an ever-increasing burden of functions, and the cost of government had relatively increased. As long as property values were increasing, the additional tax burden went unnoticed. But when property values collapsed, the problem of taxation began to be acute — and for twenty odd years it has been increasing. The cry for reduction of taxes has become ever louder in the face of increasing cost of government.

The burden of taxation on real estate became more onerous during the second and third decades of this century by reason of several facts, among which were the following: (1) Great areas were allowed to revert to the municipalities for non-payment of taxes, and completely disappeared from the tax rolls; (2) as the burden of taxes on real property increased, capital sought investment in bonds, stocks and other securities, and escaped taxation entirely, or carried, at most, only a small portion of the burden.

A growing agitation for decrease in taxes developed. But the relief was not available, because the state *Page 387 found itself in a strait-jacket in the shape of article VII of the constitution, with the judicial interpretations that had been placed upon it. The cry for relief became so loud, however, that the legislature, at the session of 1929, passed an act empowering the governor to appoint an investigating commission

". . . to make a thorough and comprehensive study of the entire subject of taxation . . . and . . . report their findings and recommendations to the governor . . . to be by him transmitted to the legislature on the opening day of the next session."

As a result of these years of agitation and investigation of the subject, there was submitted to the people and adopted by them at the general election of 1930, what is now the fourteenth amendment to the constitution, which reads as follows:

"Article VII is amended by striking out all of sections 1, 2, 3 and 4, and inserting in lieu thereof the following, to be known as section 1:

"Art. VII, § 1. The power of taxation shall never be suspended, surrendered or contracted away. All taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of property within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax and shall be levied and collected for public purposes only. The word `property' as used herein shall mean and include everything, whether tangible or intangible, subject to ownership. All real estate shall constitute one class: Provided, That the Legislature may tax mines and mineral resources and lands devoted to reforestation by either a yield tax or an ad valorem tax at such rate as it may fix, or by both. Such property as the Legislature may by general laws provide shall be exempt from taxation. Property of the United States and of the state, counties, school districts and other municipal corporations, and credits secured by property actually taxed in this state, not exceeding in value the value of such property, shall be exempt from taxation. The Legislature shall have power, by appropriate legislation, to exempt personal property to the amount of three hundred ($300.00) *Page 388 dollars for each head of a family liable to assessment and taxation under the provisions of the laws of this state of which the individual is the actual bona fide owner."

As I see it, the real question presented on this appeal is whether, by construction of this amendment, we are going to thwart the effort of the state to throw off the strait-jacket in which it was bound. To do so requires a literal, technical construction of a few words of the amendment, in perversion of their true and obvious intent and purpose and in total disregard of its historical background and the conditions which brought it into being.

Before proceeding with the discussion of the constitutionality of the act, it is necessary to note one more step in the eventful history of taxation in this state. At the general election of 1932, the people not only passed this income tax bill, but they passed an act limiting the levy of taxes on real estate to forty mills on the dollar. The relief of real property is at last achieved, but at what cost — if the income tax act is held invalid? The consequences are too obvious for discussion. They, however, are only of general interest; we are concerned merely with the legal aspects of the situation. It is no concern of ours that the revenues from taxation on real property will be insufficient to support the government and the schools, even though the cost of the former is reduced twenty-five per cent and the latter thirty-three and one-third per cent. For, as we proceed, it will appear that, if this income tax is unconstitutional, the state will have no other source of substantial revenue than from taxes on real property. In addition, of course, there will be inconsequential revenues from taxes on tangible personal property and licenses imposed under the police power. All excise taxes for revenue will be obliterated. *Page 389

The argument in support of the attack on the income tax act, briefly stated, is this: (a) That the fourteenth amendment permits classification of property for purposes of taxation, but requires uniformity of taxation on property within a given class; (b) that the amendment defines property to be anything, tangible or intangible, subject to ownership; (c) that income is subject to ownership; (d) that income is therefore property constituted in one class; (e) that a graduated income tax, classifying taxpayers in groups according to the amount of their income, violates the rule of uniformity, and the act is therefore unconstitutional.

The syllogism seems perfect, but, as I see it, there are two answers to it: (1) That, notwithstanding the definition of property contained in the amendment, the exaction imposed under the income tax law is an excise and not a property tax; (2) that, if it is a property tax, the classifications fixed by the act are within the constitutional limitations of the fourteenth amendment.

(1) It does not follow, from the broad definition of property contained in the amendment, that this is a property tax. To so reason seems to me to be sheer sophistry. The fundamental character of a tax cannot be changed by legislative declaration. That which was a tax on property prior to the fourteenth amendment remains a property tax; and that which was an exaction for the enjoyment of privileges, made possible by the protection of the organized state, remains an excise tax.

The decisions defining and distinguishing property and excise taxes are in hopeless confusion, due in part to differences in constitutional provisions under consideration, but due mainly to a failure to apprehend the generic differences between the two. The distinction *Page 390 is tersely stated in Hattiesburg Grocery Co. v. Robertson,126 Miss. 34, 88 So. 4, 25 A.L.R. 748:

"Income is necessarily the product of the joint efforts of the state and the recipient of the income, the state furnishing the protection necessary to enable the recipient to produce, receive, and enjoy it, and a tax thereon in the last analysis is simply a portion cut from the income and appropriated by the state as its share thereof, and, while a tax on income includes some of the elements both of a tax on property and of a tax on persons, it cannot be classified as strictly a tax on either, for it is generically and necessarily an excise, and should be enforced as such unless and until so to do would accomplish the result which section 112 of the Constitution was adopted to prevent, which is to prevent discrimination in the taxation of property, so that all property shall bear its due proportion of the burdens of government."

Judge Cooley, in § 1723, volume IV (4th ed.) of his work on Taxation, makes a statement pertinent to the situation, with which we are confronted, both as to the character of an excise and the effect of legislative declarations relating to them.

"§ 1723. An inheritance tax is an excise and not a property tax. However, a statute may, in name, be one imposing a tax on the right of succession, and, in reality, be one on the property passing. In other words, the title of the legislative act cannot always be taken as conclusive of the character of the tax imposed. An inheritance tax is not a tax on property merely because the amount of the tax is made to depend upon the value of the property transmitted, nor because the tax is made a lien on the property the succession of which is taxed."

Measured by these standards, what is the exaction imposed by initiative No. 69? Without going into the provisions of the act in too much detail, it is well to note, in a general way, its contents. It is long, but excellently drawn — clear, hardly susceptible of misconstruction, *Page 391 either by courts or administrative officials. It is subject only to the general objection that all taxes are obnoxious — so well answered by the supreme court of Missouri:

"That the tax in question was exceedingly onerous is undoubted; but it may be said that there is nothing very poetical or romantic about tax laws, at best. They are exacting and remorseless, and do not discriminate with any particular nicety as to individual convenience. But mere oppressiveness is no ground for setting them aside or arresting their operation."Glasgow v. Rowse, 43 Mo. 479.

Section 1 of the act provides that:

"There shall be assessed, levied, collected and paid annually, a tax on all net income, as hereinafter provided, by every person residing within the state. . ."

Section 2 defines persons and income.

Section 3 provides for deductions to be allowed corporations.

Section 4 provides for deductions to be allowed persons other than corporations.

Section 5 provides for exemptions: (a) of income received from various and certain specified sources; (b) individuals and heads of families.

Section 6 prescribes the rates for computation of the tax.

Section 7 provides for the personnel necessary for the administration of the act.

Section 8 authorizes the state tax commission to make rules and regulations looking to the enforcement of the act and not in conflict therewith. It also provides for the making of return by the taxpayer and provides certain penalties for failure to make return, subdivision (12) of the section providing:

"Any person, other than a corporation, who fails or refuses to make a return at the time hereinbefore specified *Page 392 in each year or shall render a false or fraudulent return shall upon conviction be fined not to exceed five hundred dollars, or be imprisoned not to exceed one year, or both, at the discretion of the court, together with the cost of prosecution."

Section 9 provides for the making of returns by administrators, executors, guardians and trustees of estates, and the levy of the impost on such estates.

Section 10 provides for the collection of the tax, time of payment and remedies for failure (which is by the same method as the levy of a general execution on a judgment of a court of record). It also provides a method for contest of the amount of the tax by the taxpayer; and also for recovery of overpayment.

Section 11 authorizes the tax commission to make investigation of the taxpayer's records in such cases as it deems advisable.

Section 12 provides that no additional assessment shall be made without notice to the taxpayer and hearing if demanded by him.

Section 13 provides for the setting up of a board of review in each county, consisting of three persons, whose function it is to hear grievances of taxpayers and of representatives of the tax commission.

Section 14 contains certain prerequisites to actions which may be brought by the taxpayer.

Section 15 provides for appeal to the state tax commission from decisions of county boards of review.

Section 16 provides for appeal to and review by the courts.

Section 17 provides for refunds.

Section 18 relates to taxpayers deriving income from sources both within and without the state.

Section 19 relates to the disposition of the revenues derived from the tax. *Page 393

Section 20 relates to administrative features of enforcement.

Section 21 relates to the correction of assessments.

Section 22 relates to evasions by corporations.

Section 23 provides that the holding that any portion of the act is unconstitutional shall not render the rest of the act invalid.

Section 24 prohibits the publication of individual returns, but provides for the publication of statistics, and the inspection of returns by the attorney general.

Section 25 provides for the appropriation of $15,000 for paying expenses incurred in the administration of the act.

Section 26 provides that the act shall be operative on incomes received in 1932.

This somewhat detailed review of the provisions of the act is primarily for the purpose of showing that it has nothing whatever to do with property in the generally accepted definition of the term. It operates entirely in personam. It requires the taxpayer to act. It charges him, not his property. And if he does not act in accordance with the terms imposed upon him,he is subject to penalty — fine and imprisonment. No lien attaches to any particular property. His property is not seized or sequestered, except upon what is the equivalent of an execution issued on a judgment against him in personam.

He pays for the privilege of being able to enjoy his property, which he can enjoy only under the protection of the organized state. And he pays according to the degree of benefit he derives from that protection. If he enjoys little, he pays little. If he enjoys much, he pays (relatively not much) more.

While the act requires every person receiving an income in excess of eight hundred dollars to make a return, the head of a family is not required to pay a *Page 394 tax (providing he is a home owner) until his income reaches the sum of four thousand dollars, for he is allowed to deduct from the tax due $17.50 as a personal exemption and $50 on account of taxes paid on his home.

Let us consider another example or two. Take a head of family and home owner whose income is ten thousand dollars a year. Computation shows his assessment to be $282.50. Deduct $17.50 personal exemption and $50 for taxes paid on his home. He pays a tax of $215. Take a man whose income is twenty thousand dollars per year. Computation shows his assessment to be $957.50. Allow the deductions, and the tax paid is $890. Is this too high a price for him to pay in support of the state, by the grace only of whose protection he is guaranteed the enjoyment of such an income? Is this a lack of equality and uniformity in taxation? If the tax is an excise, it certainly is not.

And this court has very recently held that such a tax is an excise. Pacific Tel. Tel. Co. v. Seattle, 172 Wn. 649,21 P.2d 721. There the question involved was as to whether an ordinance of the city of Seattle, which levied a tax based on gross revenues of various public service corporations, contravened the constitution. The ordinance provided a different rate on corporations operating in different fields, but the rate was the same on corporations operating in the same field. We held the tax was an excise and that the classifications were not arbitrary or unreasonable.

I can see no distinction in principle between the tax involved in that case and the one under consideration here. If a tax on gross revenue is an excise, a tax on net income must be. I fail to see any distinction between them in operation or result. Furthermore, if a city, the creature of the state, whose power to tax is *Page 395 limited strictly within the grant of power from the state, may impose an excise, I fail to see why the state itself, whose power to tax is limited only by express constitutional prohibition, may not levy such a tax.

I have refrained from discussing decisions of courts of other states, because, as pointed out by counsel for respondents, they deal, for the most part, with constitutional provisions so different from ours that they cannot be deemed authority for sustaining initiative No. 69. There is one case, however, decided since this case was first argued, which deals with a constitutional provision defining "property" in even more comprehensive terms than our own fourteenth amendment. O'Connellv. State Board of Equalization, 25 P.2d (Mont.) 114. There the supreme court of Montana had under consideration a graduated income tax law, enacted by the legislature under a constitutional provision defining property as follows:

"Article XII, § 17: The word property as used in this Article is hereby declared to include moneys, credits, bonds, stocks, franchises, and all matters and things (real, personal and mixed) capable of private ownership, but this shall not be construed so as to authorize the taxation of the stocks of any company or corporation when the property of such company or corporation represented by such stocks is within the state and has been taxed."

The court said:

"It is not necessary for us to declare the exact nature of the income tax under consideration. It is apparent that the legislature of the state of Montana intended to enact an income tax and did not intend that it should be considered as a property tax law. It is also apparent that the legislature by the adoption of the statute from the state of Idaho, took the statute with the Idaho construction, which was to the effect that it was an excise tax. It is also further apparent that if the definition of `property' contained in section *Page 396 17 of Article XII is to be given the effect as expressed by this court in Hilger v. Moore, supra, then the argument of plaintiff that the Act imposes a property tax falls to the ground.

"It is important to note that if section 17, supra, does not limit the legislature in the particular under consideration, then the general power of the legislature to enact legislation, as discussed earlier in this opinion, comes into effect, and the legislature, in the absence of the restriction, was just as free in that particular as was the Idaho legislature under its permissive constitutional authority. In that event the legislature was free to enact Chapter 181, and it follows that the provisions of section 1 and section 17 of Article XII are not prohibitive, because the same degree of uniformity is not required in the case of an excise tax or in the case of an income tax statute that is required in one providing for a levy upon `property.' (Hale v. County Treasurer, 82 Mont. 98, 265 P. 5;Quong Wing v. Kirkendall, 39 Mont. 64, 101 P. 250; s.c.233 U.S. 59, 56 L.Ed. 350, 32 S.Ct. 192.)"

Of course, this decision carries no binding force upon this court. But if the principle, that legislative enactments are to be upheld unless their invalidity is apparent beyond all reasonable doubt, is to be adhered to, it brings to us a persuasive power well nigh irresistible. The disagreement of courts and judges on identical problems seems to afford the highest proof that "reasonable doubt" does exist.

(2) Let us assume, however, that the character of the tax has been changed by this broad definition of property; that the declaration in the fourteenth amendment has converted an exaction for the enjoyment of a personal privilege from an excise to a property tax. Still, the income tax act is not beyond the pale of its limitations. It must always be borne in mind that the state constitution is not a grant of power; it is a limitation. The theory is that the power of government is in the people, and that the legislature, *Page 397 representing the people, has all the powers of government inherent in the people, except such as are specifically withheld. In this case, it is particularly important to remember this principle, because the act under attack was enacted by the people themselves as initiative measure No. 69. So the essence of this phase of the question is: Have the people, by the enactment of the fourteenth amendment, placed a limitation upon their owninherent power of taxation, which renders them impotent to impose an income tax upon themselves?

It cannot be gainsaid that the purpose of the amendment was to remove limitations on the taxing power, as defined in article VII. The latter was archaic, but under it the state had power to levy excises for revenue. This right had been consistently sustained by this court, from Fleetwood v. Read, 21 Wn. 547,58 P. 665, 47 L.R.A. 205, to Pacific Tel. Tel. Co. v.Seattle, 172 Wn. 649, 21 P.2d 721. Can it be possible that, by defining as property everything capable of ownership, the people intended to destroy this lucrative source of revenue? Patently, they did not.

Of course, citation of cases is not necessary in support of legislative authority to classify persons in groups for the purposes of exacting excise taxes from them. The only limitation is that the classification shall not be unreasonable or arbitrary. And the courts will not weigh with too much nicety the legislative discretion in that respect. State Board of TaxCommissioners v. Jackson, 283 U.S. 527, 73 A.L.R. 1464.

While the amendment placed a limitation of uniformity of taxation on property in the same class, it placed but one limitation (and that qualified) on the power of classification. Reverting to the terms of the amendment, we find four elements in the body of it — prohibitory, declaratory and mandatory. They are: *Page 398 (1) "The power of taxation shall never be suspended, surrendered or contracted away" (distinctly prohibitory); (2) "taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of property" (mandatory); (3) property "shall mean and include everything, whether tangible or intangible, subject to ownership" (declaratory); and (4) "all real estate shall constitute one class" (mandatory). Those subdivisions constitute the essence of the amendment. I fail to see wherein there is any limitation contained therein to classify property for purposes of taxation, other than that real estate shall constitute one class. It goes without saying that the amendment was adopted, holding in view the judicial interpretation and limitation of article VII. If that be true, and if the purpose of the amendment was to broaden, rather than restrict, the power of taxation, it is sacrificing substance to form to so construe the amendment as to deprive the state of a source of revenue which it had before its adoption.

This phase of our problem was presented to and met by the supreme court of Missouri in Ludlow-Saylor Wire Co. v.Wollbrinck, 275 Mo. 339, 205 S.W. 196. It was there said:

"The appellant contends that the act under review (Laws 1917, p. 524, et seq.) in taxing incomes, thereby imposed a tax on property in contravention of Section 4, supra, in that by the terms of the act the tax was not laid in proportion to value. . ..

"In law and in the broadest sense `property' means `a thing owned,' and is, therefore, applicable to whatever is the subject of legal ownership. It is divisible into different species of property, including physical things, such as lands, goods, money; intangible things, such as franchises, patent rights, copyrights, trademarks, trade names, business good will, rights of action, etc. In short it embraces anything and everything which may belong to a man and in the ownership of which he has a right to be protected by law. The *Page 399 court held, in effect, that in directing as the Constitution does, that taxes on property should be levied according to value, reference was intended to be made to other species of property than that which a person has in his income; that the Constitution did not abridge the power of the Legislature to provide revenue by a taxation of income; that its command was directed to other and distinct classes of property which (on account of their peculiar nature could be measured in value) become the object of taxation independent of the owner, and are susceptible, by proper procedure, to lien or seizure for the enforcement of the tax. The court held that it was property having such a nature and characteristics, and not the mere usufruct of such property, nor the earnings of physical or mental labor, which was referred to in the clause under review and intended thereby to be subjected to taxation according to its value. . . .

"It may be that the construction of the word `property' which has appeared as definitive of the subject of ad valorem taxation in all of the three constitutions of this state when originally made, was not in full accord with the broadest possible meaning of that term, in that literally it might include every species of property. But that was not a compellable view, and the restricted construction (which excluded from its purview personal earnings and incomes) had been affixed to this term six years prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1875, and the principle of that construction has since been applied in sustaining taxes of a similar nature, although levied without proportioning the taxation to the value of the thing taxed. . . .

"That income is property because it is an ownable thing, is a matter of simple apprehension which has been affirmed under the definition of property above stated. That it is, `in effect' a taxation of the labor or capital which produced it, may be conceded, since by reaction it affects the value of the thing or things from which it is derived. But none of these considerations alter the fact that incomes are distinguishable from the tangible or intangible property yielding them, nor do they affect the established law in Missouri, that incomes are thus connoted by our Constitution and decisions. *Page 400 These recognize incomes as one of the classes entering into the concept of property not required to be taxed in proportion to value, and, therefore, not falling within the designation of property which the Legislature is forbidden to tax except in that way; and (as a consequence of the plenary power of that body to raise revenue at will, absent a constitutional prohibition) falling wholly within the scope of the authority of the Legislature to impose taxes for the sustenance of the State without measuring its impose by the value of the thing taxed. Taxation of incomes, therefore, does not offend Section 4 of Article 10 of the Constitution of 1875. . . .

"In the act under review it is not even contended (conceding the power to levy the tax) that the provisions distinguishing the persons and grading the tax to be paid in accordance with such distinctions, are not founded in reason, in justice and for the utility of the public — the true criteria which should govern all legislative action. Indeed the essential justice of the various classifications of the act seems to be evident. Practically identical gradations of tax, classifications of persons, etc., are contained in the Federal act which is the pattern of the Missouri law, and are set forth in the discriminations found to exist in the acts of many other states of the Union and the most enlightened nations of the world."

While the constitutional provision considered in that case was not the same as that contained in the fourteenth amendment, the question raised under it was identical with the one here presented. The decision is of peculiar importance to the solution of the problem here presented, in that it makes clear that the fourteenth amendment must be construed in the light of the law as it existed, under the decisions of this court, at the time the amendment was adopted. In the Telephone Co. case, supra, we sanctioned a tax in no essential element distinguishable from the exaction here questioned, and we based that holding on a line *Page 401 of decisions extending over a period of thirty years prior to the adoption of the amendment. The Telephone Co. case was decided subsequent to the adoption of the fourteenth amendment. By implication, at least, the court, by that decision, held that existing methods and forms of taxation were in no wise impaired by the terms of the amendment.

Conceding the exaction imposed by the income tax act to be a property tax, the amendment still leaves to legislative discretion and determination the classification of persons and subject matter to which the act applies. So whether the tax imposed be considered an excise or a property tax, it in no wise runs counter to any prohibitory or mandatory provision of the fourteenth amendment.

The judgment, in my opinion, should be reversed.

BEALS, C.J., TOLMAN, and GERAGHTY, JJ., concur with BLAKE, J. *Page 402