This case questions the Merchants License Tax for the year 1979 under § 150.040, RSMo 1978, and because it involves the construction of the revenue laws of the State, it falls within our direct appellate jurisdiction. Mo. Const. Article V, § 3.
Plaintiff during the year 1979 was an automobile dealer, owning new motor vehicles and other “goods, wares and merchandise.” In 1974 the Legislature adopted statutes imposing a special ad valorem tax
In 1976 the Legislature enacted § 150.-040, 1976 Mo.Laws 662, which became § 150.040, RSMo 1978, and reads as follows:
1. Merchants shall pay an ad valorem tax equal to that which is levied upon real estate, on the highest amount of all goods, wares and merchandise, except new motor vehicles, which they may have in their possession or under their control, whether owned by them or consigned to them for sale, at any time between the first Monday in January and the first Monday in April in each year; provided, that no commission merchant shall be required to pay any tax on any unmanufac-tured article, the growth or produce of this or any other state, which may have been consigned for sale, and in which he has no ownership or interest other than his commission.
2. Merchants shall pay an ad valorem tax equal to that which is levied upon real estate on new motor vehicles. The inventory valuation for assessment purposes for the ad valorem tax on new motor vehicles shall be nine and one-half percent of the gross amount received from sales by merchants for new motor vehicles sold by them from January first through March thirty-first of each year, and the' assessor of each county and the city of St. Louis shall have the authority to inspect the books of each merchant for the purpose of determining said sales.
Similarly this statute was challenged on constitutional grounds, with respect to the special method of valuation of new motor vehicles, and this challenge too was successful. McKay Buick, Inc v. Love, 569 S.W.2d 740 (Mo. banc 1978). (McKay II.) This Court held that an ad valorem tax could not constitutionally be determined on the basis of gross receipts from the sale of the property involved.
The defendants here, taxing authorities in Jackson County, determined plaintiff’s liability for Merchants License Tax for the year 1979 under Subsection 1 of § 150.040 quoted above, knowing that Subsection 2 of that section had fallen as a result of McKay II, and in the belief that new motor vehicles in inventory would escape taxation unless Subsection 1 was applied. Plaintiff filed a protest pursuant to § 139.031, RSMo 1978, making the not implausible argument that its new motor vehicles could not be assessed under Subsection 1 inasmuch as that subsection applies only to “goods, wares and merchandise, except new motor vehicles.” (Emphasis supplied.) The trial court found in favor of the plaintiff and entered judgment sustaining the protest in an amount agreed upon by the parties. Defendants appealed.
Defendants argue for reversal that the Legislature did not intend to exempt new motor vehicles from the Merchants License Tax, and that, had the legislators known Subsection 2 was constitutionally infirm, they would undoubtedly have removed the exclusionary language from Subsection 1. They also argue that if the plaintiff’s new motor vehicles are not assessed for taxation under Subsection 1, plaintiffs will enjoy an exemption from taxation contrary to the provisions of Article X, § 6 of the Missouri Constitution, which forbids the granting of exemptions other than those specifically set out in the section.
The plaintiff argues that it may not be taxed except in accordance with the terms of a valid statute and that the failure of an explicit tax, because of constitutional deficiency, furnishes no basis for assessing an unauthorized tax.
We cannot accept the invitation to authorize assessment of the plaintiff’s new motor vehicles under Subsection 1, however expedient that solution might be. The exclusion of new motor vehicles from that section is clear as can be. Nor is there an invalid exemption from taxation. No exemption was intended. The Legislature simply failed to prescribe a valid tax. Cf. William A. Straub, Inc. v. City of St. Louis, 506 S.W.2d 377 (Mo.1974).
We do not need to decide whether such a doctrine could ever be applied to statutes, because we are of the opinion that it is clearly inappropriate in this case. The legislatures of 1974 and 1976 manifested the clear purpose of treating new motor vehicles differently than other items in merchants’ inventories. Some of the problems asserted by dealers in motor vehicles are described in McKay I. Only on the basis of pure speculation could it be said that the 1976 Legislature, if apprised of the constitutional problem, would have enacted Subsection 1 without the exclusionary language. It is just as reasonable to assume that it would have sought another solution for the perceived special problems in the assessment of new motor vehicles.
We also note that the Legislature did not take the steps it might have taken to protect against a finding of partial unconstitutionality of the 1976 enactment. See Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. v. Morris, 345 S.W.2d 52 (Mo. banc 1961); Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Morris, 345 S.W.2d 62 (Mo. banc 1961).
It is not appropriate to assume that the 1976 Legislature would have done the same thing that the 1979 session did, in repealing the existing § 150.040, RSMo 1978, and enacting a new § 150.040 which eliminated the distinction between new motor vehicles and other goods, wares and merchandise. § 150.040, 1979 Mo.Laws 347. Perhaps the 1979 legislators through a sense of frustration and gave up on the separate treatment of new motor vehicles. There is no assurance that the 1976 session would have done the same.
We find, in sum, no reason for not applying Subsection 1 of § 150.040, RSMo 1978, just as it is written.
The judgment is affirmed.
1.
Under what has been termed “the doctrine of dependent relative revocation” the rule is that if a testator cancels or destroys a will with a present intention of making a new one immediately and as a substitute, and the new will is not made, or, if made, fails of effect, it will be presumed the testator preferred the old will to intestacy, and the old one will be admitted to probate in the absence of evidence overcoming the presumption. 79 Am.Jur.2d Wills § 563 (1975).