concurring. Since 1911 the General Assembly has imposed a tax on public utilities measured by their gross receipts. The tax has always been denominated by statute as an excise tax, and, until the instant case, no one has contended that it is an income tax subject to the return provisions of Section 9, Article XII of the Ohio Constitution, even though tMs section of the Constitution has been effective since 1912. The present action was probably engendered by the following language found in the opiMon in East Ohio Gas Co. v. Akron (1966), 7 Ohio St. 2d 73, 77, 218 N. E. 2d 608: “The ‘gross receipts tax’ levied upon public utilities, pursuant to Chapter 5727 of the Eevised Code, regardless of any nomenclature used in the statute or in prior decisions to characterize it, is an adjusted gross income tax * *
Eelator in the present case correctly contends that tMs is supporting authority for his proposition that the taxes contained in E .0. 5727.38 and 5727.81 are income, not excise, taxes. However, the court in the East Ohio Gas Co. case was not confronted with the problem of determimng whether the taxes in question were income or excise taxes, and therefore that case is not controlling in this action. Neverthe*186less, simply to distinguish that case from the present action upon the basis of the different issues presented in each would be inadequate. It is appropriate that a more detailed explanation of the East Ohio Gas Co. case be made.
The general power of a municipality to levy taxes, implicit in the “home rule” provisions of the Ohio Constitution, is limited by the authority constitutionally granted to the General Assembly in Section 13, Article XYIII, and Section 6, Article XII, to restrict the taxing powers of municipalities. Those provisions have generated the judicial doctrine of preemption by implication, which provides that if the General Assembly has levied a tax on a particular subject matter, it will be presumed that the General Assembly has impliedly exercised its power to prohibit a local tax on the same subject matter. State, ex rel. Zielonka, v. Carrel (1919), 99 Ohio St. 220, 124 N. E. 134; Cincinnati v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co. (1925), 112 Ohio St. 493, 147 N. E. 806.
In East Ohio Gas Co. v. Akron, supra, this court held that under that doctrine a municipal income tax on the net income of a public utility doing business in that municipality was impliedly prohibited by the gross receipts taxes found in R. C. Chapter 5727. In its opinion, at page 77, the court expressly stated that the rationale behind the doctrine was “the court’s antipathy to ‘double taxation.’ ” Therefore, whenever the doctrine is invoked by a litigant, the relevant question is whether the local levy seeks to collect a tax on subject matter which the state also taxes. If it does, the doctrine will be applied to invalidate the municipal tax. Hence, in the East Ohio Gas Co. ease the fact that the state gross receipts taxes on public utilities were statutorily and judicially viewed as excise taxes did not prevent the application of preemption by implication. Since both the state taxes and the local tax were imposed on the same subject matter — the income of public utilities — the local tax was held invalid. It is within that framework that one must view this court’s statement in East Ohio Gas Co. that the state gross receipts taxes on public utilities were adjusted *187gross income taxes. For the purpose of applying the doctrine of preemption by implication, the fact that the state taxes were measured by the utilities’ gross receipts was sufficient to regard them as income taxes.
However, the present case does not in any way involve the doctrine of preemption by implication, and hence the statements found in East Ohio Gas Co. v. Akron, supra, are inapplicable. For the purpose of determining whether the taxes imposed by E. C. 5727.38 and 5727.81 are income or excise taxes, I can perceive no reason to depart from the settled judicial interpretation upholding thie statutory declaration that they are excise taxes.