Louisville Water Co. v. Commonwealth

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The property of the Louisville Water Company not having been assessed for State taxes for the years from 1882 to 1885, inclusive, the sheriff of the county, in obedience to statutory provision, returned a list of it ' for each of those years to the county court clerk, who entered the same upon the assessor’s books, and certified it to the State Auditor, and also to the sheriff f01collection.

The company refused payment, claiming that it was exempt from taxation under a,11 act of the Legislature. It is a corporation, and, as its name indicates, supplies the city of Louisville with water. The property assessed was that in use for this purpose. It could not, therefore, be seized and sold by a collecting officer, as this would deprive the city of water. Its safety, as well as the health and comfort of its citizens, required the exercise of the corporate franchise, and' forbade *249interference with it by a sale of the means necessary to operate it.

The sheriff thereupon brought this action in his own name, but subsequently, by an amended petition, united the Commonwealth as a co-plaintiff, asking that the company be compelled to show cause, if any existed, why it should not, within a given time, pay the taxes into court, and in the event it failed to do so upon the court’s order, that it be placed in the hands of a receiver, and its receipts applied to their payment. Various defenses were presented. But one question requires notice, however, as it is decisive of the case.

The lower court, upon final hearing, was of the opinion that the company was liable to taxation, and ordered it to pay the taxes into court within a certain number of days. This it' declined to do, and thereupon a receiver was appointed, and the company has-appealed.

It was held by this court in the case of Baldwin v. Hewitt, Auditor, &c., 88 Ky., 673, that taxes could not be recovered by suit in the absence of legislative authority, and there being no statute to this effect in this State, save as to railroad companies, an action for such a purpose could not be maintained, even in the absence of any other adequate remedy. There an administrator had failed for several years to list and pay the taxes upon the assets in his hands, consisting altogether of choses in action. When the suit was brought, seeking a recovery against him as administrator, he had distributed the estate, and it had been removed by the distributees out of the State. It is urgent *250that this case differs materially from that one; that here the statute gives a lien upon the property for the payment of the taxes, and that the proceeding is in rem, no personal judgment being sought- If, however, no, right exists to use the' courts as a vehicle for the collection of tax claims, we fail to see any difference between the two cases. It is said, however, that 'in the case cited an adequate remedy in fact existed, but Avas ineffectual, while here there is none Avhatever, and that, in such a case the right to sue should be implied as a matter of necessity.

We do not grant that such a difference exists between the tAvo cases. If the administrator had still been in possession of the assets, no suit could have been maintained against him for the taxes, although the estate could not have been seized for them, as it consisted of choses in action. It is true they might have been reached in the manner provided by statute by the summary mode of attachment by notice served upon those owing them, if the debtors could haA^e been found and a* judgment obtained in the county court; but this would. have been because the Legislature had expressly provided such a mode of collection.

Granting, however, that there is a difference between the two cases, and admitting, for the sake of further discussion, that the one cited is not altogether decisive of this one, yet it is certainly true that it is not any more an inherent power of a court to collect taxes than it is to levy them. It has been held by this court that a tax is not a debt within the legal mean*251ing of the term, and, therefore, assumpsit can. not be maintained npon it, as is done in some States where it is regarded as an indebtedness. It comes npon the citizen in invitum, and its payment rests npon the duty he owes to the State in return for the protection extended by it to him. The exercise of the power of taxation is legislative in character, while the collection of taxes, when once authorized by the law-making power, is ministerial. The one is legislative and the •other executive. Neither is a judicial act, and one department of the government should be careful not to encroach upon the domain of another. It is true the judiciary may be called upon by the Legislature to enforce the collection of taxes in a judicial way, but it has not done so in this State, save as to railroads, where suit has been authorized to recover them, and this exceptional case inferentially says that this remedy can not be resorted to in other cases.

The collection of taxes depends, and properly so, upon the remedies afforded by statute. Their speedy and prompt collection is necessary to the life of the State. The interest of the citizen demands that it should be done with as little expense as possible. If resort can be had to the courts in the absence of statutory provision, then delay, expense and abuse will certainly follow.

But it may be said it is only in cases where there is no remedy, or it is ineffectual, that the right to sue for taxes should be implied. We are aware that it has been held by some courts, and said by some text-writers, that if no specific remedy be given by statute, or only an imperfect or inadequate one, then it is but *252reasonable to infer that a remedy by suit was intended, by the Legislature. This court has, however, never-assented to such a rule. Public policy, in our opinion, forbids it. Its adoption would biirden the courts-with litigation, and be likely to lead to abuse of such ■a character as not only to unjustly harass the citizen, but injure the State greatly more than it would suffer by the loss of taxes from its non-adoption. It would tend to confuse the powers of the different departments of the government, and there would be no limit to its exercise.- If one delinquent could be sued because he has made a fraudulent transfer of his property, or another for some other reason, upon the ground that there is no remedy or adequate one, the State in the end would be the sufferer. Beside, it would violate a policy which has prevailed in this State from its earliest history. It is true it has been said by this court in some cases that wherever a legal liability exists, the law raises a promise and assumpsit lies; that if a right be created and no remedy appointed, the usual remedy for that class of cases will be appropriate; that when the statute creates a liability and provides no specific remedy, the common law must afford it, and that when the chancellor finds a party with a legal right, but no remedy, he should furnish it. This is all true, generally speaking, and a review of the cases shows that they were general expressions, used in the argument contained in the opinions and where questions unlike this one were presented.

In the case of the Portland Dry Dock Company v. Town of Portland, 12 B. M., 77, the company *253was required by its charter to pay annually to the city of Louisville ñfty cents on each hundred dollars of its capital stock. Subsequently the trustees of the town of Portland were authorized by the Legislature to collect annually two hundred dollars of the assessment. It was urged that they could not sue for it, but must, collect it as they did their ordinary taxes. The difference between that case and this one is manifest. There a certain sum was fixed by statute, and the fact that it was called a tax by the statute creating the liability did not preclude an action of debt to recover it.

The cases of Johnston v. City of Louisville, 11 Bush, 527; Railroad Company v. Trustees of Elizabethtown, 12 Bush, 233, and Louisville Water Company v. Hamilton, 81 Ky., 517, are not in conflict with the views above expressed. Expressions of a general character may be found in the argument in the opinions in those cases which seem to support a different view, but the question as now presented was not then before the court, nor was it decided.

In the last-named case the water company sued out an injunction to prevent the sale of some property for its taxes. It was not sued for them. It voluntarily came into a court of equity, asking relief, and under such circumstances the court said: “ The chancellor having been appealed to by the appellant (the water company) for some sort of relief, should have taken cognizance of the case, 'and required the appellant, by rule, to pay the money into court, and if not, to place the management of the corporation in the hands of a receiver, in order that tlie burthen might be discharged.” It is apparent that case is not this one.

*254If, where a tax has been imposed and no remedy or any adequate one furnished for its collection by the statute, it were, in our opinion, a correct rule to imply the right to sue for it on account of the silence of the Legislature, yet we would not apply it in view of the fact that our Legislature has expressly provided that a railroad corporation may be sued for its taxes. (General Statutes, chapter 92, article 3, section 5.)

This was equivalent to a declaration by it that in the absence of such a statute no suit could be maintained.

The judiciary should not, in our opinion, merely because of legislative silence as to the collection of a tax, imply to itself a power not inherent in itself, and the exercise of which will -not only be confusing as to the powers of the different branches of the government, but likely to lead to great- abuse. Indeed, in view of the legislation as to taxes owing by railroads, it can not do so. We do not intimate whether, in this instance, the taxes are or are not owing, but merely decide that for the lack of legislation no action can be maintained looking to their collection. If, in such a case, the State is likely to lose any of its revenue, the Legislature can, by additional legislation in the form of penalties for non-payment, or by authorizing suits for its recovery, provide against it, and will, no doubt, do so where, in its wisdom, it may be proper and necessary.

Judgment reversed, with directions to dismiss the r petition.