DocketNumber: [No. 29, September Term, 1959, Adv.]
Citation Numbers: 153 A.2d 287, 220 Md. 418
Judges: Brune, Bruñe, Henderson, Hammond, Prescott, Piorney
Filed Date: 9/29/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, National Can Company, (National) seeks to set aside the assessment for the year 1957 of its tangible personal property, consisting of furniture, fixtures and equipment, manufactured products and raw material, tools and machinery used for manufacturing, and tools and machinery not used for manufacturing. The aggregate assessed value of such property is somewhat in excess of $5,200,000, the great bulk of it being placed upon manufactured products and raw material (over $3,737,000) and tools and machinery used for manufac
The Act begins with nine recitals: (1) a reference to the decision by this Court of the case of Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. State Tax Commission (214 Md. 550), 136 A. 2d 567; (2) a summary of the holding therein—that real property and stock in business have been classified alike by the General Assembly for assessment purposes and that the same allowance for inflation must be made in respect of stock in business as in respect of real property; (3) that Article 15 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights empowers the General Assembly to provide for the separate assessment of land and the classification and sub-classification of personal property; (4) that “it is the intention of the General Assembly to classify real property separate and distinct from personal property, and to separately sub-classify certain classes of personal property for assessment purposes, to the end that an allowance for inflation may be made in respect to real property, but not in respect to personal property;” (5) that “it is the belief of the General Assembly that the natural and inherent differences between real and personal property, and the peculiarities of certain classes of personal property require and justify separate classification and sub-classification for assessment purposes as aforesaid, and require and justify the making of an allowance for inflation in respect to real estate assessments but not in respect to personal property assessments; ” (6) that “the State will lose substantial revenues as the result of the Sears Roebuck decision unless remedial legislation is enacted and made retroactive to January 1, 1957; ” (7) that “the great majority of taxpayers have paid taxes upon stock in business without protest for the year 1957, leaving only a small number of protesting taxpayers to whom the Sears Roebuck decision will be applicable unless remedial legislation is made retroactive; ” (8) that “it is the belief of the General Assembly that fundamental concepts of fairness and equality require that the protesting taxpayers be accorded the same tax treatment as those taxpayers who have paid taxes
The operative provisions of the Act undertake to carry into effect the purposes and intent of the General Assembly as expressed in the above preamble clauses numbered (4) to (9), inclusive. Accordingly, the Act, insofar as here pertinent, amends or adds to the pre-existing law by providing, in brief, “effective as of January 1, 1957”: (a) for the separate classification for taxation of real and personal property, with a separate sub-classification under the latter of “stock in business” (inventory); (b) for the determination of the “full cash value” of real estate by deducting from its “current value * * * an allowance for inflation, if in fact inflation exists”; (c) for the determination of the full cash value of personal property, as its “current value without any allowance for inflation”; (d) for the determination of the “fair average value” of a “stock in business” by taking the “cost or market value [thereof], whichever is lower, without any allowance for inflation”; (e) for immunity from prosecution or penalty for any violation of the Act which occurred prior to its passage; and (f) for the separability of the provisions of the Act. The Act was passed as an emergency measure to take effect from the date of its passage, and it was approved on April 4, 1958. It was clearly intended to reverse the result of the Sears case for 1957 and subsequent years.
This case is a sequel to the Sears case, supra, 214 Md. 550, 136 A. 2d 567. There this Court held that, under the then existing law, the assessment practice of the State Tax Commission of making a deduction from the “full cash value” of real estate in order to allow for the effect of inflation, but of
Before proceeding further it seems well to state that the Sears case did not determine that Article 15 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights required uniformity of treatment of real estate and personal property for tax purposes. No such question was involved in the case. It was there held that under the applicable statutory provisions the Legislature had put real estate and inventories on the same footing for tax purposes, and that a practice of the Commission which gave to the former more favorable treatment than to the latter as to assessments and therefore (because the tax rates per dollar of assessed value were the same) also gave to owners of real estate more favorable treatment as to the amount of taxes on property of equal value, was invalid. It was further held that under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the owner of personal property was entitled to have his assessment reduced to the same level as that applicable to real estate.
The challenges to the validity of the Act are based upon the following grounds: first, that it sets up an unfair and dis
The first attack is two-pronged, but its two branches are so closely related as to make it desirable to treat them together so as to avoid unnecessary repetition.
The power to classify property for purposes of taxation was conferred by the amendment to Article 15 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights which was proposed by Ch. 390 of the Acts of 1914 and ratified November 2, 1915. Prior to that amendment, taxes were required under Article 15 to be apportioned in accordance with the actual worth of the taxpayer in real or personal property. This necessarily meant uniformity of assessment as well as uniformity of tax rates. See an article by H. H. Walker Lewis, Esq., “Maryland Tax Articles,” 13 Maryland L. Rev. 83, at 105; State v. Cumberland & Penn. R.R. Co., 40 Md. 22; Schley v. Montgomery County, 106 Md. 407, 67 A. 250. The history of Article 15 is traced by Lewis and is also traced in a very full opinion of the then Attorney General, now Judge Hammond, and of Robert M. Thomas, Esq., then an Assistant Attorney General, reported in 37 Ops. Att’y Gen. 424 (1952). See especially pages 426-433 and the cases therein cited. We shall not undertake to review this history at length in this opinion.
In the Constitution of 1867, as originally adopted, Article 15 contained a provision that “every person in the State, or person holding property therein, ought to contribute his
Susquehanna Power Co. v. State Tax Comm., 159 Md. 334, 151 A. 29, makes it clear that the obligation of owners of property within the State to pay taxes thereon continues to exist, notwithstanding the amendment, and is implicit in the provisions with regard to uniformity within classes or subclasses. We find, however, no implication in that case of a continued constitutional obligation under Article 15 that taxes must be uniform as between different classes of property. Cf. Wells v. Hyattsville, 77 Md. 125, 26 A. 357, decided in 1893, in which it was held that a local Act imposing a tax on real estate, but barring a tax on personal property, for town purposes was unconstitutional under Article 15 as it then stood.
In Oursler v. Tawes, 178 Md. 471, 13 A. 2d 763, this Court held that Article 15 did1 not bar income taxes at different rates on ordinary income and on investment income. This case is of especial significance here because, although the Court considered it doubtful whether an income tax was a property tax, it was held that it was controlled by the same basic principles which govern either excise or property taxation. (178 Md. 482.) In rejecting the taxpayers’ argument based upon
See also County Comm’rs of Anne Arundel County v. English, 182 Md. 514, 35 A. 2d 135, which recognized that there can be a reasonable classification for tax purposes, but struck down the assessment there involved as being discriminatory.
1 Cooley, Taxation, (4th Ed.), § 281, p. 596, states: “* * * |T]n those states where all property need not be taxed, a classification of property as real and personal, and the taxing of one and not the other, has been upheld.” Maryland has long granted or permitted exemptions in favor of religious or charitable organizations and other exemptions believed to be in the public interest, such as those from local or State taxation, or both, of raw materials and inventory in the hands of manufacturers and manufacturing machinery and equipment. Indeed, it was the repeal of such exemptions in Baltimore City which precipitated the present controversy. Cf. Kimball-Tyler Co. v. City of Baltimore, 214 Md. 86, 133 A. 2d 433. National was a party to a suit covered by that case.
In footnote 25 to § 292, op. cit., Cooley says: “If there is a general power to classify, no good reason is apparent why different rates may not be imposed on real and personal property as constituting separate classes.” See Klein v. Bd. of Supervisors, 282 U. S. 19, 24; Waring v. City of Savannah,
A like rule has been applied to variations in assessments of different classes of property. Rees v. City of Erie, 90 A. 58 (Pa.), involving different percentages applied to land and to improvements. Kentucky Finance Co. v. McCord, 290 S. W. 2d 481 (Ky.), 100% of full cash value on intangible personal property, 29.7% on real estate.
In Maryland, a totally different basis of taxation of intangible personal property long prevailed—the so-called 30-mill tax on stocks, bonds and other securities. Its repeal and replacement by the income tax on investment income shows the interrelation which may exist between property taxes and income taxes.
The Attorney General’s opinion above referred to (37 Ops. Att’y Gen. 424) dealt directly with a statute which provided for the assessment of inventories in two counties for local purposes at 75% of the fair average value thereof during the year preceding the date of finality. In discussing the question, the opinion (p. 434) referred to 1 Cooley, op. cit., § 298 and quoted a footnote stating that “Ordinarily, it would seem, a classification whereby one class of property would be valued at a higher or lower percentage of real value than other property, conceding the power to classify in a proper case, would ordinarily be an unreasonable classification and therefore invalid.” The Attorney General commented: “This is almost the equivalent of saying the power does not exist.” We agree with this comment. At page 436 of the above opinion, the Attorney General made the following further comment, with which we also agree:
“Moreover, inasmuch as the final tax is the product of the rate and an assessment of valuation, there*429 would seem to be little logic from the standpoint of practical results in denying the Legislature the power to classify for purposes of valuation and assessment when it already has the power to classify as to rates. The trend, such as it is, seems to be toward increased powers of classification for all purposes, particularly where the Constitution requires uniformity only within the class or sub-class of property.”
We, therefore, find it unnecessary to rest our decision with regard to the power of the General Assembly to classify upon the narrow ground of the statement in Rogan v. County Commissioners of Calvert County, 194 Md. 299, 309, 71 A. 2d 47, 51 (which cited a similar statement in Leser v. Lowenstein, 129 Md. 244, 250, 98 A. 712), to the effect that the requirement of Article 15 that taxes shall be uniform as to land within the taxing district, “refers to levies of taxes and not to assessments.” The test which we deem appropriate is the reasonableness of the classification rather than the method by which a difference in the amount of taxes is effected—whether by a difference in percentage of assessment or by a difference in the rate of taxation applicable to the respective classes. Cf. Lewis, op. cit., 13 Md. L. Rev. 103-107, where he questions the statement as made in the Rogan case on the ground that it has been lifted out of the context in which it was made in the Leser case and was thereby given a destructive effect as to the uniformity which should be required.
Our present Article 15 requires that a classification be uniform within a class, and this Court struck down as arbitrary a classification under our Income Tax Law in Blaustein v. Tax Comm., 176 Md. 423, 4 A. 2d 861, where there was no real difference between income from certain trust estates which was taxed and income from others which was not.
Turning now to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, it is well settled that this Clause does not prevent a State from making a reasonable classification for tax purposes and taxing different classes differently. Michigan Central R.R. Co. v. Powers, 201 U. S. 245; Kentucky Union Co. v. Kentucky, 219 U. S. 140; Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U. S. 132; Nashville, C. & St.
In the very recent case of Allied Stores of Ohio, Inc. v. Bowers, 358 U. S. 522 (1959), the Supreme Court has reviewed many cases dealing with classification for purposes of state taxation of several kinds and has restated some of the rules with regard to the application thereto of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court points out that this clause “imposes no iron rule of equality, prohibiting the flexibility and variety that are appropriate to reasonable schemes of state taxation.” (358 U. S. at page 526.) The Court further says (p. 527) : “But there is a
point beyond which the State cannot go without violating the Equal Protection Clause. The State must proceed upon a. rational basis and may not resort to a classification that is palpably arbitrary. The rule often has been stated to be that the classification ‘must rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the object of the legislation.’ [Cases cited.] ‘If the selection or classification is neither capricious nor arbitrary, and rests upon some reasonable consideration of difference or policy, there is no denial of the equal protection of the law.’ Brown-Forman Co. v. Kentucky, 217 U. S. 563, 573; State Board of Tax Comm’rs v. Jackson, 283 U. S. 527, 537. That a statute may discriminate in favor of a certain class does not render it arbitrary if the discrimination is founded upon a reasonable distinction, or difference in state policy. American Sugar Ref. Co. v. Louisiana, 179 U. S. 89; Stebbins v. Riley, 268 U. S. 137, 142.”
The Brown-Forman case upheld a tax on distillers and rectifiers of blended spirits, though the state imposed no corresponding tax on distillers or rectifiers of straight spirits. In the Jackson case a progressive tax on chain stores based upon the number of units was upheld. In the American Sugar Refining case a tax on persons or corporations engaged in the business of refining sugar and molasses was upheld, notwithstanding an exemption in favor of planters and farmers grinding and refining their own sugar and molasses. In Stebbins v. Riley, supra, a state inheritance tax was upheld which prohibited the deduction of the amount of the Federal Estate Tax in arriving
Equality within a class is essential under the Equal Protection Clause, but equality between different classes is not required. Kentucky Railroad Tax Cases, 115 U. S. 321, Magoun v. Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, 170 U. S. 283; Michigan Central R.R. Co. v. Powers, supra; Hart Refineries v. Harmon, 278 U. S. 499.
The Supreme Court has also said that the Equal Protection Clause does not require that a state tax all pursuits or all property that may legitimately be taxed. Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S. 540, 562. That Court has held that if a state taxes wholesale dealers in certain specified articles, it need not impose a like occupation tax upon wholesale dealers in other articles. Southwestern Oil Co. v. Texas, 217 U. S. 114.
Our next problem is whether or not, under established rules, the particular classification here made is valid under Article 15 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights and under the Equal .Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that under the Equal Protection Clause real property and personal property may be differently taxed. Bell’s Gap R. Co. v. Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232, 237; Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594, 606; American Sugar Refining Co. v. Louisiana, supra; Southwestern Oil Co. v. Texas, supra; Stebbins v. Riley, supra; Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway, 281 U. S. 146, 149. In none of these cases was this the actual holding of the case, but the general principle appears from these numerous statements to be fully accepted as well settled law. See also, 1 Cooley, Taxation, § 281, above cited, as to taxation of one class of property and not the other; 51 Am. Jur., Taxation, § 194; 84 C.J.S., Taxation, § 26; Kentucky Finance Co. v. McCord, supra.
These authorities are, we think, sufficient to sustain different treatment of real and personal property for purposes of assessment for taxation. We shall not, however, rest our decision on this phase of the case solely on that general ground.
We have already set forth the declarations of the Legislature in the preambles to the Act. Those numbered above as (4),
The preamble of the Act (Par. (5)) speaks of the inherent differences between real and personal property and the peculiarities of certain classes of personal property (first) as requiring and justifying separate classification and sub-classification for assessment purposes and (second) as requiring and justifying the making of an allowance for inflation with respect to real estate, but not personal property. Other recitals show, we think, that inflation at least prompted the adoption of the statute. Yet, after we give careful consideration to that fact, and if we accept the appellant’s contention that there must be some difference in the impact of inflation as between real estate and tangible personal property to support the difference in treatment here accorded, we cannot say that the legislative classification based upon the finding stated in preamble clause (5), supra, is unsustainable. There is a strong presumption in favor of the validity of a legislative finding. As was said by Chief Judge Markell, speaking for this Court in Dundalk Liquor Co. v. Tawes, 201 Md. 58, 62, 92 A. 2d 560: “An invalid act cannot be made valid by a ‘preface of generalities’ in the form of a legislative declaration of purpose. Schechter Poultry Corporation v. United States, 295 U. S. 495, 537, 55 S. Ct. 837, 79 L. Ed. 1570. But if a legislative declaration is not demonstrably untrue or meaningless, and if true, would support the validity of the act, the courts must accept the judgment of the legislature and cannot substitute a contrary judgment of their own.” See also Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Cotton Duck Co. v. Frankfort Marine, etc., Insurance Co., 111 Md. 561, 75 A. 105.
As to the relative impact of inflation upon real property and tangible personal property, we may note that under our present tax laws and exemptions from taxation (as to the latter of which see Secs. 9 (12) and 9 (17) of Art. 81), generally speaking, taxable personal property is held or used for manufacturing, mercantile or other business purposes. As we have noted above, real estate, to a very considerable extent, is not.
Even though the owner of tangible personal property held for business purposes may fare worse taxwise than the owner of real estate, this alone does not nullify a classification based upon the two different types of property. Insofar as our Article 15 of the Declaration of Rights is concerned, as we have already pointed out, there would seem to be little point in providing for different classifications of property if different tax treatment could not be accorded to the actually different classes. Insofar as the question of, discrimination and the Fourteenth Amendment is concerned, Allied Stores of Ohio v. Bowers, supra, seems decisive. There the Court said (358 U. S. at 528), as we have already noted, that the fact that “a statute may discriminate in favor of a certain class does not render it arbitrary if the discrimination is founded upon a reasonable distinction, or difference in state policy”, and further that “a classification, though discriminatory, is not arbitrary nor violative of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment if any state of facts reasonably can be conceived that would sustain it.” The similarity of the problem of reasonable classification under a state constitution
In the present case we think, as we have indicated above, that a state of facts can reasonably be conceived which would support the classification, and we, therefore, find no violation of either Article 15 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights or of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
We turn now to National’s contention that the absence of standards to guide the Commission in making an allowance for inflation is fatal to the validity of the Act. The language of the Act requiring that an allowance for inflation be made in the case of real estate is certainly very general in terms. However, the Act refers in its preambles to the Sears case and to the prior assessing practices of the Commission and of other taxing authorities with regard to making an allowance for inflation in the case of real estate and not making it in the case of personal property. That such a practice existed was recognized in the Sears case
We do not think that this result follows. On the contrary, we think that a reading of the whole Act, including the preambles, indicates that the General Assembly intended to exercise its power of classification as one objective in itself, and that this is true, notwithstanding that inflationary influences affecting real estate and the decision in the Sears case doubtless prompted its action. It seems clear that the Legislature intended to tax personal property at full value, just as it intended to tax real property at less. There seems little reason why the possible failure of the latter objective because of inadequate guides as to how to effect it, should defeat the former. There is no room to infer that the Legislature intended to treat both alike. Here the Legislature could hardly have made it plainer that it intended to classify real estate and personal property separately for tax purposes and to treat them differently. An intention to treat them alike was the foundation of the Sears decision; under the present Act that intention no longer exists.
In the light of what we have just said, if we assume that the provision for an ¡allowance on account of inflation for real estate is invalid for vagueness or lack of standards, we cannot say that the General Assembly would not have adopted the Act at all, and specifically the provisions for classification, if it had known that this provision would be stricken down; nor can we say that it is so interwoven with the entire Act that the provisions for different classification cannot stand without it. Therefore, we think that the provisions as to personal
Accordingly, we should no longer have a difference within the same class as between National, a personal property taxpayer, and real estate taxpayers; but any inequality which there may be is between different classes. As we have held above, real property and personal property may be differently classified and taxed, without any requirement for equality between them. Accordingly, we think, National is in no position to complain.
There is no obligation resting on the State under the Fourteenth Amendment to tax other classes. See Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co.; Southwestern Oil Co. v. Texas, both cited above, and the cases upholding different taxation of different classes of property. See also Charleston Federal Savings & Loan Assoc. v. Alderson, 324 U. S. 182, 191, in which it is said that the Equal Protection Clause does not prohibit inequality in taxation “which is not shown to be the result of intentional or systematic undervaluation of some but not all of the taxed property in a single class.” (Italics supplied.)
Any invalidity of the inflation allowance provisions affecting real estate of which a real property taxpayer might complain because of alleged inequality of assessments does not give a taxpayer not affected by the provisions complained of standing to maintain a suit to upset them. Roberts & Schaefer Co. v. Emmerson, 271 U. S. 50, 54; Seaboard Commercial Corp. v. State Tax Comm., 181 Md. 234, 239, 29 A. 2d 294; Atkinson v. Sapperstein, 191 Md. 301, 309, 60 A. 2d 737; Hess v. Mullaney, 213 F. 2d 635; People v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 36 N. E. 2d 362 (Ill. Sup. Ct.). In the last mentioned case, it was held that there was no violation of uniformity of taxation where the assessment of one kind of property (real
The appellant’s last contention is that the Act is invalid as applied to 1957 assessments because, as to them, it is retroactive.
The subject of retroactive taxes was considered at some length in Comptroller v. Martin, 216 Md. 235, 140 A. 2d 288, in which retroactive sales and use taxes having a backward reach of three to six years as to the transactions there involved was held invalid. That case, however, recognized the often stated rule that a tax is not necessarily invalid because it is retroactive, citing Diamond Match Co. v. State Tax Comm., 175 Md. 234, 200 A. 365; Leser v. Wagner, 120 Md. 671, 87 A. 1040, affd. sub nom. Wagner v. Baltimore, 239 U. S. 207; and Welch v. Henry, 305 U. S. 134.
The first general group of cases discussed in the Martin case in which retroactive taxes have been upheld are the so-called ratification cases. Probably the leading case among them is United States v. Heinszen & Co., 206 U. S. 370. In speaking of this case, we there said: “It upheld an Act of
Congress which validated customs duties previously imposed under Presidential, rather than Congressional, authority. Other Supreme Court decisions had established the lack of power to impose such duties without the authorization of Congress. The case was rested squarely upon ratification of the acts of an agent done without prior authority from the principal. The Heinszen case was followed in Tiaco v. Forbes, 228 U. S. 549, and in Rafferty v. Smith, Bell & Co., 257 U. S. 226. In Tiaco v. Forbes, 228 U. S. at 556, Mr. Justice Holmes thus stated the ratification doctrine: ‘[I]t generally is recognized that * * * where the act originally purports to be done in the name and by the authority of the state, a defect in that authority may be cured by the subsequent adoption of the act. The person who has assumed to represent the will and person of the superior power is given the benefit of the representation if it turns out that his assumption was correct. [Cases cited.]’ ”
At this point it seems appropriate to state that the Act is not, in our estimation, an attempt at a legislative reversal of a judicial decision. It is, rather, an attempt to supply legis
The Noel case is clearly a case of ratification. So, we think, is the present case. In the Martin case, the preambles of the statute (which, as noted, did not constitute parts of its operative provisions) undertook to declare what the intent of the General Assembly had “always” been as to certain definitions and that the uniform administrative interpretation and enforcement had always been in conformity “with the provisions of this Act.” It was pointed out that these recitals did not amount to a legislative attempt to reverse prior decisions of this Court contrary to these declarations, that if it were such an attempt it would be ineffectual (citing Article 8 of the Declaration of Rights; Crane v. Meginnis, 1 Gill & J. 463, 476; and other cases), and that the pertinent operative parts of the statute there involved did not undertake to ratify anything, but to add retroactively a new definition to the Retail Sales Tax Act and (similarly) to amend a provision of the Use Tax Act. These changes, which had the effect of bringing transactions not previously taxed within the ambit of taxation, were held to constitute new enactments, not ratification. (216 Md. 245, 249.)
In the instant case the intention to ratify is clear, even though the word “ratify” is not used, and the words of the operative portion of the statute are apt to accomplish that purpose. It is true, as held in the Martin case and in Gibson v. State, 204 Md. 423, 104 A. 2d 800, that a preamble is not an operative part of a statute. It may, however, sometimes be resorted to in aid of the interpretation of a statute. Hammond v. Lancaster, 194 Md. 462, 71 A. 2d 474; Hammond v. Frankfeld, 194 Md. 487, 71 A. 2d 482. An existing practice as to the assessment of property long taxed was recognized and was adopted retroactively by the enactment in the case before us.
In one respect the case is stronger for ratification than was the Heinszen case. This is that there was here a statute in
The ratification here involved is, we think, indistinguishable in principle from that upheld in the Noel case. It also seems to be supported by Leonardo v. Board of County Comm’rs of St. Mary's County, 214 Md. 287, 134 A. 2d 284, where the General Assembly ratified an invalid statute providing for the establishment of a special taxing district for erosion prevention work, though there had been no levy of taxes prior to the validating act.
National contends that no retroactive ad valorem tax has ever been upheld. The Commission controverts this and cites a number of cases in support of its position. Among the cases so cited we find Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Streepy, 211 Iowa 1334, 236 N. W. 24, and Whitlock v. Hawkins, 105 Va. 242, 53 S. E. 401, quite in point. In each the state legislature passed a retroactive, curative act for the imposition of ordinary real estate taxes, which, we take it, were ad valorem taxes. In the Iowa case the original statute was held unconstitutional because of a defect in the title; in the Virginia case the original statute was held unconstitutional because it had not received the requisite majority of votes needed for an act of its type in the legislature.
We see nothing peculiar to an ad valorem tax which would call for the application of a different rule from that applicable to some other types of retroactive taxes, such as benefit assessments.
As was said in the Streepy case: “As to the contention that the Legislature had no power to pass a retroactive legalizing act, the law is that, if the Legislature possessed the power in the first place to authorize the levy and collection of the taxes in question, then it had the power, by retrospective act, to cure any defect which may have obtained in the assessment and collection of such a tax.”
“From these propositions a fourth qualification is deduced, which is really a corollary from them, and that is, that the curative act can only be effectual to do that which the Legislature would have been competent to provide for and require to be done by a law prospective in its operation.”
We think that the Act in this case meets the tests stated in the Whitlock case.
A tax on imports is in at least one sense an ad valorem tax, though it is not a general property tax. Hence, the Heins seen case also seems to be against the appellant’s contention that a retroactive ad valorem tax cannot be valid.
Other cases cited by the appellee which tend to support its contention on this point are: Kentucky Union Co. v. Kentucky, supra; Rafferty v. Smith, Bell & Co., supra (tax on value of exports); Woolley v. Hendrickson, 73 N. J. L. 14, 62 A. 278 (validation of taxes for school purposes); People v. New York Central R.R. Co., 282 Ill. 11, 118 N. E. 462 (curative act in 1917 to validate 1916 levy for schools) ; Ricardo v. Ambrose, 211 F. 2d 212 (C.A., 3rd).
In the Kentucky Union case retroactive real estate taxes for the years 1901 to 1905, inclusive, were imposed by a Kentucky statute passed in 1906. It was held, citing League v. Texas, 184 U. S. 156, that “Laws of a retroactive nature, imposing taxes or providing remedies for their assessment and collection and not impairing vested rights, are not forbidden by the Federal Constitution.” (219 U. S. 152-153.)
The fact that the appellant had instituted suit to have its assessment declared invalid prior to the time of adoption of the curative statute does not give it any vested right. United
In view of our holding that this case is one of ratification, the “recent transactions” rule referred to in the Martin case does not seem of importance, if it is, indeed, applicable at all; nor do we find any violation of it. Perhaps the most stringent statement of that rule is to be found in Commonwealth v. Budd Co., 379 Pa. 159, 108 A. 2d 563, where it was said (108 A. 2d 569) that: “Following Welch v. Henry, we decide that a tax may not be retroactively applied beyond the year of the general legislative session immediately preceding that of its enactment; to provide otherwise constitutes a denial of due process.” Wheeler v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 143 F. 2d 162 (C. C. A., 9th), reversed on other grounds, 324 U. S. 542, adopts the same view of Welch v. Henry as did the Budd case. Welch v. Henry, supra, 305 U. S. 134, does not, however, impose such a limitation; it merely upheld a tax not exceeding it. Here the date of finality was January 1, 1957, (Kimball-Tyler Co. v. City of Baltimore, supra), which would fall even within the rule of the Budd case, though we do not hold here, any more than we did in the Martin case, that that case expresses the uttermost limit of retroactivity of a tax statute under the recent transactions rule.
In accordance with the above views, the order of the trial court will be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs.
. References to section numbers in this opinion are to those of the 1957 Edition of the Code, or amendments thereto; and, unless otherwise specified, references simply to section numbers are to sections of Art. 81 of the Code. Sec. 14 of the 1957 Edition was Sec. 13 (a) of the 1951 Edition.
. Former Judge Oscar Leser, for many years a member of the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore and later of the State Tax Commission, has stated that prior to the 1915 amendment of Article 15 the 30-mill tax was unconstitutional, though it was never challenged. See Lewis, op. cit., 13 Md. L. Rev. 100, citing Proceedings of National Tax Assn., 1922, p. 307. Exemptions in favor of manufacturers long antedate the 1915 amendment.
. Some practice involving assessment of real estate at less than full current value has been used by the Commission in the past. See Rogan v. Co. Comm’rs, supra. And a hybrid system of valuing improvements to real estate, based upon age, was upheld in State Tax Comm. v. Brandt Cabinet Works, 203 Md. 533, 97 A. 2d 290.