DocketNumber: 6702
Judges: Pope, Messrs, Jones, Woods
Filed Date: 11/6/1907
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The opinion of this Court was delivered by
This is a petition to this Court in its original juridiction. whereby the plaintiff insurance companies, for themselves and others in like situation, seek to have the comptroller-g'eneral enjoined from proceeding to collect certain taxes provided for by an Act of the General Assembly approved May 9, 1906, 25 Stat., 620, on the ground that the said act is unconstitutional, null, and void. Counsel for petitioners discuss at length the preliminary question as to the jurisdiction of this Court to hear the cause, but an identical question having been passed upon in the recent case of Ware Shoals Mfg. Co. v. Jones, Comptroller General, ante, 211, we proceed at once to the merits of the case.
The title of the act is : “An act requiring the payment of certain premiums to the fire departments of incorporated cities and towns by the fire insurance companies doing business in the State, for the purpose of creating a fund for the benefit of the members of the fire departments of such cities and towns, and providing for the collection and distribution of "the same.”
Section 2 requires such companies to pay within the said sixty days to the State Treasurer the sum' of two dollars on every one hundred dollars premiums collected on fire or lightning' insurance business done in said cities and towns.
Sections 3 and 4 require said insurance companies to- keep accurate books of account of all business -done in said cities and towns and provide a penalty for failure so to do.
Section 5 enacts that in case of failure to pay said tax or any penalty imposed, the Comptroller General shall have power to revoke any license previously issued to said companies.
Section/ 6. “The State Treasurer shall pay over the money collected from the insurance companies, associations or corporations doing business within the cities or towns having or that may hereafter have a regularly organized fire department as aforesaid in section 1 of this act, to- the treasurer of the firemen’s Relief Association to be composed of the members of the fire departments of such cities or towns, and to be .incorporated under the laws of this State;
Section 7. “All money collected and received under the provisions of this act shall be held in trust and used as a fund for the relief of any member of the fire department of such city or town who may be injured or disabled, and for the relief of, or the payment of gratuities to the widow or those dependent upon any member of such fire department who may be killed; for the payment of necessary funeral expenses of any member of such fire department, and for the purchase of accident insurance upon the members of such fire department; Provided, further, that the boards of trastees of such cities having- pension funds may also use said money for pensions to* superannuated and disabled firemen: Provided, that the fire department of such city or town should also be a member of the State Firemen’s Association of this State.”
The act is attacked on numerous grounds., but we think the pivotal question is, has the General Assembly power to enact such legislation. In other words, is the constitution violated in that the tax here under consideration is not urn-form’ and for no public purpose. That the imposition is an attempted exercise of the taxing power conferred by the constitution, the respondent practically admits in that it is
The respondent here contends, however, that the imposition is not a tax, but is one of the conditions upon which foreign insurance companies are permitted to do business in this State. Such a contention, we think, cannot be sustained. Tn the first place, the act is general, applying both to domestic and foreign corporations. In the second place, the act itself does not purport to be conditional. It applies to “every fire insurance company, corporation or association doing business ini incorporated cities or towns in this State.” The participle “doing” is important here as throwing light on the intention of the Degislature. The word implies that the corporations are already in existence and are carrying on business. The license has already issued. True; the act does provide that under certain circumstances, the certificate shall be revoked, but we regard this as merely a means for securing the collection of the imposition and not as a con-
Again, the respondent contends that the present enactment is a lawful exercise of the police power, inherent in the State as a sovereignty, the exercise looking to the protection of the property of all the citizens of the State. Perhaps no subject is more fraught with difficulty than is the proper* limiting and defining of the police power of a sovereign State. Generally courts refuse to attempt such definition, leaving each case to be decided as it arises. In our State, however, in the comparatively recent case of Stehmeyer v. City Council, 53 S. C., 259, 282, where this power is discussed at length and numerous authorities are reviewed, the court with deference lays down the following: “The police power is that attribute of sovereignty in a State, by which it clothes the Legislature with power to. regulate persons — natural and artificial — and property, in accordance with the provisions of the State Constitution, in all matters relating to the public health, the public morals, and the public safety.” Again, in the case of Beer Company v. Mass., 97 U. S., 25-33, it is said: “Whatever difference of opinion may exist as to the extent and boundaries of the police power, and however difficult it may be to render a satisfactory definition of it, there seems to be no doubt that it does extend to the protection, health and property of the citizens, and to the preservation of good order and the public morals.”
In Volume 22, page 938, of the A. & E. Ency. of Law the following proposition sustained by much authority is laid down: “In order that a statute or ordinance may be sustained as an exercise of the police power, the courts must be able to see (1) that the enactment has for its object the prevention of some offense or manifest evil, or the preservation of the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare; and (2) that there is some clear, real substantial connection
This brings us then to the question as to whether or not the legislation here under consideration has in view a public purpose. The money secured from the imposition on the insurance companies is to “be held in trust and used as a fund for the relief of any member of the fire department of such city or town who may be injured or disabled, and for the relief of, or the payment of gratuities,'to the widow or those dependent upon any member of such fire department who may be killed, for the payment of necessary funeral expenses of any member of such fire department and for the purchase of accident insurance upon the members of such fire departments” and ini certain cases to be used for the payment of pensions. New York and Alabama and perhaps one or two other States, proceeding upon the theory that the prevention of conflagrations is a public duty which prior to the establishment of fire departments devolved upon the community, that in discharging these duties the firemen sustain such relation to the public as to become, in the true sense, public servants, have sustained the position that such enactments are for public purposes. Trustees of Exempt Firemen’s Benevolent Fund v. Roome, 93 N. Y., 313; Phoenix Assurance Company of London v. Fire Department of Montgomery, 23 So., 843. In each of these cases, however, the legislation was sustained on the ground that it provided conditions upon which foreign insurance companies would be permitted to carry on business in the State. The above reasoning as to the publicity of the purpose of
It cannot be doubted that incidentally the public derives much benefit from fire departments of municipal corporations. Any organization that tends to enhance the value of property or the security of its possession, that gives work to unemployed persons in a given locality, or bridles powers hitherto unused, is certainly after a manner beneficial to the public at large. The wealth and welfare of a State lies in the well-being of its individual citizens. Thus, if a factory employing hundreds of hands and annually turning out thousands of dollars’ worth of products is built or a mine which yearly puts on the market hundreds of tons of mineral is opened up, the incidental benefit to the public is great, yet the highest legal tribunal of the country has held that public funds cannot be appropriated for such a purpose. Loan Association v. Topeka, 20 Wallace, 663. A fire department is a municipal institution. Its organization and control is purely a matter of municipal concern. True, interest in the establishment of such agencies would extend further than the municipal boundaries, but whether that interest could be manifested in action on the part of the General Assembly, otherwise than to encourage, seems a matter of doubt, the spirit of our law being that the Legislature may invest municipal governments with power, leaving the exercise of it to their discretion and corporate needs.
In the present case the Legislature has gone further than attempting to raise money for fire departments, municipal organizations, in that it seeks to raise a-fund by taxation for what seems to us merely a benevolent purpose. The
It is argued that the fire company by its work saves the insurance company from loss, and therefore the insurance company should compensate them. Let us see what this argument would lead to. It is well known that all insurance companies regulate their rate by the risk and expense relative to the insurance of a certain piece of property. Therefore the only reasonable view is that the insurance companies would in the end make the insured pay the gratuities to the associations. It is likewise well known that in all cities and towns there are numerous persons who do not cany insurance. Now it cannot be denied that such persons are even more benefited by the fire departments than those who carry insurance, for their entire risk is entrusted to the efficiency of such departments. Under the enactment being considered the class of citizens who carry insurance must pay the whole of the imposition while the latter get the benefits and have no burden to bear. On this reasoning the tax is not uniform.
That the fireman’s work is a meritorious one and that he deserves the highest regard of the community for the faithful performance of his duties are facts that cannot be controverted. Yet his work is not altogether gratuitous. More and more is it the present day tendency to establish paid departments. In these the members are paid for their services. In the volunteer departments, too, the members
Any speculation as to- this subject, however, is estopped by the constitutional inhibition, Art. Ill, sec. 32. which provides : “The General Assembly * * * shall not grant pensions except for military and naval service.” A pension has been defined to be an annuity from the government for services rendered in the past. That the pensions provided for by the act of 1906 fall within this rule is evident. The money is to be obtained by a governmental enactment and is to be paid to superannuated or disabled firemen who in time past had been in active service.
We do not deem it necessary to continue the discussion further. In our opinion the act is clearly unconstitutional.
Therefore it is the judgment of this Court, that the petition be granted and the prohibition issue as prayed for.