Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1894

Board of Trustees v. Bell County Coke & Improvement Co.

Board of Trustees v. Bell County Coke & Improvement Co.
Court of Appeals of Kentucky · Decided October 6, 1894 · Hazeleigg
96 Ky. 68; 27 S.W. 862; 1894 Ky. LEXIS 93

Board of Trustees v. Bell County Coke & Improvement Co.

Opinion of the Court

JUDGE HAZELEIGG

delivered the opinion of the court.

The General Assembly by an act approved April 22, 1890, provided for a tax of not over fifty cents on each one hundred dollars worth of property owned by white persons within a designated territory, including the city of Pineville, for the purpose of maintaining a graded school for white pupils.

*70By virtue of the provisions of the act, the appellants were about to sell the property of the appellee, a corporation created under the laws of Kentucky, when this suit was instituted by the latter to enjoin the sale upon the sole ground that the act authorizes only the taxation of property belonging to white persons and not that belonging to artificial persons. The appellants’ demurrer to the petition was overruled, and upon their refusal to plead further the injunction was perpetuated, and the collection of the tax enjoined by the judgment of the court below.

In behalf of the appellees it is insisted that, as an artificial person has no color, it can not be said to be white, and to levy the tax on the property of any person other than white persons is unauthorized by the act. Looking alone to the letter of the act it is difficult to escape this reasoning. If the property only of white persons is to be taxed, and the property in question is not that of a white person, but of one without color, it would follow that it must escape taxation. But unquestionably the Legislature never intended that the property of corporations should be exempt from this tax. And looking to the manifest intent and spirit of the act, we are constrained to the conclusion that the burden was to fall on all the property within the district except that of the blacks. They alone are excluded from the benefits of the school, and it is their property only that the tax collector is forbidden to touch. That a corporation is a person is well settled, and that the property of a corporation is taxable under an act which authorizes the taxation of the property of persons is also *71well settled. (L. & N. R. Co. v. Commonwealth, 1 Bush, 251.) A corporation is also an inhabitant within the meaning of an act taxing the property •of inhabitants. (Angelí & Ames on Corp., sec. 440.)

When we consider that the great bulk of all the' property in the State belongs to the whites, it might not be at all violative of the legislative intent to say that presumptively the property of the corporations is to be regarded as that of white persons, within the meaning of the act, at least until the contrary is made to appear. In other wonds, that the corporators and stockholders are presumably white persons, unless it is otherwise shown. Be that as it may, when an exemption from taxation is claimed in a case where the intent, as we may have supposed, is to tax all property, save that of black persons, the burden of showing the exemption is on the one claiming it. Upon its being shown that the corporators and stockholders —-who are at last the real owners, and who are natural persons having color — are black persons, the courts may grant the relief sought, but not otherwise.

The demurrer must be sustained, and unless an amendment be filed showing the real owners of the property to be black persons, the injunction must be dissolved and petition dismissed.

Judgment reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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