McIver v. Clarke
McIver v. Clarke
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The act of March 7, 1892, entitled “An act granting relief from certain penalties, and to render enforcible certain contracts under § 589 of the code of 1880,” is, in its first section, in these words : “ When any person or corporation required to pay a privilege tax under the laws of this state, upon any store, trade, bank, profession, business or calling, has from any cause failed, neglected or refused, in whole or in part, to make payment of such privilege tax, and procure the proper licenses for the carrying on of such profession, business or calling, such person or corporation may, at any time within sixty days from and after the passage of this act, pay the true amount or the balance remaining unpaid by such person or corporation on account of such privilege for three years next preceding the date of the passage of this act, according to the requirements of the laws in force during such three years touching the taxes on privileges, twenty-five per centum additional; and the person or corporation making such payment of such three years taxes, or such balances remaining due and unpaid on account thereof, twenty-five per centum additional, shall thereby, and by virtue of this act, be relieved from all the pains and penalties imposed by § 589 of said code of 1880, or any law of like import in respect of the effects of such non-payment of such privilege tax on con
The second section of the act saves pending criminal prosecutions, and the third section continues in full force § 589, and laws amendatory thereof, where not inconsistent with the provisions of the act which we are considering.
The proper construction of this act will solve the controlling . question presented by the " present appeal, namely: Lid the payment of a lawyer’s privilege tax by W. J. Lacey, or some' one for him, for each of the three years next preceding the seventh day of March, 1892, with twenty-five per centum additional thereto, validate the contract made by his firm in the year 1884, when, unmistakably, he did not pay the lawyer’s privilege tax and procure the necessary license for practicing his profession ?
We find no support for the contention that the payment of the gross amount of three years taxes, with the additional twenty-five per centum, ascertained by the laws in force during the three years next preceding March 7,1892, is the condition upon which the state offered relief to those who had subjected themselves to the penalty of non-enforcement of their contracts by reason of failure to pay their privilege taxes, in any amouut, and at any time. It is, by the words of the act, the payment of the true amount of the taxes which should have been paid, or the payment of the balance of such taxes which remain unpaid, where a smaller sum than was legally demandable had been paid, which, in certain cases, gives validity to the invalid contract, and opens the courts to its enforcement. If three years taxes are due for the three years immediately preceding the date of the passage of the relief act, or if any balance on these three years taxes is due, then the payment of the true amount of such taxes
To what class or classes of delinquents is grace extended on the terms prescribed? Is the oiler universal? Does it embrace all who are in default, without regard to time? Or is it restricted to those who have not paid the true amount due by them, or the balances remaining unpaid by them, for the three years next preceding March 7, 1892? '
We are of opinion that the benefits of the act are to be confined to those delinquents whose failures are confined to a short, recent period, to wit, three years, and are not designed for those other delinquents whose failures are marked and persistent, and extend through a longer period than three years. We have seen that the terms of offered grace prescribed payment of the true amount due for the three years next before March 7,1892, or payment of the balance of such taxes remaining unpaid. To extend the terms to those delinquent for all the years antedating the prescribed three years, would be to release from the penalties of §589 those who had failed and refused to pay their proper privilege taxes during all such antedating years, provided such presistent contemners of the law had only paid their privilege taxes for the throe years next before the passage of the relief act.
Under the view which wo are combating, the delinquents of six or eight or ten years have all their invalid contracts
We do not think the act of March 7, 1892, applicable to the case at bar; and, agreeing with the court below on its finding that W. J. Lacey had not paid the privilege tax required for the year 1884,
We reverse the decree and remand the cause.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Alice McIver v. M. E. Clarke
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Privilege Tax. Relief act. Laws 1892, p. 31. Limited to three prior years. The act of 1892 (Laws, p. 31), providing that when one required to pay a privilege tax has failed to do so, he may “ pay the true amount or the balance remaining unpaid on account of such privilege for three years next preceding the passage of this act,” and thus be relieved from the penalties for such non-payment as to all contracts made by him, does not apply to defaults for any year more than three years prior to the act. A contract made in 1884, void because of such default, is not validated by payment under said act.