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22 Taxes 114 (1944)
Tax Changes in the Missouri Constitution

handle is hein.journals/taxtm22 and id is 114 raw text is: By LYLE OWEN
Tax Changes in the Missouri Constitution

This article points out certain limitations which follow
the incorporation of tax provisions in a state's constitution,
and while the problems related here are lyMissouri's, the
same problems may be present in other states, especially so
in regard to the decline of the general property tax.
Mr. Owen is Assistant Professor of Economics, Carnegie
Institute of Technology; and was Visiting Professor of
Economics and Government, Southwest Missouri State
Teachers College.
TTHE November election of
1942 the voters of Missouri au-
thorized the calling of a Con-
vention to revise and amend the
Constitution of that state. This Con-
vention assembled on September 21,
1943, and is now in session. There
is general agreement among informed
Missourians as to the need for revi-
sion. The Missouri Constitution of
1875, the one now in effect, is gen-
erally conceded to contain some obsolete and much
legislative matter. Moreover, it has been amended
rather frequently by the initiative method, so that
today the original document has numerous excrescences
and lacks the neat integration which is desirable in
the fundamental law of the land. In addition new
problems, including financial ones, unknown to state
government in 1875 now demand attention.
The last Constitutional Convention in Missouri was
held in 1922 and 1923. Not counting several recesses,
it was actually in session 266 days. Its recommenda-
tions were submitted to the voters at a special election
in 1924, in the form of 21 proposed amendments. The
people rejected all but six.
There was much criticism of this Convention of
1922-1923 on such grounds as that it was in session
too long, that it was too expensive, and so on.'
Partly because the 1922-1923 Convention was never
viewed as a success, the one now sitting opened under
some handicap of suspicion. In addition there was a
belief on the part of many Missourians this time that
a Constitutional Convention should not be held during,
the war. So far the business of the Convention has
been that of receiving proposals for change and hold-
ing committee hearings thereon. December 3, 1943
was set as the deadline for introduction of proposals.
The response of the voters to the Convention's work
may depend largely not only upon the nature of the
final recommendations made by that body, but also
upon popular impressions as to the level of debate, as
well as to the length and cost of the session. It is not
anticipated that the Convention will be ready for final
adjournment until late spring or early summer. Then,
to become effective, its proposals, whether they be
amendments or a whole new Constitution, must secure
a majority vote at a special election to be held not
less than 60 days nor more than six months after the
adjournment of the Convention.2
Thus it will be some months before the Conven-
tion's final recommendations will be available, and
even more before their fate will be known. The pur-
' The cost of the 1922-1923 Constitutional Convention was about
$800,000. See editorial, Job Before the Convention, St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, Sept. 21, 1943.
2 Constitution of Missouri, Article XV, Sections 2, 3.

pose of the present paper is to assay some of the tax
problems with which the Convention is by public
demand being forced to grapple.
One of the most insistent of these problems is whether
the Constitution shall remain so worded that property
taxation must take the form of the old-fashioned gen-
eral property tax. At present that document appears
to require that all forms of property, tangible or in-
tangible, must be listed and taxed at the same rate,
save for a few specific exemptions.2
It is well known that the general property tax, which
in its standard and once nearly universal form in the
American states attempted to assess and tax all prop-
erty at the same rate, has for some time been on the
wane. A recent study by the Governmental Research
Institute (of St. Louis) concludes that there remain
only seven states which can definitely be classified as
general property tax states on the basis of actual
practice. 4 Missouri is one of them.
There are various reasons for the decline of the gen-
eral property tax. One important reason, and the one
which is attracting great attention at Missouri's Con-
stitutional Convention, is the difficulty, or more accu-
rately the impossibility, of getting a full listing of
intangibles like money, bank deposits, accounts re-
ceivable, mortgages, promissory notes, state and munici-
pal bonds, and corporate stocks' and bonds, when
the Missouri Constitution requires that All property
subject to taxation shall be taxed in proportion to its
value. 5 Not only are such intangibles notoriously
mobile and easily concealed, but with the present tax
rates the motive for such concealment is perfect. In the
writer's home community in a rural part of Missouri the
rate this year, for all purposes, is $2.45 per $100 of as-
sessed valuation. In the last half-dozen years it has been
as high as $3.10. On real estate such a rate proves not
Exemptions are the usual ones for lands belonging to the United
States (by Constitution of Missouri, Art. XIV, Sec. 1); real and
personal property of the state, counties, and municipalities (Const.
of Mo.. Art. X, Sec. 6); cemeteries (Ibid.); and the legislature may
exempt limited amounts of real estate used exclusively for religious.
educational, and charitable purposes, as well as real or personal
property used exclusively for agricultural or horticultural so-
cieties. (Ibid.). There Is no homestead exemption, or any other
exemption of either a minimum amount, or a class, of property.
Art. X, Sec. 7, Const. of Mo., specifically states that All laws
exempting property from taxation, other than the property above
enumerated, shall be void. Hence Missouri remains one of the
seven states attempting to retain the general property tax.
4 Constitutional Provisions Relating to* the Taxation of Intan-
gibles Should Be Revised, research report issued by the Govern-
mental Research Institute (of St. Louis), Nov. 1, 1943; Dr. Charlton
F. Chute, Director. The seven states are Arkansas, Maine, Missouri,
New Jersey, New Mexico, Texas, Wyoming. Lists of which states
fall In which class as to tax matters will be found to vary. in dif-
ferent publications. In making Its lists the Governmental Research
Institute not only checked various published sources, but sought
first-hand Information through visits to about one-third of the states
In the Union. In tax matters actual practice Is sometimes more
reliable than what the statutes say.
5Const. of Mo., Art. X, Sec. 4. There Is of course no attempt made
to tax bonds or other obligations of the United States Government,
and by Missouri Supreme Court decisions it Is held at present that
corporate stock Is not normally subject to taxation under the
general property tax laws of Missouri as now written. For the
decision stating the exemption of shares In a foreign corporation
that owns no property In Missouri, the stock being held within
Missouri by a resident of that state, see State ex rel. Koeln v.
Lesser et aL. (1911) 237 Mo. 310, 141 S. W. 888. State ex rel. Camp-
belt and American Insurance Co. v. Brinkop and Koeln (1911) 238
Mo. 298, 143 S. W. 444, states the similar exemption of stock In
domestic corporations, where the property of such corporations has
already been taxed. But bonds issued by both foreign and domestic
corporations are taxable In Missouri. And so are state and mu-
niclpal bonds.

M   TAXES-The Tax Magazine

March, 1944

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