Lutz vs. Araneta GR L-7859 22 December 1955: FACTS: This Case Was Initiated in The Court of First Instance of Negros
Lutz vs. Araneta GR L-7859 22 December 1955: FACTS: This Case Was Initiated in The Court of First Instance of Negros
This Court can take judicial notice of the fact that sugar production is one
of the great industries of our nation, sugar occupying a leading position
among its export products; that it gives employment to thousands of
laborers in fields and factories; that it is a great source of the state's
wealth, is one of the important sources of foreign exchange needed by
our government, and is thus pivotal in the plans of a regime committed to
a policy of currency stability. Its promotion, protection and advancement,
therefore redounds greatly to the general welfare. Hence it was
competent for the legislature to find that the general welfare demanded
that the sugar industry should be stabilized in turn; and in the wide field of
its police power, the lawmaking body could provide that the distribution of
benefits therefrom be readjusted among its components to enable it to
resist the added strain of the increase in taxes that it had to sustain.
Once it is conceded, as it must, that the protection and promotion of the
sugar industry is a matter of public concern, it follows that the Legislature
may determine within reasonable bounds what is necessary for its
protection and expedient for its promotion. Here, the legislative discretion
must be allowed fully play, subject only to the test of reasonableness; and
it is not contended that the means provided in section 6 of the law bear
no relation to the objective pursued or are oppressive in character. If
objective and methods are alike constitutionally valid, no reason is seen
why the state may not levy taxes to raise funds for their prosecution and
attainment. Taxation may be made the implement of the state's police
power.
That the tax to be levied should burden the sugar producers themselves
can hardly be a ground of complaint; indeed, it appears rational that the
tax be obtained precisely from those who are to be benefited from the
expenditure of the funds derived from it. At any rate, it is inherent in the
power to tax that a state be free to select the subjects of taxation, and it
has been repeatedly held that "inequalities which result from a singling
out of one particular class for taxation, or exemption infringe no
constitutional limitation".
From the point of view we have taken it appears of no moment that the
funds raised under the Sugar Stabilization Act, now in question, should
be exclusively spent in aid of the sugar industry, since it is that very
enterprise that is being protected. It may be that other industries are also
in need of similar protection; that the legislature is not required by the
Constitution to adhere to a policy of "all or none." As ruled in Minnesota
ex rel. Pearson vs. Probate Court, 309 U. S. 270, 84 L. Ed. 744, "if the
law presumably hits the evil where it is most felt, it is not to be overthrown
because there are other instances to which it might have been applied;"
and that "the legislative authority, exerted within its proper field, need not
embrace all the evils within its reach".