42 A. 941 | Md. | 1899
The appellant was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City on the charge of having violated the provisions *142 of the Act of 1894, ch. 380, entitled "An Act to repeal Article seventy-two of the Code of Public General Laws," and all sections and sub-sections thereunder, and to re-enact said Article with amendments. The indictment contains three counts, each of which charges the appellant with having violated secs. 66 and 67 of the Act in question. It will not be important to consider the first and second counts of the indictment. The appellant filed a special plea to the third count of the indictment, which plea the appellee demurred to and the Court sustained the demurrer. The parties then elected to go to trial before the Court on the third count under the plea of not guilty. The State, after it had given evidence tending to prove that the appellant was engaged in the business of packing and canning oysters for sale and transportation at Baltimore from the first of September, 1897, to the 25th of April, 1898, and that the said appellant had failed to pay the tax of one dollar per thousand bushels for each thousand bushels of oysters packed and canned by himself in excess of the amount named in the license issued to him, as stated in the third count of the indictment, and in pursuance of the said license issued to him. The appellant further offered evidence, tending to prove that the oysters, which were canned and packed by him, as testified to by the witness on the part of the State, were purchased by him in the State of Virginia, and shipped to him from that State by a citizen thereof; that said oysters were taken from the waters of the State of Virginia, and were not taken or caught from the waters of the State of Maryland, to which evidence the State objected, and the Court sustained the objection and refused to permit the said evidence to be offered.
The demurrer and the exception present the same question, to-wit: "Does the fact that the appellant bought the oysters in the State of Virginia and had them shipped to him from that State to the State of Maryland, exempt him from the payment of the license fee?" The appellant contends that the provisions of the Act of 1894 relate solely *143 to the oyster industry of the State of Maryland, and further, that it was not the intention of the Legislature to tax the canning of oysters caught in other States, than by thisstatute, or to place a burden on the packer for which he did not receive a corresponding benefit for the protection and preservation of an article to be packed; and further, it is contended that such a construction would be unreasonable and would impose an unjust burden, and if the Legislature had so intended the tax to apply to other oysters than such as have been caught in Maryland waters, it would have said so in the words of the statute. But we fail to comprehend in what respect the Constitution has been violated by the provisions of this Act, unless it be true that every license issued to a merchant is unconstitutional because he must sell goods that were made in, and shipped from some other State. In other words, on whatever stock he purchased outside of the State he would not be required to pay any license.
To sanction the contention of the appellant would be to grant immunity to the citizens of the State of Virginia by releasing them from taking out certain licenses, which the citizens of Maryland are, under the Act of 1894, required to obtain. We know of no Act ever passed by the Legislature of this State which was intended to confer benefits upon other States, but which denied to this State equal benefits. MR. JUSTICE FIELD, delivering the opinion of the Court in the case of Webber v. Virginia,
It follows from what we have said that the judgment of the Court below must be affirmed with costs.
Judgment affirmed with costs.
(Decided March 14th, 1899.)