61 So. 604 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
The appellant, a resident of the city and county of Montgomery, in the state of Alabama, being the owner of a motor vehicle which he operated on the public highways of the state without paying a license tax or registration fee, as required by the provisions of the Motor Vehicle Law, was convicted on an indictment charging this offense under the provisions of the act of the Legislature approved April 22, 1911, known as the Motor Vehicle Law (Acts 1911, pp. 634-650), and in prosecuting this appeal the appellant contends that the act is void, in that it offends certain constitutional requirements.
The principal argument and attack seem to be based on the contention that section 7 of the Motor Vehicle
“Sec. 7. The following license tax or registration fee shall be charged on motor vehicles used for private use: Seven and one-half dollars for each motor vehicle having a rating of less than twenty horse power.” The section, after fixing the license to be charged for motor vehicles with different horse power, then concludes as follows : “Said several sums of money charged as a license tax herein, shall be paid to the Secretary of State and forty per centum of the gross revenue derived from any incorporated city or town shall revert to the treasurer of the city or town in which the owner or licensee resides, and forty, per cent, of the gross revenue derived from any county outside of any incorporated city or town shall likewise revert to the treasurer of said county. The registration fee, or license tax, shall be in lieu of all other privilege license which the state or any county or municipality thereof might impose, but nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the collection of any ad valorem tax.” — Acts 1911, p. 636.
“Sec. 221. The Legislature shall not enact any' law which will permit any person, firm, corporation, or association to pay a privilege, license, or other tax to the state of Alabama, and relieve him or it from the payment of all other privilege and license taxes in the state.” —Constitution of 1901.
This section of the Constitution means, as we read the plain language employed by the framers of the Constitution to express the meaning and purpose of the provision, thát the Legislature is prohibited from enacting a law that would require the payment of one privilege tax or license fee for the benefit of the state alone, to the exclusion of the counties and municipalities; and a statute’or legislative act providing for the payment of
. The license or' privilege tax assessed against express companies (Code 1907, § 2086) is similar, to the act in
When the meaning of a constitutional provision is plainly expressed by its words, there can be no occasion or excuse for a. resort to extrinsic sources of information as to its import. As in such case the court would not be justified in according to the provision any meaning other than that which its words express, it would be wholly inappropriate for the debates of the constitutional convention on the occasion of its adoption of the provision in question, or substitutes or amendments then proposed and rejected, to be looked to to find another meaning to impute to the language used. — Lane v. Kolb, 92 Ala. 636, 655, 9 South. 873; State ex rel. Robertson v. McGough, 118 Ala. 159, 166, 24 South. 395; Cooley on Const. Lim. 69, 70; Lehman v. Robinson, 59 Ala. 241; United States v. Freight Association, 166 U. S. 290, 318, 17 Sup. Ct. 540, 41 L. Ed. 1007; 36 Cyc. 1139.
The act is also attacked as an- attempt of the Legislature to raise revenue under the guise of a police regulation, and the argument is made that, the act having been passed on the last day of the legislative session, it cannot be upheld as a revenue measure (Constitution, § 70), and that, as the amount of license exacted by the tax is in excess of the necessary expense of regulating and controlling the operation of motor vehicles, it cannot be imposed under the authority of the police poAver, but of necessity, because of the amount fixed or designated, becomes a revenue measure.’ It is not to be questioned, hut is uoav a settled principle of the laAv, that the state has the right to regulate the use of motor vehicles upon the public highways of the state, and may impose a license fee or tax under the police power for this purpose. — Berry’s LaAv of Automobiles, § 80; Hud-dy’s Law of Automobiles, p. 78, and authorities cited by' these authors in notes to.the sections referred to. And AAre think the act in question is clearly the exercise of the right to exact a license tax under the police power of the state. The purpose of levying the tax to he gathered from the provisions of the act is not “to levy a tax as a means of collecting revenue” (Perry County v. Selma R. R. Co., 58 Ala. 546, 557), but for the general purpose of regulating and controlling the use of motor vehicles on the public highways. The right of a county to levy a license tax on vehicles for the use of its roads is upheld by the Supreme Court -in the case of Kenna-
The act under consideration seems to afford a general system for the regulation and control of the use of motor vehicles on the public highways of the state, and the license fee exacted is in furtherance of this general purpose, and was not, as was said in Kennaaner’s Case, supra, “simply to raise revenue through the indirect method of license fees,” but on the contrary, as was also the fact in Kennamer’s Case, for the purpose of requiring those making this particular use of the public roads to pay a reasonable sum for the privilege. The charge exacted by this act for an automobile' tax is for a specific and burdensome use of a public utility; and, though the fund derived from the fees charged is not appropriated directly to such utility, yet it is apportioned among the governmental subdivisions upon which the burden of its maintenance rests, and, if the portion retained by the state is in excess of the amount necessary to regulate and enforce the law, yet the excess goes into the state treasury, out of which the counties of the state are paid sums for the improvement and betterment of this public utility far in excess of the amount derived from this source.
The act approved December 9, 1898 (Acts 1898-99, p. 108), commonly known as the “Dispensary Law,” was
Whether or not section 16 of the Motor Vehicle Law is violative of section 2, art. 4, of the Federal Constitution, the appellant is in no position to raise the question, as the record shows that he is a resident of the city of Montgomery in this state, and does not belong to that class (non-residents of the state) affected by the provisions of section 16, which the appellant contends discriminates against certain non-residents because the state of their residence does not reciprocate the privilege granted to the residents of states that do reciprocate. One who is not directly affected cannot complain that a statute violates constitutional provisions. —State ex rel. Thomas v. Gunter, 170 Ala. 165, 54 South. 288.
The act in question is not liable to the objections urged as rendering it void as offensive to the constitutional provisions pointed out, and the court was therefore not in error in overruling the defendant’s demurrers grounded on such contention. The validity of the act being established as against the attack made against it, there was no error in refusing the general charge requested, as the defendant was properly convicted under the agreed statement of facts set out in the record, and the case will be affirmed.
Affirmed.