148 P.2d 371 | Colo. | 1944
THESE parties are hereinafter referred to as the director and Cusack, respectively.
Cusack protested a delinquent service tax of two per cent totaling $885.64 assessed against him as an "advertising service agency." A hearing was had, as by law provided, and the director sustained the assessment. Cusack went to the district court by certiorari where the director was reversed. To review that judgment the director brings error. In our opinion the answer to one question presented by the five assignments disposes of the litigation, i. e., Did the district court exceed its powers? This, of course, involves the legality of the director's decision. It is unnecessary to detail further the procedural steps taken, as these are not questioned, or cite the several governing sections of our law. The applicable act is chapter 202 of the Laws of 1941, and particularly sections 5 (c), 13 and 14 (b) thereof. So far as these are here material they do not differ from the provisions of the same sections of chapter 240, Laws of 1937, and chapter 158, Laws of 1939.
1. Said section 5(c), chapter 202, Laws of 1941, imposes a tax of two per cent "of the value of services rendered or performed by any person engaging or continuing in any of the following businesses; * * * advertising service agencies * * * and any other business of a similar nature in which services (not professional) are performed on a price or fee basis; * * *." The director says that language covers Cusack's business and *153 Cusack says it does not. The first question therefore is, Did the evidence before the director support his decision?
[1] As an advantage to those who have property or service to sell and to publishers and radio (the only kind of advertising here involved) presenting their offerings to the public, such agencies as Cusack's have come into being. Periodicals and broadcasting companies do business with them because of their stability and reliability, and advertisers because of the assistance and advice furnished by them. For example, Cusack contracts with a newspaper to handle the advertising of Mr. A. The newspaper bills Cusack for fifteen per cent less than its regular rate and Cusack bills Mr. A. for the exact amount the latter would pay the newspaper if he dealt directly. The difference of fifteen per cent constitutes Cusack's compensation. We think the evidence amply justifies the foregoing and thus briefly describes Cusack's business. He is therefore an agent or broker for both parties. If this does not stamp his business as that of an "advertising service agency" we fail to grasp the intention of the Legislature in the use of that term. Such agencies have been before the appellate courts and their methods of operation perhaps more specifically outlined. The language used in the following authorities will throw further light on those methods. It fits exactly the evidence given before the director in the instant case. Dolman Company Inc. v. RubberCorp.,
[2, 3] 2. Section 14(b) chapter 202, Laws 1941, provides: "The district court of the county wherein the taxpayer resides or has his principal place of business shall have original jurisdiction in proceedings to review all questions of law and fact determined by the director *154
in administering the provisions of this act by writ of certiorari to the director. * * * The procedure therein shall be in conformity with the code of civil procedure." We are not concerned with the provisions of the new code which assumes to abolish the writ of certiorari. It does not abolish the remedy which remains as heretofore. It is clearly settled in this jurisdiction that the only questions to be determined by certiorari are the existence of jurisdiction and the absence of arbitrary or capricious action or abuse of discretion. State CivilService Com. v. Cummings,
In the instant case the trial court found that: "Cusack, on the record under review, did not perform the services of an advertising service agency in placing ads in the newspapers and radio stations, and hence in said business he did not come within the provisions of the service tax." Thereupon rests the decision of the trial court, and therein the court erred as above indicated.
The judgment is reversed. *155