This City of Corpus Christi, Texas’, instituted this, suit against L. C. Mc-Claugherty, doing business as Hertz Driv-Ur-Self System, seeking to recover sums alleged to be due it under the provisions of Ordinance No. 3258, levying a city permit fee of two per cent of gross receipts against1 defendant "for the privilege1 of conducting his driverless automobile- rental business within thfe city. The ordinance was at
The trial court held Ordinance No. 3258 to be void, as being in conflict with Art. 6698, supra, granted defendant’s motion for judgment, and entered judgment that the City take nothing, from which judgment the City of Corpus Christi has prosecuted this appeal.
This appeal presents but one question, Does Art. 6698, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Stats., as amended by Acts of the 50th Legislature in 1947, Chapter 302, page 512, prohibit a city from levying a city permit tax of two per cent of gross receipts against a person engaged within such city in the business of renting driverless automobiles to the public?
Prior to the amendment of Art. 6698, supra, in 1947, the courts had held that a city had the right to license and regulate the driverless automobile business. City of San Antonio v. Besteiro, Tex.Civ.App.,
It will be noted that this amendment repeatedly refers to the operation of motor vehicles transporting passengers for hire. Since this amendment, there can be no question about the authority of a city to levy a city permit tax of two per cent of gross receipts against taxicab companies. Reed v. City of Waco, Tex.Civ.App.,
■ However, the language of the amendment is not broad enough to include the driverless automobile business, which does not transport passengers for hire, but simply rents automobiles to be used by the person renting the same for any purposes which he might see fit.
This exact question has not been decided in this State, but the case of Campbell v. Groh, Tex.Civ.App.,
There are cases of other jurisdictions which are helpful here. In Armstrong v. Denver Saunders System,
The City of Corpus Christi must find, if at all, its authority to levy a city permit tax of two per cent of gross receipts against appellee in the 1947 amendment to Art. 6698, supra. This amendment is an exception to the rule laid down originally by the provisions of Art. 6698, supra,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
