118 P. 215 | Cal. | 1911
This is an action to recover moneys due under a revenue license ordinance of the city of Los Angeles providing "for licensing and regulating the carrying on of certain professions, trades, callings and occupations." Judgment passed for the plaintiff and from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial defendant appeals. *801
While thus described as "regulatory" an inspection of the ordinance discloses that it is an ordinance simply for revenue, the only attempt at regulation being the prohibition against conducting or carrying on any of the enumerated professions, trades, callings, or occupations without first procuring a license so to do. Section 54 of the ordinance is as follows: —
"Section 54. For every person, firm or corporation maintaining, managing or conducting a building for the purpose of letting office rooms or storerooms, the following license:
"For every building containing more than 30 rooms, $1.00 per year for each office room, and $3.00 per year for each storeroom contained in said building."
Defendant is admittedly the owner of an office building containing more than thirty rooms which are rented or leased.
Against the enforcement of this license ordinance and against its validity it is first urged that the ordinance in design and in effect levies an unequal and ununiform tax upon property which the owner may elect to rent (Const., art XIII, sec. 1); that an owner's right to rent his property and receive the rents thereof is one of the inherent rights of property ownership; that to call the renting an "occupation" is a mere subterfuge and that to exact a license-tax for the right to conduct this so-called "occupation" is but an attempt to evade the law forbidding unequal taxation. The question thus presented is certainly a serious one. If a man owning an office building with offices to rent who has paid all taxes, state, county, and municipal, upon his property is to be charged a dollar a room for every office he rents under a declaration that he is engaged in the "occupation" of "conducting a building" for the purpose of letting office rooms and that, consequently, a license may be exacted on the occupation, equally well might the board of supervisors under the guise of licensing the "occupation of renting land" exact from the farmer a dollar per acre for all farming lands which he might rent.
But in the present case we need not pause to determine this point for the ordinance in the matter here under review is certainly obnoxious to the general law and to the charter provisions in its unjust discrimination between persons engaged in the same business. It imposes a burden upon one owner which it does not impose upon another in the same class. We *802
need do no more than refer to such familiar cases as Ex parteMirande,
No ordinance which has come under the review of this court has ever gone to the limits of this ordinance or has been upheld if it has done so. In Ex parte Sisto Li Protti,
The well-settled rule that "every intendment is to be indulged in favor of the validity of a municipal ordinance imposing a license fee for the carrying on of a particular business" means that a court will be zealous in its search for any substantial ground for upholding such an ordinance when attacked; but it does not mean that the court must shut its ears to reason and declare in every case that because an ordinance has been passed there must be valid reasons for its existence. The true principle, repeatedly affirmed in this state, is thus expressed by the supreme court of Georgia: *804
"The legislature has absolutely no power to classify persons, natural or artifical, engaged in precisely the same occupation, laying a tax upon some of them and excepting others, or imposing a tax not operating uniformly upon all." (Singer ManuafcturingCo. v. Wright,
This ordinance, therefore, is unjust and discriminatory in making an unwarranted exception in favor of members of the same class, or what is the same thing phrased differently, imposing upon a part of a class artificially created, a burden not imposed upon all who stand in the same relation to the same subject-matter. (City of Pasadena v. Stimson,
The judgment and order are, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded.
Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred. *805