129 So. 477 | Ala. | 1930
Plaintiff corporation, operating a hotel in Mobile, paid under protest the sum of $200 required as a license for conducting such business under the city ordinance, and sued for a recovery thereof upon the theory the ordinance was void as arbitrary, discriminatory, and unreasonable. The trial court so held, and the city appeals.
The schedule of licenses as fixed by the ordinance, which appears in the report of the case, is based upon a classification as to the number of rooms in the hotel. Plaintiff vigorously argues such classification as sufficiently unreasonable and arbitrary as to condemn the ordinance, but we do not agree. The ordinance is presumptively reasonable and valid and much must be left to legislative discretion.
Counsel in brief have demonstrated some inequalities resulting in the administration of such license schedule, but, as noted by this court in Quartlebaum v. State,
But to sustain the ordinance there must be uniformity of the tax burden upon those in the same class, there must be no fanciful or capricious classification. Republic Iron Steel Co. v. State, supra; Woco Pep Co. v. City of Montgomery,
This ordinance offends this well-recognized principle. Though disclosing a general purpose to tax all hotels by classification as above outlined, yet there is discrimination in that hotels of fifteen rooms, and those of *533 thirty to thirty-five rooms are not taxed. They are omitted from the schedule. Doubtless this was unintentional, and a mere oversight, but the result is their omission, exempts them from the license tax. We are dealing with a city law, and cannot supply the deficiency, for, as observed in Board of Commissioners v. Orr, supra, "It is not the business of the courts to amend municipal ordinances or lick them into shape on their own notions of convenience, feasibility, and justice, to meet the exigencies of particular cases. It is for the legislative authority, not the judicial, to classify." We can, of course, conceive of no substantial basis for such exemption classification, and none is here suggested. It must therefore be condemned as arbitrary and capricious, and thus invalidate the ordinance.
It is suggested, however, plaintiff comes within the higher class and is not affected by the omission, and therefore is not in position to complain, citing State v. Montgomery,
It is clear, therefore, that plaintiff is affected by such arbitrary and capricious discrimination by way of exemption from taxation of those like situated in the business world, and that such discrimination suffices to invalidate the ordinance in its entirety.
We conclude the trial court correctly ruled, and the judgment will accordingly be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur.