This is an action by plaintiff city against defendant, a practicing attorney-at-law, for the collection of a license tax fee due under the provisions of an ordinance of the city of San Mateo for a period from July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1940. Based upon a finding and conclusion of law that the tax was unconstitutional, judgment was rendered for defendant. The city appeals from the judgment.
In June 1932 the City Council of the City of San Mateo passed and adopted ordinance No. 373 entitled “San Mateo Business License Ordinance,” which in brief provides that persons engaged in businesses, trades, callings or professions, including that of attorney-at-law, shall pay an amina.1 license tax. The ordinance was amended in April 1936 to provide that where two or more persons of like businesses, trade, calling or profession are associated as partners, or as employer and employee, then an additional license tax in a less amount shall be paid for each additional person after the first.
The trial court declared “That section 8.25 of ordinance *654 number 373 of the City of San Mateo, as amended, requires a license tax to be paid by attorneys at law, engaged in the practice of law in plaintiff city, unequal in amount, and that said section of said ordinance is discriminatory and that the provisions thereof are, by reason of inequality and lack of uniformity, with respect to the license tax required to be paid by such attorneys, in conflict with section 1 of Article XIV of the Constitution of the United States, and section 11 of Article I of the Constitution of the State of California and are therefore void.”
In the imposition of the tax herein—a municipal affair—the municipality, unless prohibited by statute, has the right and power to impose the tax, not for the purpose of regulating the conduct of defendant’s practice, but for revenue.
(West Coast Adver. Co.
v.
San Francisco,
It is the rule that the requirement of-the State Bar Act of payment of an annual fee for the
privilege
of practicing law does not preclude the imposition of a municipal license tax on attorneys who conduct the
business
of practicing law.
(In re Galusha,
When a license measure is unreasonable, or an arbitrary yardstick is used, or there is a failure to define sufficiently the subject of the tax, the courts have been prompt to declare it unconstitutional. In
City of Los Angeles
v.
Lankershim,
A difference in the method of conducting a business is generally a sound basis for classification, particularly if it appears that the tax was fixed in proportion to the amount of business, which may be determined by different but reasonable methods.
(Ex parte Lemon,
The number of persons used in the conduct of a business may not be a perfect way of determining the amount of a license fee, but “it is
one
way of doing so, and for aught we know, the safest way. . . . But it is fair to presume that no more persons are employed in such establishments than is necessary to the performance of the work, and as a consequence, that the amount of business done by such establishments is in proportion to the number of persons employed therein.”
(Ex parte Sisto Li Protti, supra,
p. 636.) In
Bramman
v.
City of Alameda,
In Ex parte Lemon, supra, and Ex parte Sisto Li Protti, supra, the language is—persons employed or used. If it is fair and reasonable to fix the license fee in accordance with the number of persons employed, it may with equal force and effect be said that the number “used” or “engaged” in the conduct of the business gives a sounder basis for determining the fair amount of the license fee. The number of employees may vary to a greater extent than the number of employers. *658 If the employers are “used” or “engaged” in producing or contributing to the output or the results of the business, it does not appear that it is. unfair or unreasonable to group employer workers and listed employees. They all tend to increase the size of the business and the financial returns.
Respondent contends that there is discrimination against him by reason of the fact that in the conduct of his profession he is taxed $15 while some of the associates of law firms pay only $5 for the same privilege. There may be some confusion in differentiating between the right to practice law, evidenced by a certificate issued by the state, and the privilege of conducting a legal business in a municipality. While the state certificate is a prerequisite to practice, the actual practice is a business.
(In re Galusha, supra.)
The tax is levied upon the business and not the person. Whether that business is conducted by one, or more than one, associated as partners or as empldyer and employee, it is still in the class of business as that word is used in the ordinance. If a firm of legal associates paid less than respondent as an individual, he might be aggrieved, but when each “business” individually or as a firm pays the minimum tax of $15, respondent cannot justly claim discrimination. There may seem to be a discrimination between an individual and an individual plus an employee, or a firm of asspciated or employee attorneys, but such a discrimination, if it existed, would not be a matter in which the individual respondent would be aggrieved, and, as we have herein held, such method of fixing license taxes has been approved. An employer and an employee may be taxed and the employer actually pay or be held responsible for the tax, and the designation of the tax, whether imposed upon property or upon “the exercise of personal rights and privileges,” is not controlling in determining its constitutionality.
(Carmichael
v.
Southern Coal Co.,
The amount of the tax is not in restraint of trade and not against public policy. In reaching the conclusion that the license tax herein is not unconstitutional, we have been guided by the rules set forth by the Supreme Court of this state and the Supreme Court of the United States. In
Ex parte Haskell, supra,
p. 417, the court said: “The very power to license for purposes of regulation and revenue involves the
*659
right to make distinctions between different trades and between essentially different methods of conducting the same general character of business or trade.” ”... legislatures possess the greatest freedom in classification.”
(Madden
v.
Kentucky, supra,
p. 88.) Where the terms of a license ordinance may be capable of several constructions, its constitutionality should be upheld.
(Edwards
v.
City of Los Angeles,
“Like considerations govern exemptions from the operation of a tax imposed on the members of a class. A legislature is not bound to tax every member of a class or none. It may make distinctions of degree having a rational basis, and when subjected to judicial scrutiny they must be presumed to rest on that basis if there is any conceivable state of facts which would support it. [citing cases]
‘1 This restriction upon the judicial function, in passing on the constitutionality of statutes, is not artificial or irrational. A state legislature, in the enactment of laws, has the widest possible latitude within the limits of the Constitution. In the nature of the case it cannot record a complete catalogue of the considerations which move its members to enact laws. In the absence of such a record courts cannot assume that its action is capricious, or that, with its informed acquaintance with local conditions to which the legislation is to be applied, it was not aware of facts which afford reasonable basis for its action. Only by faithful adherence to this guiding principle of judicial review of legislation is it possible to preserve to the legislative branch its rightful independence and its ability to function.”
In
Gillum
v.
Johnson,
The judgment is reversed.
Peters, P. J., and Knight, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 8,1943.
