95 Mo. 533 | Mo. | 1888
An ordinance of the city of St. Louis contains the following section: “Sec. 889. No person, persons, or copartnership of persons, shall open or keep a meatshop in the city of Saint Lonis, without having first obtained from the collector a license therefor, and any person, persons, or copartnership of persons, doing business as a meat-shop keeper or keepers, shall pay an annual license of fifty dollars in advance, which license shall authorize and empower such person, persons, or copartnership of persons, to sell in their shops all kinds of fresh and salt meats, fresh and salt fish, sausage and sausage-meat, whether made by them or not, and also all kinds of fowl and game in their proper seasons that is not prohibited being sold or offered for sale by any ordinance of this city or law of this state, all kinds of vegetables and fruit, in large or small quantities, for one year from the date of such license, and it is hereby provided that the owners of meatshops, who have paid their license, may be permitted to deliver meat in a wagon or otherwise, without taking out an additional license therefor.* It is hereby provided that if any person, persons, or copartnership of persons, shall exhibit for sale or offer for sale any of the above-enumerated articles, vegetables and fruit excepted, in any market, stall, place, or shop in this-city, whether sold or not, such person, persons, or copartnership of persons, shall be considered to be meat-shop keepers, as herein defined, and shall be adjudged to be such in the full meaning of this section, and provided further, that nothing in this section.shall be so construed as to include grocers who sell ham, shoulders, dried beef, bacon, salt fish, and smoked sausages.”
It appears from the record tha/fc defendant sold meat.
As to the points made under the first ground of objection, viz., that the charter conferred no power to impose such a tax, it may be said that they are identical with those made in the cases of City of St. Louis v. Spiegel, reported in 75 Mo. 145 and 90 Mo. 587. The ordinance, the validity of which was challenged in the cases above cited, as to the question whether the power to tax was given by the charter, is in its essential features bearing on that question like the one in the present case. (See City of St. Joseph v. Ernst, ante, p. 360). Spiegel was convicted for selling meat as a meat-shop keeper without taking out a license, and on appeal to the St. Louis court of appeals, the judgment was affirmed (8 Mo. App. 478); the court in its opinion holding that the charter of the city gives the power to license and tax meatshops, and on that branch of the case it is said: “The charter * * * gives power to the municipal authorities (art. 3, sec. 6) ‘ to assess, levy, and collect all taxes for general and special purposes on real and personal property, and licenses; * * * to establish market-places and meatshops, and license, regulate, sell, lease, abolish, or otherwise dispose of, the
While it was held in the case above quoted from that the power to tax meatshops was given by the charter, it was further held .that the license tax when imposed need not be uniform in the city. On said cause being appealed to this court, the judgment of the St. Louis court of appeals was reversed on the sole ground that the license tax when imposed must be uniform, under section three, article ten of the constitution, which provides that “ taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax,” and that, inasmuch as the tax imposed was not uniform in this, that it imposed a license tax of one hundred dollars on meat-shop keepers in one part
Considering the question of the power to tax meat-shop keepers under the charter as having been settled by the adjudications hereinbefore referred to, the only remaining question left for determination is as to whether the ordinance makes such discrimination as to render it invalid, and on this branch of the case it is insisted by counsel that it discriminates in favor of grocers ; that it undertakes to classify butchers as meat-shop keepers; that it also discriminates in allowing a meat-shop keeper to deliver meat from an unlicensed wagon without giving this privilege to one who sells
As to the last point of objection made, it is claimed by counsel for the city that the denial of the right to sell vegetables and-fruit in a stall in a market-house is not by virtue of the ordinance in question, but by virtue of the following ordinances:. “All the inner portion of all market-houses shall be and are hereby set apart for butchers’ stalls, but when not needed for this-purpose may be used, under the direction of the comptroller, for the sale’of fresh, smoked, or salted meats,, bacon, ham, sausages, dressed fowls, and all other kinds-of provisions or goods except fish.” “Any stand or stall outside of any market-house may be used or employed for the sale of poultry, game, vegetables, fruits, coffee, or other articles except fresh meat.” It would, therefore, seem that the interdiction of the sale-of vegetables and fruits in the market comes from the-
The judgment is hereby affirmed.