8 Mo. App. 478 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
■ Defendant was convicted, in the First District Police Court-of St. Louis, of violatingthe meat-shop ordinance of that city, bj carrying on a meat-shop business, at 921 Market Street, without a license. On appeal to the Court of Criminal Correction, defendant moved to dismiss, on the ground that-the provision under which he was convicted- conflicts with
The ordinance provides that no person shall keep a meat-shop in St. Louis without a license from the city. The ordinance marks out two districts of the city. The first district seems to include what may be called the suburban property within the city limits, whilst the second district embraces the parts of the city built up and which are being rapidly built up. This was assumed on argument to be the fact, and we take it to be so. The districts are marked out in the ordinance by the streets separating them, and nothing is said in the ordinance as to the character of each district. The meat-shop license in the first district is fixed at $100 a year, and in the second district at $25 a 3'ear. The ordinance contains many other provisions regulating meat-shops — registering them, providing when they may be open, and that they shall keep them clean, and so on.
It was competent for the voters of St. Louis, under the State Constitution of 1875, to adopt a city charter containing any provisions as to imposing license-taxes not inconsistent with the Constitution and the existing laws of .the State. St. Louis v. Sternberg, 69 Mo. 289. The charter then adopted gives power to the municipal authorities (Art. III., sect. 26) “to assess, levy, and collect all taxes, for general and special purposes, on real and personal property, and licenses; * * * to establish market-places and meat-shops, and license, regulate, sell, lease, abolish, or otherwise dispose of the same; * * * to license, tax, and regulate grocers, merchants, retailers, * * * and all other business, trades, avocations, or professions whatsoever; * * * to license, tax, regulate, or suppress all occupations, professions, and trades not enumerated, of whatever name or character.” These provisions give the right to license meat-shops, as plainly as can be given. It is said in so many words, in the charter, that
It is urged that the tax imposed is a violation of that provision of the Constitution (Art. X., sect. 4) which declares that taxes ‘ ‘ shall be uniform within the territorial limits of
We do not consider that the views here expressed are at all at variance with anything decided, or even with anything said, in American Union Express Company v. St. Joseph, 66 Mo. 675. It is by no means intimated in that case that the constitutional provisions as to uniformity of taxation require that all persons engaged in the same business in the same
The judgment of the Court of Criminal Correction is reversed and the cause remanded.