47 S.E. 411 | N.C. | 1904
This action was brought to recover license taxes alleged to be due by the defendant to the plaintiffs under section 91 of the Revenue Act of 1901. A jury trial was waived, and the Court found as facts that the defendant is a corporation of the State of New Jersey with a capital stock of one million dollars, and was engaged during the years 1901 and 1902 in the business of selling, dealing in and distributing meats, *45
canned goods and other articles of trade at wholesale in this State, with its principal office at Wilmington and three offices at other places in this State, all office reports being sent directly to Kansas City. That license taxes under said section were duly levied by the (63) proper authorities of New Hanover County for the years 1901 and 1902, and a demand made upon the defendant for the payment of the same and a similar demand also made by the State for its taxes for those years, but payment was refused. That the Revenue Act of 1901 appears by the Senate and House Journals to have been read, as a whole, on three several days in each house of the General Assembly, and the ayes and noes were entered on the journals upon the second and third readings. That the bill was amended in the Senate, it appears in the journal, as to several sections, but there is nothing in the entries on the journal to show that section 91 was one of the sections so amended. The defendant introduced in evidence the original bill filed in the State Librarian's office, and from the entries therein it appears that the bill was amended in the Senate by inserting in what was section 88, between the word "corporation" and the word "railroad," the words "organized under the laws of this State," and that section 85 as thus amended became section 95, and that thereafter section 95 was amended by inserting after the word "State" and before the word "railroads" the words "or doing business in this State," and by adding to the section the words "provided further, that the tax provided for under this section shall be payable in the county of this State where it has its principal office." That said amendments were reported from a committee of conference and concurred in without a vote on three several days and without entering the ayes and noes on the journals, and section 95 was then numbered 91. That the defendant has paid the taxes due under section 66 of said act and imposed upon all agents of packing houses doing business in this State. No point was made in the court below as to the joinder of the plaintiffs, the State and the (64) county, in one action.
The court gave judgment for the plaintiffs and the defendant appealed. The contentions of the defendant in this case relate to the validity and the interpretation of section 91 of the Revenue Act, it being chapter 9 of the Acts of *46 1901, and is as follows: (1) That section 91 was not passed in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, Article II, section 14, as the said section was amended after the original bill had passed its several readings in each House by the insertion of the words "or doing business in this State," and of the proviso, which is as follows: "Provided further, that the tax provided for under this section shall be payable in the county of this State where it has its principal office." And that after the bill was thus amended it was not read three several times in each house, nor were the ayes and noes on the second and third readings entered on the journal, as required by the said article and section of the Constitution. (2) That neither the State nor any county thereof can collect the tax, because section 91 of the Revenue Act of 1901 applies only to corporations organized under the laws of this State, and (3) That even if the State can collect the tax under section 91 of said act no county can do so, as it is a tax on the franchise of the corporation, and not a license or privilege tax, and the act confers no authority upon a county to collect such a tax. (65) We will consider these propositions in the order above stated. In the Constitution of the State, Article II, section 14, it is provided "that no law shall be passed to impose any tax upon the people of the State, or to allow the counties to do so, unless the bill for the purpose shall have been read three several times in each house of the General Assembly and passed three several readings, which readings shall have been on three different days and agreed to by each house respectively, and unless the ayes and noes on the second and third readings of the bill shall have been entered on the journal."
Assuming, for the sake of the argument, that the defendant, a nonresident corporation and not a citizen of this State, can avail itself of any noncompliance with the provisions of that section (which by its terms applies only to a law imposing a tax upon the people of the State) for the reason that it is entitled to the rights and privileges of the citizens of this State or to the equal protection of its laws (Blake v.McClung,
We have, then, the ratification of the bill, which imports that it has become a law in due course of procedure, and its authentication as a bill that has passed the proper legislative body is complete and unimpeachable (Scarborough v. Robinson,
In Gatlin v. Tarboro,
The burden is always on the party who alleges that a statute was not passed according to the constitutional requirements and he must furnish the competent evidence necessary to overcome the presumption arising from the ratification of the act. This proof must appear in the record.R. R. v. Wren,
The third ground of objection to the tax is equally untenable. It is true that section 91 provides for an annual franchise tax, but this section is in Schedule C, and section 87 of the act, which is the first section of Schedule C, provides that taxes imposed by that schedule "shall be for the privilege of carrying on the business or doing the act named and shall be subject to the other regulations mentioned in section 35 under Schedule B." Turning to section 35, we find it to be expressly provided that a tax may be imposed by the county, in *51 addition to the State tax, upon the subjects of taxation mentioned in that section. It is provided by section 102 of the act (Schedule C) that when a specific license tax is levied for the privilege of carrying on any business, the county may levy the same tax, unless a provision to the contrary is made in the section levying the specific license tax. Schedule C provides for what is called license taxes to be paid by a designated class of corporations, such as railroads, banks, building and loan associations, insurance, telegraph, telephone and express companies, the amount of the tax being fixed at a certain per cent on gross receipts, or earnings, and on other corporations a tax is levied for carrying on their business, the assessment of which is graduated according to the capital stock paid in or subscribed and this is called a franchise tax, but it is nevertheless, by the very terms of section 87, a privilege or license tax. It is to be observed, in this connection, that sections 89 and 90, which provide for the tax on the first class (72) of corporations we have mentioned, contain a clause exempting those corporations from a county tax, and the taxes imposed by those sections are paid directly to the State Treasurer. But section 91 contains no such clause of exemption so as to bring it within the operation of the proviso to section 102, and the tax by section 91 is required to be paid in the county where the corporation has its principal office, which would indicate that county as well as a State tax was contemplated. Upon a review of the several sections of the Revenue Act relating to this matter we are constrained to think that the defendant is liable for the taxes sought to be recovered in this action. But it is only liable under the act, to the State and to the county where it has its principal office, if the latter has seen fit to impose the tax.
It must be certified that there is no error in the judgment of the Superior Court.
No error.
DOUGLAS J., concurs only in result.
(73)