130 A. 412 | Pa. | 1925
Is an electric light company which pays the gross receipts tax levied by section 23 of the Act of June 1, 1889, P. L. 420, liable to pay the mercantile license tax levied by the Act of May 2, 1899, P. L. 184, on the gross receipts from its sale of electric appliances?
The defendant has two places of business in the City of Harrisburg, separate and apart from the plant in which it generates electricity, where it sells electric lamps, fans, wire, lighting fixtures, heating and cooking utensils, motors, sweepers or vacuum cleaners and other electric appliances. During the year 1922 it did a gross business in the sale of these articles amounting to $54,910.73, on which a mercantile tax of one mill per dollar was assessed for the year 1923 amounting to $54.91, together with the annual tax of $2. Defendant appealed *178 from the assessment and the court of common pleas (trial by jury having been dispensed with) sustained the appeal and determined it was not liable for the tax and entered judgment in its favor, from which the Commonwealth appeals.
The court below reached the conclusion that appellee is not subject to the tax because "to impose the tax claimed would be double taxation without the clear intent of the Act of 1899 to impose it." The court recognized that the legislature had the power to impose double taxation (Com. v. Lehigh Coal
Navigation Co.,
We cannot subscribe to the thought, even should it be considered that the tax in question is a duplicate tax, that there is no clear intent in the act to levy it. The Act of May 2, 1899, P. L. 184, provides that ". . . . . . each retail vendor of or retail dealer in goods, wares and merchandise shall pay an annual mercantile license tax of $2, and all persons so engaged shall pay one mill additional on each dollar of the whole volume, gross, of business transacted annually." We cannot imagine any language more comprehensive and embracing and more indicative of a positive and absolute intent than "each *179
retail vendor . . . . . or retail dealer." Admittedly defendant is a retail dealer because it buys to sell again (Norris v. Com.,
So far as double taxation is concerned, it exists only where there is "the taxation twice by the same taxing power of what was regarded as the same subject" (Com. v. Shenango Furnace Co.,
We are of opinion that the court erred in entering judgment in favor of the defendant, and, therefore, the thirteenth assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed and it is directed that the court below shall enter judgment in favor of the Commonwealth for the amount due. *180