95 So. 488 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1922
Under authority of the Goode Law approved September 22, 1915 (Acts 1915; p. 573 et seq.), as approved and construed in Windham v. State,
The next question is not without difficulty. The taxing power of the state rests with the Legislature, subject only to such restrictions as may have been placed upon it by the Constitution. For certain purposes this power may be granted to county and municipal corporations, and we have held that in 1915 Acts, supra, the Legislature by a valid enactment did place this power in the commissioners' court of Conecuh county, and that acting under this power the commissioners' court of Conecuh county levied a license on automobile trucks, covering the two trucks of appellee. The same power that granted the power can by valid enactment take it away or withhold it, and when such is the case the act or ordinance of the county ceases to be of any force or effect and is superseded by the act of the superior power. By the act of the Legislature of 1915, approved September 14, 1915 (Acts 1915, p. 489 et seq.), sections 6, 7, 8, and 9, levying a license or privilege taxes on automobile vehicles, by section 2, p. 527, made a levy for the counties, and with the law so written the Supreme Court, in Mills v. Conecuh County,
The power of levying privilege taxes still remains with the counties as fixed by the Goode Law and construed in Mills v. Conecuh County,
"The sufficiency and definiteness of the order is free from criticism, since the amount of the license tax is graduated according to the character of the vehicle, as indicated by its being a two or more horse wagon. Clearly the measure of the draft is the better determined under such a standard."
In the Goode Law (Acts 1915, p. 573, § 13) the court of county commissioners are only given authority to levy license taxes for each class of vehicles, and that act does not confer authority to fix a license for hauling along the public road any particular article of commerce. Hence the county ordinance fixing a license tax on each truck of certain tonnage with pneumatic tires hauling logs, blocks, etc., is a classification according to tonnage within the class designated, and not a license for the privilege of hauling logs, blocks, etc., and is authorized under the legislative power given, except as to such vehicles as have been taken from under its influence by the statute as passed by the act of the Legislature of 1919.
The judgment of the lower court is not *67 in accord with the foregoing views, and therefore is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
As we see it, if the trucks were used for "commercial purposes," they came under the influence of the decision in the Mills Case cited in the original opinion, and would not be exempt as a "motor vehicle," used by the owner for his private use and that of his family. In determining this question we must ascertain the intent of the Legislature, from the act itself, aided by such general rules of construction as have been laid down for our guidance and a general judicial knowledge of the conditions.
In the first place, the act itself (Schedule 7, § 361, p. 397, Acts 1919) classifies trucks as commercial automobiles. Notwithstanding such classification, we can conceive of a state of facts taking a truck out of this class, but none the less such classification indicates the trend of the legislative mind. In the next place, it must be admitted that the defendant's business was wholly that, pertaining to the commerce of the country. And it is shown by the evidence that these trucks were one of the means by which this commerce was carried on. They were no more being used by the owner for his private use and that of his family, than the saw used for sawing the logs into lumber, or the oxen used in conveying the logs to the mill, or any other utility used in the conduct of the business. In Hannibal S. J. R. Co. v. Husen,
"By the term 'commerce,' is meant not traffic only, but every species of commercial intercourse, every communication by land or by water, foreign and domestic, external and internal."
In Erie R. Co. v. State,
We see no good reason for changing the decision. The opinion is extended, and the application is overruled.