87 P. 909 | Cal. | 1906
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants, entered upon the plaintiff's failure to amend its complaint after a general demurrer thereto had been sustained. The action was brought by the county of Plumas *760 to recover the sum of one thousand three hundred dollars, alleged to be due it from defendants as a license fee for conducting the business of raising, grazing, herding, and pasturing sheep and lambs within the county. The plaintiff's claim is based upon an ordinance adopted by the county supervisors in January, 1902, and set forth in full in the complaint. The enactment is entitled "An ordinance regulating the business of raising, grazing, herding, and pasturing sheep and lambs in the county of Plumas, state of California." Section 1 requires persons engaging in the described business in the county to present annually to the license collector an affidavit showing the number of sheep or lambs owned or controlled by them in the county, and whether such sheep or lambs are infected with contagious disease. Section 2 prohibits the bringing into the county of sheep or lambs infected with certain diseases. Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 make certain provisions regulating the conduct of said business. In a general way, it is sufficient to say that provision is made against the camping or grazing of sheep or lambs on public roads or trails, against dipping near public highways or buildings, and against such acts as would cause injury to the roads or trails of the county or delay and inconvenience to travelers. Section 8 makes a violation of any of the preceding sections a misdemeanor. Section 9, which provides for the license here sought to be collected, reads as follows: "Section 9. Every person, firm or corporation engaging in said Plumas County in the business of raising, grazing, herding or pasturing sheep or lambs must annually, at the time of the commencement of said business, procure a license therefor from the license collector of said county, and must pay for said license, the license fee or charge of ten cents for each sheep or lamb owned by, or in possession of, or under the control of such person, firm or corporation." The remaining sections of the ordinance (except section 13, which will be referred to hereafter) provide for the collection of the license fee, section 16 declaring that the license fee or charge is a debt owing to the county, and shall become due and payable to the county in advance. Section 11 authorizes the district attorney to bring suit, in the name of the county, to recover license fees due.
The complaint alleges that the defendants, between May 1, *761 1902, and June 19, 1902, were engaged in the business of raising, grazing, herding, and pasturing sheep and lambs in the county of Plumas, that during that time they owned and possessed in said county thirteen thousand sheep and lambs, and that they have failed and refused to take out a license or to pay any license fee.
If the ordinance in question is a valid exercise of the legislative power of the county, the complaint states a cause of action. And, on the record before us, consisting simply of the complaint and the demurrer, the validity of the ordinance must be determined from an inspection of its provisions alone, read in the light of facts within the judicial knowledge of the court. Unless, so read, it appears that the ordinance is invalid on its face, the order sustaining the demurrer cannot be upheld.
Under the state constitution (art. XI, sec. 11). "Any county . . . may make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws." Section 3366 of the Political Code, enacted in 1901, provides that "Boards of supervisors of the counties of the state . . . shall, in the exercise of their police powers,and for the purpose of regulation, as herein provided, and nototherwise, have power to license all and every kind of business not prohibited by law, and transacted and carried on within the limits of their respective jurisdictions, . . . to fix the rates of license tax upon the same, and to provide for the collection of the same by suit or otherwise." The effect of this statutory provision was to cut off the power, theretofore residing in boards of supervisors under the County Government Act (Stats. 1897, p. 465, sec. 25, subd. 25), to collect a license tax forrevenue. "The words `not otherwise' curtail and cut off all power boards of supervisors theretofore had to issue licenses and charge therefor as a revenue measure. . . . Indeed, it may be said that every feature of this act of 1901 indicates a plain purpose upon the part of the legislature to restrict the licensing power of boards of supervisors and city councils to matters of regulation alone." (Ex parte Pfirrmann,
Can the ordinance now before us be sustained as a valid exercise of the power of the county to regulate the business *762
of raising, herding, grazing, and pasturing sheep? The principles affecting the right of legislative bodies in the exercise of what is known as the "police power," to place restrictions upon the conduct of lawful pursuits and occupations, are well settled, although there is often great difficulty in applying these principles to a given state of facts. It is within the legislative discretion to place such restrictions upon the use of any property or the conduct of any business as may be reasonably necessary for the public safety, comfort, or health. "The police power, the power to make laws to secure the comfort, convenience, peace, and health of the community, is an extensive one and in its exercise a very wide discretion as to what is needful or proper for the purpose is necessarily committed to the legislative body in which the power to make such laws is vested."(Ex parte Whitwell,
It is also well settled that the power to regulate a business may be exercised by means of a license fee or charge. The amount of the license fee, however, must not be more than is reasonably necessary for the purpose sought, — i.e. the regulation of the business. If it is so great that the court can plainly see that the purpose of its imposition was to realize a revenue under the guise of regulating the business, the provision for the fee cannot stand as an exercise of the police power. The elements that may properly be taken into consideration by the legislative body in determining the amount of license fee that may for purposes of regulation be imposed upon any business are stated in two recent decisions of the United States supreme court. Both were cases involving the validity of ordinances imposing license charges upon telegraph poles and wires. Western Union TelegraphCo. v. New Hope,
It is not to be understood from these citations that the costs to the municipality which may be considered are simply those which arise directly in the enforcement of the regulatory provisions themselves. The license fee may properly be fixed with a view to reimbursing the city, town, or county for all expense imposed upon it by the business sought to be regulated. "In fixing upon the fee, it is proper and reasonable to take into account not the expense merely of direct regulation, but all the incidental consequences that may be likely to subject the public to cost in consequence of the business licensed." (Cooley on Taxation, p. 599.) Thus, in Philadelphia v. Western Union Tel.Co., 89 Fed. 460, in which the rule was stated in language which has had the approval *765 of the United States supreme court, it was held to be error, in a case involving the reasonableness of a charge for maintaining telegraph poles and wires, to exclude evidence tending to show that the city was, by reason of the wires, put to additional expense in providing a greater number of fire companies and apparatus.
Applying these rules to the ordinance before us, can it be said that the charge of ten cents per head of sheep and lambs is so clearly excessive, so grossly disproportionate to the expense incurred by the county by reason of this business, that the enactment is void upon its face? It is to be remembered that the presumption is in favor of the reasonableness of the charge, and that the county is not limited to the exact amount of the expense, as it may subsequently develop. "The municipality is at liberty to make the charge large enough to cover any reasonable anticipated expenses." (Atlantic etc. Tel. Co. v. Philadelphia,
The herding, pasturing, and raising of sheep is undoubtedly a lawful, indeed a necessary, vocation. But there can be no question that it, in common with the keeping of other kinds of livestock, is an occupation which may properly be subjected to reasonable restrictions for the purpose of preventing or lessening the annoyance or discomfort which, if unrestrained, it would be likely to cause. (Tiedeman on State and Federal Control, p. 838; Sifers v. Johnson,
Much stress is laid upon the fact, which appears from decisions of this court in earlier cases (Ex parte Mirande,
In the case at bar we are not aware of any facts from which we can say as a matter of law that the license fee imposed is necessarily, under all circumstances and in every locality, unreasonable or excessive. It may be unreasonable and excessive, in view of the conditions existing in Plumas County. If it is, the defendants may so allege, and if they prove their allegations, they will be under no liability. But, in view of the purpose of the ordinance, as declared in its title, and the presumption of validity attending such enactments, it should not be held that the ordinance is on its face a revenue measure disguised as a provision for regulation.
We see no force in the contention that the provision in the ordinance authorizing a suit by the county to recover the amount of the license fee indicates that the tax is exacted for revenue rather than as an exercise of the police power. Section 3366 of the Political Code, which restricts the licensing power of the county supervisors to licensing for regulation, *768
in the exercise of their police powers, expressly authorizes them to fix the rates of license tax, and "to provide for the collection of the same by suit or otherwise." Sonora v. Curtin,
The point is made that the provision requiring the payment of a license fee cannot be regarded as a regulation, inasmuch as the ordinance does not "forbid the carrying on of the business mentioned unless a license be procured." If such prohibition be an essential element of a regulatory license fee, it is supplied by the provisions of section 435 of the Penal Code, to wit: "Every person who commences or carries on any business, trade, profession, or calling, for the transaction or carrying on of which a license is required by any law of this state, without taking out or procuring the license prescribed by such law, is guilty of a misdemeanor." A county ordinance is a "law of this state" within the meaning of this section. (In re Lawrence,
Various other points are made by the respondents, but in our judgment they are all reducible to, or are based upon, the proposition that the ordinance in question is necessarily to be regarded as a revenue measure. These points are therefore sufficiently answered by what has already been *769 said in this opinion regarding the character of the enactment.
The judgment is reversed.
Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., and Beatty, C.J., concurred.
Henshaw, J., and McFarland, J., dissented.
Rehearing denied.