64 Ga. 128 | Ga. | 1879
In July, 1879, the city corporation of Macon issued a.fi. fa. against H. G. Davis & Co. for fifty dollars, “it being license city tax for retailing fresh and butcher’s meats in the city, and peddling the 'same on the streets, for the year 1879.” Also a fi.fa. for twenty-five dollars, “it being license city tax for running a one-horse wagon for the year 1879.” Both these fi. fas. were levied by the city marshal upon certain personal property of Davis & Co. An ordinance of the city, passed June 12th, 1879, declared that the vaiious amounts specified therein should be levied and collected as license and business taxes for the year 1879; among the numerous specifications in the ordinance were the following: “Each person or firm (farmers selling their own produce excepted) retailing fresh or butcher’s meat in the city, whether from stalls, stores, or by peddling the same on the streets, shall pay a license of $50.00. . . . “For each and every wagon used by butchers and bakers in their business, and wagons used by brewers and manufacturers of soda water, or for the’delivery of oil, milk or any other article (except wagons delivering milk from dairies on country farms), and package delivery wagons, where such wagons are used for hauling in the city, and drawn by one horse, shall pay $25.00
By charter, the city of Macon has power to tax property, real and personal, within the city, at a rate not exceeding (for all purposes) one and a half per cent, ad valorem, and also “power to levy and collect a tax upon .... all persons exercising within the city any profession, trade or calling, or business of any nature whatever.” Acts of 1871-2, pp. 120, 121. The constitution of 1877 (art. vii, section 2) declares “all taxation shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects, and ad valorem on all property subject to be taxed, within the territorial limits of the authority
On the first of August, 1879, H. G. Davis & Co. filed their bill against the corporation of Macon, praying for an injunction against the collection of the two executions above described, and that said corporation and its officers be restrained from proceeding further at law touching the matters in questions. At the hearing of the order to show cause, the injunction was refused, and that is the alleged error.
The charges of the bill make the following case : The complainants do not reside within the corporate limits of the city ; they carry on the business of butchers, but have no slaughter-pen, stall or place of business within the city ; their slaughter-pen is about one mile outside of the city limits, and their shop is in Yineville; a few of their regular city customers reside in the city of Macon, and the complainants deliver to these, at their doors, fresh meats, using for this purpose a one-horse wagon, which wagon is the property of. complainants; that-for such delivery they charge nothing, nor are they paid anything; that they do not retail fresh or butcher’s meat in the city from a stall or store, nor peddle the same upon the streets; and that the cattle they slaughter are raised in Georgia, not bought in the city, but bought from farmers in Bibb and adjacent
The ordinance is further attacked as invalid because it has an exception in it exempting from its operation farmers selling their own produce. The exception would probably have been implied had it not been expressed, for the tax imposed is a business tax, a tax on avocation or calling. The business of a farmer is production, not trade, and the
Judgment affirmed.