Erie City v. Erie Electric Motor Co.

24 Pa. Super. 77 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1903

Opinion by

Orlady, J.,

The state cannot bargain away its right to exercise at all times its police power, nor can a municipality to which is delegated the state’s police power over streets and highways enter into any contract by which the free exercise of the power granted can be abridged, limited or destroyed: McKeesport v. McKeesport, etc., Passenger Railway Company, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 242, 249; New Hope Boro. v. Postal Tel. Cable Co., 202 Pa. 532; North Braddock Boro. v. Second Avenue Traction Co., 8 Pa. Superior Ct. 233.

In these cases there are a number of authorities collated in which the Supreme Court and this court have held that a reasonable annual license fee imposed by a municipality on poles, wires and street cars in use within the municipality is a valid exercise of its police power. The defendant company has charter rights from the state to construct its railway and contract rights from the city to operate its cars on the public streets, and it'is undoubtedly a purchaser of these privileges, so that it cannot be deprived of them by any action of the city. However, the grant of a privilege to carry passengers in cars over the streets does not involve exemption from liability to municipal regulation. When the legislature creates a corporation, and authorizes it to carry on a specified business within the limits of a municipality, it is to be presumed that the business is intended to be conducted under the restrictions, rules and regulations that govern the same business when transacted *82by others within the same corporate limits: Frankford, etc., Pass. Ry. Co. v. Phila., 58 Pa. 119. The multiplicity of uses to which public streets are now subjected, such as construction and maintenance on, under and over the surface for the transmission of water, gas, sewage, light, heat and power, the carriage of passengers in cars propelled by steam or electricity imposes ah imperative duty on the municipal authorities to provide proper rules and regulations for their use and occupancy in order that the safety of the citizens may be insured and the public use of the highways may be interfered with as little as possible. The ordinance in question does not depend for its validity upon the Act of May 23, 1889, P. L. 277, entitled “ An act providing for the incorporation and government of cities of the third class.” The power to impose reasonable regulations, including a license tax on street railway cars, existed before the passage of that act and is not abridged by any of its provisions. City of Allentown v. Gross, 132 Pa. 319; Williamsport v. Wenner, 172 Pa. 173, and Commonwealth v. Clark, 195 Pa. 634, are not in conflict with the inherent right in the municipality to regulate under its general police powers, the use of cars upon the public streets.

The state may choose its own agents in its own way to carry out its commands in regard to the taxing, or police or other general powers: Knisely v. Cotterel, 196 Pa. 614. This is not a tax imposed upon the property of the corporation but an annual license charge in the sum of $25.00 for each car run or operated upon any road in said city and providing “ that no car shall be placed, operated or run upon any road or street until it shall be regularly licensed and a certificate issued, duly numbered by the city treasurer.” It is not a tax upon business done or upon property, but a license tax to legalize the use of a car for carrying passengers upon the public streets.

That the tax required by the ordinance shall be “ paid into the office of the city treasury for the use of the city,” and thus incidentally augment the revenues of the city does not change the character of the tax nor show that the ordinance was enacted for the purpose of raising revenue by taxation of the defendant’s company. The treasury of the city is the only channel through which such licenses, fines and penalties can be properly received and disbursed. On its face the ordinance *83purports to impose a license tax as a police regulation on each car run and operated upon any road in said city. The presumption is that it is what it professes to be, and it is not invalidated. by the use to which the license fee is subsequently applied. See Johnson v. Philadelphia, 60 Pa. 445.

The amount of the license tax imposed on each car is not challenged as unreasonable, the weight of the argument being directed to ascertaining the true number of cars for which the company is liable.

From the undisputed testimony it appears that the company had forty-nine complete car trucks, which could be used with its eighty car bodies. The car bodies were so constructed that twenty-one of the whole number could be used on summer or open cars as might be indicated or needful for the public comfort or economic management of the corporate business. Eight of the trucks were not used so that but forty-one were in use for either closed or open bodies, and these forty-one were in service during the license year. While each part of a car-truck or body is a necessary constituent of a completed car, in determining the largest possible number of entire cars to be formed by assembling the trucks and bodies, we are limited to the possible number of available car trucks. The trucks are the primary or principal part of the car and the body is secondary. The trucks could be used on the streets irrespective of the kind of car body, and without the trucks the bodies were useless. Whether the trucks were mounted with a winter or a summer body or with a flat platform, there could not be more than forty-nine cars made up from the whole equipment of the company. The company could effect as many combinations aS it had car bodies, yet that number would not represent the correct number of cars it could run and operate, and a tax imposed on the whole number of car bodies would necessarily impose a tax on a truck which had been licensed with another car body. The unused parts of a car in the shops or car barns which were held in reserve for climatic changes and substituted to meet such exigencies are only auxiliary parts of the cars in actual use.

At the time of the trial the plaintiff had obtained judgment, for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, for the tax on thirty cars, to wit: $750, and the court held “ that the company was *84liable for the tax on a winter car (the closed car with the trucks) and when they put arsummer car upon the same trucks, that makes another car within the meaning of the law,” and the jury was instructed to return a verdict for the tax on forty cars, to wit: $1,000 with interest. '

The system of computation was erroneous, and we now modify the judgment in accordance with the reasons above given, and enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff on this appeal for the tax on eleven cars at $25.00 a car, making $275 with interest from June 1, 1899, in addition to the judgment entered for want of a sufficient affidavit of defence by which the company is held to be liable for the license tax on forty-one cars used and operated during the period mentioned.