159 Ga. 303 | Ga. | 1924
J. H. Ewing and others brought their equitable petition against W. A. Wright, comptroller-general, and W. S. Richardson, tax-collector of Fulton County, alleging that they were engaged ip the business of negotiating loans and charging commissions therefor, and that the tax-collector was threatening to enforce executions against the plaintiffs on account of their failure to pay the tax imposed upon them by subsection 70 of section 2 of the general tax act of the State, approved August 15, 1921 (Ga. Laws 1921, p. 58)'. The section of the tax act in question undertakes to create, for purposes of taxation, a distinct class, to wit, persons “negotiating loans and charging therefor any fee, commission, or salary.” If the class included all persons “negotiating loans and charging therefor,” the classification would not be subject to the objections here raised to it; but the statute in question does not include all persons belonging to the class upon which the tax is imposed; it expressly excludes a number of them, to wit, attorneys at law who are engaged in the same kind of loan business as the class.generally upon whom the tax is imposed. Paragraph 1 of section 2 of article 7 of the constitution of this State provides as follows: “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 levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws.” Civil Code, § 6553. And where the legislature, as here, creates by statute a class upon which it imposes a tax like that imposed by this statute, but excepts from it a number of persons falling within the classification, the,
Judgment reversed.