66 Neb. 244 | Neb. | 1902
In this case the defendant in the court below was prosecuted on an information charging him with selling intoxicating liquors in violation of section 11, chapter 50,
One of the alleged errors called to our attention in the brief of plaintiff in error, defendant below, is the action of the trial court in permitting the state to show that the defendant had in his place of business a United States internal revenue stamp, commonly called a government license, for the sale of intoxicating liquors during^ the year
In our view, a more serious question is presented by the action of the trial court in refusing paragraph No. 1 of instructions requested by the defendant below, and giving in its stead paragraph No. 9 of instructions on its own motion. In the prosecution of this case, the state was compelled to rely for the proof of the sales charged solely on the testimony of two members of a detective association at Lincoln, who admitted that they had been employed to procure testimony against the defendant by the officers of another association in that place. On the other hand, the defendant relied solely on his own testi
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Reversed and remanded.
Note. — Intoxicating Liquors — Internal Revenue Tax — United States License — State Law. — A license from the United States, under internal revenue laws, conveys to the licensee no authority to carry on the licensed business within a state. The requirement of payment for such license is only a mode of imposing taxes on the licensed business. and the prohibition, under penalties, against carrying on the business without a license is only a mode of enforcing the payment of such taxes. A government license, therefore, can not be used as a shield against the enforcement of state laws. It is purely and simply a form of taxation; for the internal revenue laws are enacted solely as a means of raising revenue. They have no effect upon the internal police of the states, with which congress has nothing to do, and can not be construed as evincing an intention to either legalize or regulate the traffic in intoxicating liquors. That the dealer has already paid a tax to the United States, gives him no claim to immunity from state or municipal taxation. And if his business is put under the ban of state law, his government license is no justification for his continuing it. All persons or corporations engaging in the traffic, are subject to pay the United States tax. For example, a city, if it' distills and sells spirits, whether authorized by its charter or not, must pay the tax. And the stockholders of a corporation engaged in operating a distillery are. “persons interested in the use. of the distillery,” within the meaning of the statute which declares that all such persons shall be jointly and severally liable for taxes imposed by law on the distilled spirits produced therein. Black, Intoxicating Liquors, sec. 113.
Where a municipal corporation by its officers and agents engages as a distiller of spirituous liquors, sells the same without paying the gallon tax thereon, receives the benefits of such business and appropriates the proceeds thereof to the public treasury, it is liable to the United States for the amount of the gallon tax on all spirits so distilled and sold, although all of such acts are authorized by its charter; money paid to a revenue officer on the assessment of such tax, although paid under protest, can not be recovered back. Salt Lake City v. Hollister, 3 Utah, 200, 2 Pac. Rep., 200.
A liquor license granted under the United States internal revenue
The prohibition under penalties of carrying on the business of a liquor-dealer' without license, is only a mode of enforcing the payment of taxes. License-Tax Cases, 5 Wall. [U. S.], 462.
The stockholders of a corporation engaged in the operation of a distillery, are liable for the license-tax. United States v. Wolters, 46 Fed. Rep., 509.
South Carolina — Dispensary—Internal Revenue — Court of Claims. — At the democratic primaries held in South Carolina in August, 1892, the question of prohibition or license was voted on. The vote stood: Prohibition, 38,890; license, 29,464; while 20,008 of those voting did not express themselves on the question. The next state legislature adopted what is known as the Dispensary Law. The bill was introduced in the state senate by John Gary Evans, of Aiken — after-wards g-overnor of the state and candidate for United States senator —as a substitute for a prohibitory bill which had passed the house. The real author of the bill was the then governor, Benjamin R. Tillman, who took his cue from the town of Athens, Georgia. Space fox-bids setting out the details of this law. Let it suffice to say that, under its terms, the state has the selling of all liquor within its confines by means of dispensaries established in towns throughout the state, one-half the revenue going to the state, a fourth to the municipality and a fourth to the county. The term “dispensary” appears to have been borrowed from the nomenclature of scientific charity to designate a place where medical and sxirgical aid are furnished to poor people free- of charge.
The state has always paid the revenue-license taxes for its dispensers; but she sued in the court of claims for the recovery of the amount paid. The points made were (1) that the term “person” is everywhere used in the United States revenue laws to designate a distiller, fermenter or dealer, and a state is neither a natural nor an artificial person, but sovereign; (2) that the United States constitution is an instrument of grants and not of restrictions; and the only power to impose taxes upon a state foimd in that instrument is in clause 2, section 3, article 1, which grants no power to levy an indirect or even a direct tax, except it be apportioned between the states, as therein stated. Contra: The state dispensers are the dealers in distilled and fermented liquors; and they can no more be protected by the appointment of a state than the licensee named in the United States revenue receipt for taxes is, thereby, protected from a police regulation of the state. See foregoing note. February 29, 1904, the court, by Nott, C. J., delivered an opinion adverse to the state, Wright, J., dissenting from some of the reasoning of the court, but concurring in the conclusion. The pith of the opinion is in the following sentence taken therefrom: “The exemptions of sovereignty extend no farther than the attributes of sovereignty.” On March 4, 1904, an appeal was taken to the United States supreme court. The result will be watched with interest.
May 31, 1897, Judge Simonton of the federal circuit court handed down an .opinion adverse to the state upon a bill in equity involving the question of interstate commerce, brought by a California corporation against the dispensary commissioner of South Carolina. Vandercook v. Vance, 80 Fed. Rep., 786. The case was taken to the United States supreme court; and, in the following March, an opinion was handed down by Mr. Justice White which modified the decision of the circuit court, and held that the purchaser within the state could receive the package, but could not'dispose of the same contrary to state law. Vance v. Vandercook, 170 U. S., 438.
The total amount of United States internal revenue collected, between 1895 and 1901,. from the state dispensary commissioner was
The term “corporation” does not include state. State v. Atkins, 35 Ga., 315. The terms “corporation” and “person” are broad enough in statutory construction to include the corporate side of a government or municipality. Republic of Honduras v. Soto, 112 N. Y., 310.—W. F. B.
Cobbey, Annotated Statutes, sec. 7161.
The word dispensary occurs in the Maine and Kansas statutes.
Since this note was wi-itten, it has been suggested to the writer, by a learned jurist, that the main feature of the South Carolina law was prohibition and the dispensary a mere exception. Were xiot the repeal of license and the enactment of prohibition mere incidents to the dispensary system? — W. E. B.
Ex-Governor, now Senator, Tillman read and corrected the proof of the above note. — W. E. B.