6 S.E.2d 320 | Ga. | 1939
1. Equity will enjoin a criminal prosecution that illegally threatens irreparable injury or destruction of property, where the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law. In such a case the injunction issues, not to prevent the criminal prosecution, but to prevent unlawful injury to property.
2. A municipal ordinance is reviewable by the courts as to its reasonableness, and if found to be unreasonable it will be held void. The ordinance *459 here involved was adopted as a revenue measure under charter authority to tax. It places upon each of the individual grocery stores of plaintiff an occupation tax from four to one hundred and twenty times the amount imposed upon individual independent grocery stores in the city. The evidence shows conclusively that the ordinance is confiscatory and unreasonably oppressive; and therefore it is unreasonable and void. No ruling is made on the constitutional questions presented, or as to the authority of a municipality to take into consideration territory outside of its jurisdiction, upon which to base a classification for taxation.
On January 20, 1939, the city commission adopted an amendment to the tax ordinance, which recited, "that because of the advantage accruing from the operation of multiple stores wherever *460 situated, and because of the basic difference inherent in such character of operations and business, there is hereby levied for the year 1939 on the business of operating and maintaining, as part of a group or chain, any store that is stationary, in the City of Columbus, Georgia, where goods, wares, merchandise, or commodities of every description whatsoever are sold or offered for sale at retail, an occupational tax or license tax as hereinafter stated." The ordinance declared that such tax should be payable on March 1, 1939, and that it should be in addition to all State taxes or licenses and all other specific business and occupation taxes, whether paid or not. The tax imposed by the ordinance was graduated as follows: (1) chains having not more than ten stores, $50; (2) more than ten and not more than forty stores, $100; (3) more than forty and not more than eighty stores, $250; (4) more than eighty and not more than 125 stores, $500; (5) more than 125 and not more than 200, $750; (6) more than 200 and not more than 400, $1,000; (7) more than 400 stores, $1,200. The schedule provided that the tax therein stipulated was levied upon each store operated in the City of Columbus, belonging to a group or chain, whether or not all the stores of such chain operated in the city. It was provided that such tax should be paid to the treasurer of the city, and would be delinquent after April 1, 1939; and that when payment was made a license certificate showing such payment should be obtained and displayed in the place of business. It was declared if any person or firm whose duty it was to obtain such license should, after the license tax became delinquent, transact or offer to transact in the city the business of operating a chain store without having first obtained the license therein provided, the offender should, upon conviction, be punished by a fine of not exceeding $250, or by imprisonment not exceeding sixty days, either or both in the discretion of the city recorder. In addition, it was provided that the clerk of the city, upon any such tax becoming delinquent, should issue an execution for the amount thereof, in substantially the same form, bearing the same rate of interest and providing for the same costs, as in the case of executions for ad valorem taxes due to said city; and that such executions should constitute a lien as other executions, and be enforced by levy and sale as provided by the charter of the city and the laws of the State in regard to ad valorem taxes. Section 36 was as follows: "The provisions of this ordinance *461 shall not apply to persons, firms, corporations, or associations of persons selling or distributing only from: (a) Depots, warehouses, or platforms where ice is manufactured, stored, or sold. (b) Depots or dairies where only milk or butter, cheese, ice cream, or other dairy products are sold. (c) Any place of business where the principal business conducted is that of selling, storing, or distributing petroleum products. (d) A store or stores selling or distributing any commodity under a public-utility franchise from the State of Georgia or any municipality or other political subdivision thereof and selling only such goods, wares and merchandise as may be used with the commodity distributed under such franchise."
The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company filed suit in the superior court against the city, the recorder, the marshal, and the chief of police of the city, alleging that the plaintiff was engaged in the business of selling at retail groceries, food stuffs, and miscellaneous related articles in the City of Columbus; that such business was legitimate and useful; that plaintiff operates five such retail stores in the City of Columbus; that it has paid all taxes required by the city, except the tax levied by the amendment of the general tax ordinance adopted January 30, 1939; that it has paid the annual occupation tax for each of its five stores levied by the general tax ordinance of the city for the year 1939, adopted December 12, 1938. The original ordinance and the amendment were attached to and made a part of the petition. It was alleged that the additional tax ordinance or amendment, by the provision that stores operated in a chain of more than 400 stores shall pay an additional license or occupation tax of $1,200 for each store operated in the city, requires the plaintiff, which operates stores throughout the United States and elsewhere, numbering more than 400, to pay $1,200 additional business tax upon each of its five stores operated in Columbus, aggregating an additional occupation tax of $6,000. The petition attacked the validity of the ordinance upon eight grounds, in substance as follows: (1) The separate classification of chain stores is unreasonable, arbitrary, and discriminatory, and denies to petitioner the equal protection of the laws. Const., art. 1, sec. 1, par. 2 (Code, § 2-102). (2) The subclassifications of chain stores, based on the number of units, are unreasonable and arbitrary, and deny to plaintiff the equal protection of the laws. (3) The ordinance violates the uniformity of *462 taxation requirements of the State constitution, art. 7, sec. 2, par. 1 (Code, § 2-5001). (4) The exemption of certain types of chain stores is unreasonable and arbitrary, and denies to the plaintiff the equal protection of the law, and violates the uniformity of taxation provision of the State constitution. (5) Having already levied and collected for 1939 a license tax on chain grocery stores, the attempt by the city to levy the additional tax on the business of operating a store as a part of a chain constitutes a tax upon the mere incident of the business of operating chain grocery stores, for which the plaintiff has already paid a business tax. (6) The ordinance levying the additional tax is unreasonable, and therefore void. (7) The city is without authority to levy a prohibitory tax upon a lawful business which has been licensed by the State. (8) The ordinance arbitrarily places one group of competitors at a disadvantage with respect to another, for the benefit of the latter, and without regard to the interest of the public, and is in restraint of trade and unconstitutional. For the reasons stated, the plaintiff has refused to pay the tax on its five stores in Columbus, and because of its failure the city, acting through its police department, on April 3, 1939, caused the arrest of John O. Windham, the manager of plaintiff's business in Columbus, on a charge of doing business without paying the tax, which charge is now pending in the recorder's court of the city; that the city through its clerk is threatening to prefer other charges against Windham for separate transactions in the conduct of the plaintiff's business so long as the tax remains unpaid; that the city through its clerk is threatening to bring similar prosecutions against each of the five managers of plaintiff's five stores in Columbus and against all the clerks and other employees in said stores, unless the tax is paid; that such prosecutions will completely paralyze plaintiff's operations, and will quickly bring about a destruction of plaintiff's business; and that plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law, and will suffer irreparable damages unless equity restrains such acts and threats of the defendants.
The City of Columbus filed answer admitting the material allegations of the petition, except the allegations attacking the validity of the tax ordinance, which are denied. On interlocutory hearing the parties offered evidence on the issue of whether or not there are inherent advantages in chain-store operations increasing as the *463 units in the chain are increased. Evidence which was not denied showed the volume of business and the gross and net profits realized for the years 1937 and 1938 from the operation of the plaintiff's five stores in Columbus, and the effect thereon of the occupation tax of $1,200, complained of in the suit, which was as follows:
Store Gross Profit Percent Net Profit Percent No. 1937 1938 1937 1938 1937 1938 1937 1938
1 $ 8,790 $10,863 13.6 11 $ 664 $ 870 Def. Def.
2 8,830 8,475 13.5 14.2 1,251 909 95.9 Def.
3 10,158 11,068 11.8 10.9 1,564 2,002 76.7 59.9
4 20,442 17,192 5.9 7 2,961 791 40.5 Def.
5 Not open 47,320 .... 2.5 .... 10,232 .... 3.9
It was undisputed that the plaintiff's operating policies were efficient, economical, and without loss or waste. The plaintiff had complied with the State law by paying $200 to the State for each of its five stores, and had received from the State a license authorizing the operation of each of said stores for the calendar year 1939. On January 30, 1939, the plaintiff paid to the City of Columbus the business-license tax required of it by the city ordinance for the year 1939, adopted December 12, 1938. A number of dealers in farm products testified that the plaintiff's stores furnished a desirable market for farm products. Other witnesses testified that the plaintiff's prices to the consumer were beneficial to labor and industry, and had the effect of reducing the cost of living. There was evidence showing the operation of all chain stores in the City of Columbus, and the effect on such operation of the tax complained of.
The defendant introduced a number of independent merchants who gave testimony as to the general advantages inherent in chain store operation, and showing that in 1923 there were 360 retail grocery stores in Columbus, and in 1937 this number had decreased to 292, while the population of the city had increased approximately 33-1/3 per cent. during the same period; that the number of chain stores during this period had increased from 13 to 32, while the number of wholesale grocery establishments had decreased from eighteen to eight; that the average number of persons employed by the independent grocery stores is four, by the wholesale grocery stores fifteen, and by the chain grocery stores five; and that as a result of the influx of the chain-store organizations there *464 are in the City of Columbus approximately 200 unoccupied store buildings. The plaintiff showed that it operates more than fifteen thousand stores throughout the United States, but that it is cut up into six divisions, each of which has its directors and operates individually, with the exception of policy-making supervision by the head office in New York; that these divisions are further cut up into approximately 45 warehouse districts, each warehouse district making all purchases for the stores in that district, because to purchase on a national scale would be highly inefficient, unwieldy and entirely impractical; that each warehouse buyer has full authority to determine what commodities shall be purchased and the amount to be purchased at any given time; that under the provisions of the Robinson-Patman act of 1936 large buyers are prevented from securing unwarranted advantages in prices over small buyers, that act permitting the seller to reduce the price to the buyer only in the exact amount which the seller saves in the cost of selling in large quantities; and that a purchasing unit of 205 stores, which is the number of stores of plaintiff in the warehouse district embracing Columbus, has no advantage in buying over a unit of fifty stores, and little, if any, over a unit of ten stores. The principal item of cost in which there may be a saving is transportation, and the maximum saving in this respect is through purchasing in carload lots. The undisputed evidence showed that the allegations of the petition with respect to prosecutions and threatened prosecutions of plaintiff's employees by the city and its damaging effect on plaintiff's business were true.
The judge denied an injunction, and the plaintiff excepted.
1. While the allegations of the petition that the prosecutions and threatened prosecutions of the plaintiff's employees would injure its business were admitted, the defendant denied that such injury would cause irreparable damage, and denied the right of the plaintiff to refuse to pay the tax complained of. Equity will not enjoin a criminal prosecution solely to prevent such a prosecution, but it will in any proper case, by injunction or *465
otherwise, prevent injury or destruction of property. Carey v.Atlanta,
2. The attacks upon the ordinance may be grouped in two general classes, to wit: (1) that the ordinance is unreasonable; and (2) that the ordinance is unconstitutional. Since it is the established rule of this court never to decide constitutional questions if the decision of the case presented can be made upon other grounds (Carter v. Dominey,
Further evidence of the unreasonableness of the amount of the tax imposed by this ordinance is disclosed by the record. Before the enactment of this ordinance the city had levied a tax of approximately $200 upon each of plaintiff's stores. Therefore, if the present ordinance is allowed to stand, each of the stores of plaintiff will be required to pay city license taxes of $1,400 in addition to the State tax of $200. The plaintiff put in evidence the city tax ordinance for 1939, showing the amount of business tax levied by the city for that year upon all types of business conducted in Columbus. This evidence was admissible on the issue of reasonableness of the tax sought to be imposed upon plaintiff.Mayor c. of Savannah v. Cooper, supra. It shows that a business tax of $1,000 upon an electric light or power company is the highest business tax imposed upon any business, except units of chain stores. It also shows that individual grocery stores are required to pay a total business tax, graduated on the number of employees, as follows: one employee, $10; two employees, $25; over two and not over four employee, $75; over four and not over six, $100; over six and not over eight, $150; over eight and not over ten, $200; over ten, $300; combined wholesale and retail hardware stores, $250; retail hardware stores, $100; wholesale grocery stores with sales of more than one million dollars, $400; cotton mills with over 25,000 spindles, $500. Thus the ordinance shows that in the judgment of the city commission grocery stores which are similar to plaintiff's business should not be required to pay a business tax of more than $300; and that no other business, including wholesale and retail hardware, wholesale grocery, cotton mills and power companies, should be required to pay an occupation tax as large as is imposed upon the plaintiff by the ordinance. This comparison illustrates the exorbitance and unreasonableness of the tax complained of. Our conclusion is that the plaintiff, by proof of the amount of business done by all of its stores during the years 1937 and 1938, as well as the evidence showing the business done by other grocery stores in the City of Columbus, has abundantly met *473 the requirement of law that it carry the burden of proving the prevailing business conditions in the city and of proving the ordinance to be unreasonable. This court must therefore declare the ordinance to be unreasonable and void.
Having held that the ordinance is void for the above reasons, no ruling will be made upon the constitutional questions presented; nor is any ruling made as to the authority of the city to take into consideration territory outside its jurisdiction upon which to base a classification for taxation. City ofDouglas v. South Georgia Grocery Co.,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.