109 Ga. 112 | Ga. | 1899
The plaintiffs in error, Hartfield and Salter, were separately convicted, in the recorder’s court of the City of Columbus, of the offense of “doing business without license.” Each sued out a certiorari, which was overruled, and he excepted. In this court the two cases were argued together, and may be disposed of in the same manner. The facts are substantially as follows: J. R. Christian and William A. Adams were indigent Confederate soldiers, and each of them had received from the ordinary of Muscogee county a certificate authorizing him to conduct business without any license for this privilege. Christian was carrying on within the City of Columbus a draying business, in tbe conduct of which he employed Hartfield as a driver. The latter had no interest in the business or. in the propertj'- used in carrying on the same, but was simply working for wages as the servant of Christian. Adams was the owner of a wood-yard and carried on the business of retailing wood in the city. Salter was- a mere employee of Adams, having no interest in the business but working for wages, which he earned by driving a wagon belonging to Adams and delivering wood to the customers of his employer. On some occasions, Salter carried wood about the city for sale in small quantities, found purchasers for the same, and collected the price thereof, his so doing being an incidental feature of the business of Adams. The two cases, in the view we take of the law, stand upon substantially the same footing. Section 1642 of the Political Code, as amended by the act of December 9, 3897 (Acts of 1897, pp. 24-5), authorizes any indigent or disabled Confederate soldier residing in this State to, “ peddle or conduct business in any town, city, county or counties thereof, without paying license for the privilege of so doing, . . pro
The position of counsel for the city was, that under the law a Confederate soldier could not carry on more than one kind of business by virtue of his certificate from the ordinary; and further, that even if a Confederate soldier engaged in only one particular business having subordinate branches which were the subjects of municipal taxation, he was not exempt from paying the license imposed by the tax ordinance of the city upon each of such branches. In this connection it was urged that as the city levied an occupation tax of ten dollars on a dealer in wood, and also a specific license tax on each wagon or dray used by such dealer in connection with his business, a Confederate soldier engaged in such business, while exempt from paying the ten dollars as an occupation tax, would be liable for the specific tax levied on each wagon or dray used by him. The ease of Macon Sash Company v. Macon, 96 Ga. 23, was cited in support of the contention that a general license to conduct a given business does not exempt a person carrying on the same from paying an additional license tax on each of the subordinate branches thereof. We do not think, however, the decision in that case is at all applicable to those now under consideration. The fundamental mistake of counsel for the city lies in the proposition advanced by him, that the certificate of the ordinary limits the holder of the same to the transaction without license of one particular kind of business only. We are firmly of the opinion that under the law the holder of such a certificate is authorized to engage in business generally, and therefore to carry on as many different lines of business as he may be able with his own means to conduct in his own name and on his own account. Of course, he could not legally transfer his privilege, directly or indirectly, to another. We ac
It follows from the above, that the conviction of the plaintiffs in error was unlawful, and that the superior court erred in holding to the contrary.
Judgment in each case reversed.