172 S.W.2d 207 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1943
Affirming.
These three appeals have been heard together and all of them will be disposed of in this opinion. Each appellant, Hertz Drivurself Stations, Dixie Driv-It-Yourself System, and the U-Drive-It Company of Ohio, as plaintiff below, brought a suit to enjoin the City of Louisville from collecting from it an annual license operating tax laid by city ordinance on trucks used on its streets. The three actions were heard together by the chancellor who refused the injunction, upheld the ordinance, dismissed the petitions and plaintiffs appeal from his judgments.
The sole business of each plaintiff is leasing trucks owned by it to customers on a "drive-it-yourself" basis. The trucks thus rented are operated, controlled and driven by the customers on the streets of Louisville. Plaintiffs have no hand in the driving or operation of the trucks and their sole business is owning and leasing the trucks for hire to customers in need of them while transacting business in Louisville. Under ordinance No. 187 enacted by the city council in 1940 and called a Business Privilege License Ordinance, a revenue raising license tax was laid against the business of each plaintiff. In 1935 the city council passed ordinance No. 201, providing a license fee shall be paid annually "by every owner or operator of a motor truck" before operating same upon the streets of Louisville, which license fees range from $6 for a truck of not exceeding one ton capacity, to $24 for trucks of not more than three tons capacity.
Plaintiffs have paid the business license, or occupational, tax provided in ordinance No. 187, but each of *570 them refused to pay the annual operating tax laid under ordinance No. 201 and have sought to enjoin its collection on the theory that their sole business is leasing their trucks under the "drive-it-yourself" plan for which they pay an occupational tax; that for the city to lay another tax against them for operating their trucks on the streets is laying a tax upon an integral or indispensable part of their business upon which they are already paying an occupational tax and amounts to double taxation, which is against the public policy of the State. It is further argued by plaintiffs that they do not operate their trucks on the streets but that is done by the lessees, hence if the tax is collectible, it must be enforced against the lessees of the trucks and not the owners.
Defendants contend that the tax laid under ordinance No. 187 is a revenue measure in the form of an occupational or business license tax, while that levied under ordinance No. 201 is a regulatory measure passed under authority of sec. 2739g-92, KS (now KRS
Plaintiffs put their chief reliance in City of Newport v. Fitzer,
This Fitzer case is easily differentiated from those at bar, since there the second tax of $3 for the privilege of using the streets was not enacted as a regulatory measure but appears to have been a revenue tax just as was the first license fee of $20; while in the cases at bar the opposed tax was enacted under the police power to regulate traffic on the streets of the city. *571
The same distinction can be drawn between the instant cases and Cumberland Tel. Telg. Co. v. Hopkins and Louisville N. R. Co. v. Hopkins,
In Kroger Grocery Baking Co. v. City of Lancaster,
"For instance, a tax and a license fee which is merely for regulation and not for revenue do not evidence double taxation."
Plaintiffs cite State v. Dabney,
The ordinance we have under consideration provides the license fees shall be paid annually "by every owner or operator of a motor truck" before operating same on the streets of Louisville. It is admitted plaintiffs owned these trucks, and it is patent that in the businesses conducted by them it would be highly impracticable, if not altogether impossible, to collect license fees from the numerous persons who might operate a given truck in the course of a year. Giving ordinance No. 201 the reasonable interpretation it is entitled to in order to carry out the intention of the legislative body of the city, we are constrained to hold it laid this tax upon plaintiffs as owners of the trucks and not upon persons who operated them.
The judgments are affirmed.