203 P. 398 | Cal. | 1921
Lead Opinion
The petitioner herein applied for and was granted a writ ofhabeas corpus by which he sought to have determined the legality of his arrest and detention upon a complaint filed in the police court of the city and county of San Francisco charging him with having engaged in the business of buying, selling, and exchanging second-hand books in said city and county of San Francisco without having obtained a municipal license so to do, and in violation of the provisions of section 63 of Ordinance No. 5132 of said city and county, requiring such license, and of his conviction and imprisonment under said charge.
Upon the hearing of said application it was stipulated that the complaint upon which the petitioner was arrested and convicted sufficiently charged the commission of the act alleged therein as constituting said offense, thus leaving as the only *642 matters for our determination the construction of the provisions of the charter of said municipality under the terms of which the ordinance under which the petitioner was convicted was drawn, and of the said ordinance for the alleged violation of which such conviction was had.
In article II, chapter 2, section 15, of the charter of San Francisco, it is provided that the board of supervisors have power:
"15. To impose license taxes and to provide for the collection thereof; but no license taxes shall be imposed upon any person who, at any fixed place of business in the City and County, sells or manufactures goods, wares or merchandise, except such as require permits from the Board of Police Commissioners as provided in this Charter."
In article VIII, chapter 3, section 9, of said charter, it is provided that the board of police commissioners shall have power:
"9. To grant or refuse to grant permits to any person engaged or desiring to engage in business as pawnbroker, peddler, junkshop keeper, dealer in second-hand merchandise, . . . and such other characters of business or callings as may hereafter be required by ordinance enacted by the Board of Supervisors to obtain permits from this Board."
In article VIII, chapter 4, section 7, of said charter, it is provided that:
"7. The Chief of Police shall possess powers of general police inspection, supervision and control over all pawnbrokers, peddlers, junk-shop keepers, dealers in second-hand merchandise, auctioneers and intelligence office keepers. All persons engaged in said callings must first procure permits from the Commissioners."
On July 1, 1920, the board of supervisors of said municipality adopted an ordinance entitled, "License Ordinance No. 5132, New Series," imposing license taxes on certain businesses, callings, trades, or employments within the city and county of San Francisco.
It was under the foregoing ordinance, and for the alleged violation thereof, that this petitioner was arrested, convicted, and confined. It is his contention that as a person engaged in the business of dealing in second-hand books he does not come within the terms of said ordinance, and, hence, could not legally be made the subject of conviction thereunder. He makes the further contention that the business of a dealer in second-hand books is not such a business as requires regulation under the police power of the municipality, or the application for an issuance of permits as a condition precedent to the right to conduct such business; and, finally, the petitioner contends that the grant of power to the police commission to issue or deny permits to conduct such business is illegal as conferring arbitrary powers upon said board.
[1] The appellant's first above contention involves an inquiry as to the meaning of the words "goods, wares and merchandise" as employed in the several sections of the charter of San Francisco above quoted, and as to the scope and meaning of the same term as found in the ordinance under the provisions of which the petitioner was convicted and confined. The appellant's first contention is that the words "goods, wares and merchandise" as used in the sections of the charter and of the ordinance above set forth are not to be construed either singly or collectively as including books. This contention cannot be sustained. The word "goods" is defined in Webster's New International Dictionary as "movables; household furniture; personal or movable estate; wares; merchandise; commodities bought and sold by merchants and traders." The earliest definition of the word "goods" is to be found in Bailery's Large Dictionary issued in 1732, which defines it as "merchandise." Samuel Johnson, the next English lexicographer, defined "goods" as "movables in a house; wares; freight; merchandise." The term "wares" is also defined in the dictionaries as a synonym of "merchandise," while the term "merchandise" is defined by Webster and the other lexicographers as "the objects of commerce; whatever is usually bought and sold in trade, or market, or by merchants; wares, goods, commodities." In the case of Blackwood v. Cushing *644 Packing Co.,
It is needless to pursue the subject further than to say that if the construction to be placed upon the phrase "goods, wares and merchandise," as contended by the petitioner, were to be adopted, dealers in books would be generally exempted from taxation under the common form of assessment of "goods," or of "goods, wares and merchandise" contained in their stores.
[2] Appellant's next contention is that the business of dealing in second-hand books is not such a business as requires or should be subjected to regulation under the police powers of the municipality, and hence that the requirement that such persons shall procure permits from the board of police commissioners before engaging in such business is an unwarranted and illegal regulation. This contention is also, in our opinion, without merit. Second-hand goods, wares, and merchandise have always been deemed the proper subjects of police regulation by municipalities (see "Constitutional Law," 8 Cyc. 875, and cases cited); and the grant by the constitution in article XI, section 11 thereof, to municipalities "to make and enforce all such local, police, sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws," is very broad and liberal. The business of buying and selling second-hand books cannot be differentiated from the business of buying and selling other forms of second-hand personal property which, being movable, valuable, and passing easily from hand to hand, are often made the subject of purloining and petit larceny and of disposal in second-hand places of business. Such places of business have, therefore, been made the proper subjects of police inspection and regulation. It is a matter of common knowledge that public libraries all over the country are continually subjected to the depletion of their shelves through loss of books which find their destination in second-hand stores, and that precautions against such loss may be observed in the equipment and administration of every well-appointed public library in the land. It cannot be said, therefore, that the requirement in section 7 of the charter, above quoted, that "the chief of police shall possess powers of general inspection, supervision and control over all . . . dealers in second-hand merchandise" *646 and that "all persons engaged in said callings must first procure permits from the commission," is an unreasonable form of regulation. This subject might be pursued into the domain of health regulation, since it may be said to be also a matter of common knowledge that books, magazines, and like publications which pass through many hands, and perchance through many households, have frequently been found the prolific carriers of infectious diseases. For both of the foregoing reasons we hold that the subjection of dealers in second-hand books to police regulation to the extent of requiring such persons to procure permits as a prerequisite to engaging in the business of selling such second-hand merchandise is a proper and reasonable regulation.
[3] The petitioner's next contention is that the investment of the board of police commissioners with the general and unqualified power to grant or refuse permits to dealers in second-hand merchandise, as contained in the provisions of the charter above quoted, is unconstitutional as an attempt to confer arbitrary power upon that body to grant or refuse permits at their whim or pleasure. The best answer to that contention is to be found in Dillon on Municipal Corporations (fifth edition), page 937, wherein the learned author says: "Many cases are to be found sustaining ordinances prohibiting acts, or even the following of trades or occupations, without procuring permits which may be issued at the discretion of the council, mayor, or some other city officer or department, and the fact that the dispensing power was apparently conferred without restraint or qualification has been regarded as arising merely from the difficulty of defining in advance upon what conditions the permits shall be given or the dispensing power exercised. It has been said that it is not to be assumed that the council or officer, in exercising the dispensing power, will act arbitrarily, or otherwise than in the exercise of a sound discretion."
The appellant, however, insists that this court has decided in the case of In re Dart,
The appellant's final contention, that second-hand book dealers ought not now to be required to obtain permits and pay licenses because they have not heretofore been required to do so during the years that have passed since the charter of San Francisco went into effect, is not worthy of serious consideration.
Writ dismissed and petitioner remanded.
Richards, J., pro tem., Shaw, C. J., Lennon, J., Waste, J., Shurtleff, J., and Sloane, J., concurred. *648
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment. The sole question in this case is the validity of the ordinance imposing a license tax upon the petitioner's business. It is conceded that under the general power of taxation this might be done. It is contended, however, that, under the provisions of the charter of San Francisco, that power is expressly taken away from the board of supervisors. This question turns upon the provisions of the charter concerning a permit. If the business is one requiring a permit it is taxable; if not, it cannot be taxed. As shown in the main opinion, the business in question is one for which, under the provisions of the charter, a permit may be required. It follows that the business is properly subject to a license tax. Whether or not the provisions of the charter or ordinances passed in pursuance thereof requiring a permit are valid as an exercise of the regulatory power over such business vested by the constitution and charter in the city government is not involved in this case. The use of the term "permit" in the charter is of no significance in the case at bar except in so far as it describes the character of business he is conducting. What is said in the main opinion concerning the propriety of requiring a permit and vesting the power to grant or withhold the same in the sound discretion of some municipal officer or body is immaterial. It is for that reason that I do not concur in the main opinion. The rules with reference to the authority of municipalities to grant or withhold permits are thoroughly established in this state and need not be discussed. I do not think that under these rules the arbitrary power to grant or withhold permits for the conduct of the business of a second-hand bookstore can exist. As the point is not involved in the case, and the law is well settled, I deem it unnecessary to say more upon this subject, and have only said this much in order to indicate my reason for not fully concurring in the main opinion. *649