95 F. 648 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1899
Ordinance No. 51 of. the town of Sausalito, Cal., adopted October 14, 1895, provides, among other things, as follows:
*649 “Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person to engage in or carry on any' business, trade, profession or calling, for the transaction or carrying on of which a license is required, without first taking out or procuring the license required for such business, trade, profession or calling. * * *
“Sec. 11. The rates of license shall be according to the following schedule: * * * (10) From each person or firm not maintaining a place of business nor beeping a business office in the town, engaged In the hawking, peddling,, itinerant vending or soliciting the sale or purchase of: (A) Books or maps, one (¡ollar per month or fraction thereof. (B) Pictures, one dollar per month or fraction thereof.”
The petitioner in May of this year was engaged in taking orders in the town of Sausalito for the enlargement of portraits by the Chicago Portrait Company, a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Illinois, and having its principal place of business and factory in the city of Chicago, in said state. Said corporation had no warehouse, storehouse, or place of business in the state of California; and its business was carried on by means of traveling agents or solicitors, who went from state to state, county to county, and town to town, soliciting orders for the enlargement of portraits. The orders were then by such agents and solicitors forwarded to the company at its place of business in the city of Chicago, and there the portraits were enlarged, and after enlargement returned, directed to said company at the town or place where said orders were taken, and there called for by an agent of the said company, and delivered to the persons who had ordered the same. The petitioner was arrested, tried, and convicted in the'recorder’s court of the town of Sausalito for transacting the business of soliciting orders for said company without first having obtained a license so to do as required by said ordinance; and thereafter he was sentenced by the said recorder’s court: to pay a fine of $30, or serve a period of 20 days in the county jail. The petitioner alleges that he is in the custody of the marshal of the town of Sausalito under such sentence,, and he seeks his discharge because bis imprisonment, detention, confinement, and restraint are illegal, and in violation of the provisions of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United Stales; also, of section 8 of article 1 of the constitution of the United Slates, relating to interstate commerce.
When a law of a state imposes a tax under such circumstances and with such effect as to constitute it a regulation of interstate commerce, it is void on that account. Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419; Telegraph Co. v. Texas, 105 U. S. 460; Moran v. New Orleans, 112 U. S. 69, 78, 5 Sup. Ct. 88. An ordinance of a municipal corporation requiring persons or firms soliciting orders on behalf of manufacturers of goods to take out a license and pay a tax is an exercise, not of the police power, but of the taxing power; and, when enforced against a person ox* firm soliciting orders for a manufacturer of goods in another state, it imposes a tax upon, and is a regulation of, interstate commerce, in violation of the provisions of the constitution of the United States. In Bobbins v. Taxing Dist, 120 U. S. 489, 7 Sup. Ct. 592, a statute of the slate of Tennessee declared that all dirummers, and all persons not having a regular licensed house of business in the taxing district, offering for sale or selling goods,
In Brennan v. City of Titusville, 153 U. S. 289, 11 Sup. Ct. 829, an order of the city of Titusville provided:
“That all persons canvassing or soliciting within said city orders for goods, hooks, paintings, wares or merchandise of any kind, or persons delivering such articles under orders so obtained or solicited, shall he required to procure from the mayor a license to transact said business, and shall pay to the said treasurer therefor the following sums, according to the time for which said license shall be granted,” etc.
The facts of the case were similar to the present case. One Shep-hard was a manufacturer of picture frames, and maker of portraits, residing in Chicago, in the state of Illinois, of which state he was a citizen, and in which city he had his manufactory and place óf business. The defendant Brennan was an agent of ¡Shephard, employed by him to travel and solicit orders for said pictures and frames. Up
“Even if it be that we are concluded by the opinion of the supreme court of the state that this ordinance was enacted in the exercise of the police power, we are still confronted with (he difficult question as to how far an act held to be a police regulation, but which in fact: affects interstate commerce, can be sustained. It; is undoubtedly true that there are many police regulations which do affect interstate commerce, but which have been, and will be, sustained as clearly within the power of the state; lmt we think it mnst he considered, in view of a long lino of decisions, that it is settled that nothing which is a direct burden upon interstate commerce can be imposed by the state without the assent ol' congress, and that the silence of congress in respect to any matter of interstate commerce is equivalent to a declaration on its part that it should be absolutely free.”
This decision so clearly establishes the law for the case at bar that further reference to authorities appears to be unnecessary. The following cases in the federal courts may, however, be referred to, as presenting different phases of the question: In re Kimmel, 41 Fed. 775; In re White, 43 Fed. 913; In re Spain, 47 Fed. 208; In re Houston, 47 Fed. 539; In re Nichols, 48 Fed. 164; In re Tyerman, 48 Fed. 167; In re Sanders, 52 Fed. 802; In re Rozelle, 57 Fed. 155; In re Mitchell, 62 Fed. 576; Ex parte Hough, 69 Fed. 330. The following cases in the state courts indicate the scope of the doctrine as admitted in the several states: Stratford v. City Council, 110 Ala, 619, 20 South. 127; Range Co. v. Johnson, 84 Ga. 754, 11 S. E. 233; City of Huntington v. Mahan, 142 Ind. 695, 42 N. E. 463; City of Ft. Scott v. Pelton, 39 Kan. 764, 18 Pac. 954; McClellan v. Pettigrew, 44 La. Ann. 356, 10 South. 853; Overton v. City of Vicksburg, 70 Miss. 558, 13 South. 226; Ex parte Rosenblatt, 19 Nev. 439, 14 Pac. 298; State v. Scott, 98 Tenn. 254, 39 S. W. 1; City of Bloomington v. Bourland, 137 Ill. 534, 27 N. E. 692.
It follows that the business of the petitioner is within the protection of the provision of the constitution of the United States re