31 Fla. 413 | Fla. | 1893
A motion to advance this cause for decision was made on the 27th day of the present month by the Attorney-General, and was granted.
' The ninth section of the general revenue law, approved June 10th, 1891, Chapter 4010, enacts that no person shall engage in or manage the business, profession or occupation mentioned therein unless a State license shall have been procured from the tax collector, which license shall be issued to each person on receipt of the amount thereinafter provided, and the fee of the county judge for the license ; and directs how the license shall be signed and sealed, and authorizes incorporated cities and towns to impose further taxes of the same kind, not exceeding fifty per cent, of the State license tax. Among the occupations mentioned is that of a dealer in dressed meats, the 17th paragraph of the section being as follows : All dealers in dressed meats doing a business of twenty-five thousand dollars or more per annum shall pay a license of five hundred dollars. The provisions of the tenth section of- the act are to the effect: 1st, that any person or persons, firm or association that shall carry on or conduct any business or profession for which a license is required, without first obtaining such license, shall, except in such cases as are otherwise provided for in the act, be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be punished by a
It is apparent that the purpose of the petitioners, as it is disclosed by their petition, was to contest the payment of the particular tax under consideration, on the ground that they were not dealers in meats; but the decision of the Circuit Judge is not based on this ground; on the contrary, it holds the tax imposed on the business in question to be illegal for the reason that the act gives no opportunity to a dealer for a hearing as to the value ol Jbis business, and that hence there is a violation pi the fundamental principle that no one shall be deprived of his property without due process of law. The brief of appellees’ counsel presents also the point that they are not dealers in dressed meats; still we care to devote no more attention to this point than to say that-the following authorities may be of service in'3 establishing who are, or are not, dealers, as that word is used in the seventeenth paragraph
Prom these general observations we turn to a consideration of the nature of the tax provided for by the seventeenth paragraph of the ninth section. It is an occupational tax upon dealers in dressed meats, but it is the clear purpose of the Legislature that it shall be
Unlike the cases of insurance companies and .auctioneers, there is no specific time prescribed for the payment of the tax by dealers in dressed meats ; this, however, has no material weight against our conclusions. The statute went into operation on the fourth day of August, 1891, the Legislature having adjourned on the fifth day of the preceding June. If the petitioners were engaged in the business when the act be
No tax was imposed by the preceding revenue act on dealers of this character. This being so, and the present act having taken effect on the fourth day of August, 1891, only about three months had elapsed when the seizure of the petitioner’s property was made. If we should assume that the tax might become due before the end of the business year by the fact of sales to the amount of twenty-five thousand dollars having been made before its expiration, the record before us does not show that such was the case, and in the absence of such showing the action of the tax collector must be regarded as premature. This is not the purpose or effect of the second and fourth statements of the answer, which are: 2d. That Armour & ■Co. on the day and date, and before the seizure was made, were dealers in dressed meats in Duval county ■doing a business of twenty-five thousand dollars per annum, and were then and there liable as such to pay a license to the State of Florida of five hundred .dollars, and of two hundred and fifty dollars for the
As indicated above, the tax is' not a license tax within that meaning of the statute which requires the
The proceeding in this case was instituted* *under the fourth section of'the act of January 4th, 1848, Section 1542, Revised Statutes, and both parties have tacitly assented to the nse of the remedy for the purposes of this case; still we feel that it is proper to say that there is doubt that occupational and license taxes are “assessments” within its meaning and scope, audit will not be understood that we are concluded on this point by this cause. Carr vs. Thomas, 18 Fla., 736, 743.
' The judgment should be affirmed for the reasons given above. It will be so ordered.