131 Ga. 670 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Several of the contentions raised by the present proceeding are controlled by previous decisions of this court. The charter of the City of Savannah confers ample authority to impose a business or occupation tax. Code of 1882, §4847; Savannah etc. Ry. v. Mayor
It is said that the State has licensed the business of this agent, and that the authorities of the City of Savannah have no power to require an additional license to be taken out by him. The line of demarcation between a business or occupation tax and a license
The framers of municipal ordinances, however, do not always keep in view the definitions of law dictionaries, or even the distinctions drawn by courts. Ordinances often include licenses, taxes, “license taxes,” occupation and business taxes, and taxes on property, in such juxtaposition and combination that it is by no means easy to say whether a given provision imposes a license charge or a tax. The exercise of the police power and of the power to raise revenue by taxation are frequently not kept within such distinct boundaries as to be readily distinguishable. Thus in Home Ins. Co. v. City Council of Augusta, 50 Ga. 530, a municipal ordinance imposed an “annual license tax” on insurance companies. This was upheld as being a tax and not a license. The law involved in Kehrer v. Stewart, supra, on the subject of packing-house agents, was not a municipal ordinance, but an act of the legislature. In describing what was the nature of such act Chief Justice Simmons said: “The statutory enactment under discussion imposed a specific tax ‘upon all agents of packing-houses doing business in this
A penalty was also provided for non-compliance with that portion of the ordinance. Still later occurred this provision: “Every person, company, or corporation required by this 'section to pay a specific or business tax shall take out a license or receipt, which shall state the business or occupation'in which such person, company, or corporation is authorized to engage, and which shall be exhibited to the city marshal or his deputy, at any time upon de
Municipal ordinances must be reasonable. The limitations of the power of a city council in this regard are not to be measured by the more extensive powers of the State legislature. A city tax on an occupation must be reasonable with reference to such vocation. This does not mean that it must be. adjusted to_the amount of business of each individual, or limited exclusively by the receipts of some particular individual; but, considering that business within the municipality as a whole, the tax must be reasonable and not arbitrarily discriminatory. To illustrate, a tax on retail clothing merchants would not necessarily be held void at the instance of one merchant by showing that he did a very small business, and that the tax fell heavily upon him. If the individual business were small enough, it might be difficult to pay any tax. But this would not suffice to upset an ordinance imposing a reasonable and fairly adjusted tax upon such an occupation. With reférence to the tax under consideration it may be noticed that it is not imposed upon the packing-house, but upon the business of the agent. He was working on a salary of $1,800 per annum, which seemed to be the entire compensation derived by him from the business which he was conducting. The evidence does not disclose that there were other packing-house agents doing a similar business, or that the tax imposed was reasonable, taking in view such business within the City of Savannah. There is no evidence that.the employer will pay the tax, or that it will not fall on the agent. On the contrary,
In view of the entire evidence, we can not say that the judge erred in granting the interlocutory injunction. Morton v. Mayor and Council of Macon, 111 Ga. 162 (36 S. E. 627, 50 L. R. A. 485).
Judgment affirmed.