128 Ky. 812 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellants, T. M. Morgan, Nick Oates, and Martin J. Morgan, partners composing a firm doing business as Morgan, Oates & Co., complain that they were illegally convicted and fined $51 in the court below under an indictment charging them with the offense of maintaining a sewing machine agency and employing an agent to sell sewing machines in Hopkins county without having a license so to do.
Section 12, subd. 1, art. 12, e. 22, p. 186, Acts 1906, entitled “An act relating to revenue and taxation,” provides: “Any person who shall engage in any business or sell or offer to sell, any article on which a license is required, before procuring the license and paying the tax thereon, as required by law, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction, be fined not less than fifty nor more than one thous- and dollars for each offense, unless otherwise spec hilly provided.” Section 1, subd. 4, art. 12, Acts 1906, provides: “Before engaging in any occupation or selling
The evidence introduced by the Commonwealth proved, beyond doubt, that appellants, composing the partnership of Morgan, Oates & Co., have a store or wareroom at Morton’s Cap, and another at White Plains, Hopkins county, in each of which they kept for sale pianos, organs, and sewing machines, and that within a year before the finding of the indictment the firm of Morgan, Oates & Co., employed Allen Thompson to act as salesman, and consequently the firm’s agent, under which employment he was required to haul from the store and warerooms referred to sewing machines, and sell them in Hopkins county. For this work appellants furnished Thompson a sewing machine wagon, containing, in large letters, the name of the firm, and paid him a commission upon all sewing machines sold or exchanged by him. Thompson testified to.having made numerous sales and exchanges of such machines in Hopkins county, and other witnesses that they had bought of Thompson sewing machines, or had seen him sell, or trade them to others. . Thompson’s sales were all made at the homes of the. purchasers, where he invariably carried the sewing machines for inspection, and oftentimes
It was contended by appellants on the motion for a new trial in the court below, and they now insist, that they were not the agents or their places of business agencies for the sale of sewing machines, for which reason it is claimed they should have been adjudged not guilty as charged. We do not regard this contention tenable. The offense charged in the indictment was, not that appellant’s became agents or established an agency for the sale of sewing machines by receiving from the manufacturer or dealer such machines to sell for it or him, or that they made such sales as agent for the manufacturer or dealer,' but that they had and maintained a sewing machine agency by employing agents, or an agent, to sell such machines in Hopkins county as Thompson was employed to sell and did sell. If employing an agent to drive about over the county from house to house to sell sewing machines, furnishing him with a vehicle for that purpose, requiring him to carry such machines with him for immediate delivery when sold, and, upon
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.