Oil City v. Oil City Trust Co.

151 Pa. 454 | Pa. | 1892

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Mitchell,

The learned judge rightly held that the test of the charge in controversy was whether it was a license fee under the po*457lice power, or a tax for revenue. On its face it purports to be a license fee on the occupation of banking, and though we may suppose it was not imposed without an eye to the increase of revenue, yet its good faith and the reasonableness of its amount are not questioned here, and the presumption therefore is that it is what it professes to be: Johnson v. Philadelphia, 60 Pa. 445.

The appellant argues that banks are not specially subjects of the police power, and quoting Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sect. 141 (edition of 1890) that “ laws and ordinances relating to the comfort, health, convenience, good order and general welfare of the inhabitants are comprehensively called police laws or regulations,” asks wherein does the regulation or licensing of the business of banking relate to the comfort, health or good order of the community? We are not required to answer this question further than to say that it is a matter for legislative determination. Certain occupations, such as tavern keeping, theatrical and kindred shows, public conveyances, barges, etc., were regulated by license in England before the settlement of Pennsylvania, and the colonists brought with them the idea of state control of such matters. Others, such as auctioneers, hawkers and peddlers, etc., were licensed by statute so early and so continuously in the history of our legislation that their appropriateness as subjects of liegnse became familiar as part of the common law of Pennsylvania. Thus aetioneers were classed with hawkers, peddlers, and petty chapmen in “ an act for regulating peddlers, vendues,” etc., passed February 14, 1729-30, aud have been subject to license regulations almost if not quite continuously from that date.

Banks are not so obviously within the sphere of police regulations as to be familiar to us as subjects of municipal license, yet it might not be any more difficult to name reasons why they should be than in the case of auctioneers, had not long familiarity with the licensing of the latter led us to accept it without question. What business or occupations so far affect the public Welfare and good order as to require to be licensed, is a matter of legislative consideration and control, which when exercised in good faith are outside of the jurisdiction of the courts.

The ordinance in present controversy rests upon the authority ,of the act of May 23, 1874, sect. 20, clause 4, P. L. 239 which *458in express te^ms confers on cities of the third class power “ to levy and collect license tax on auctioneers .... bankers,” etc. As already said, the good faith of the ordinance as an exercise of the delegated authority and the reasonableness of the amount for the lawful purpose, not being questioned, we cannot go behind the clear statutory grant of power.

The act of June 30, 1885, sect. 3, P. L. 193, provides that as to any bank electing to pajr into the state treasury a tax of six tenths of one percentum upon the par value of all its shares, “ the shares and so much of the capital and profits .... as shall not be invested in real estate shall be exempt from all other taxation under the laws of this commonwealth.” The word taxation here is used in its ordinary and proper meaning of a charge for the support of the state or some of its subordinate municipal agencies, and clearly does not refer to a charge merely incidental to the exercise of the police power. The act therefore does not exempt banks from the power of cities to impose a license tax under the act of 1874, and. the learned judge below was right in so holding.

A distinction however has been made here to which the learned judge does not refer in his opinion, and to which his attention was probably not called. The judgment is for the license tax for the years 1886 to 1890 inclusive. As already said banks are not intrinsically and obviously subjects of license under the police power by the common law of this state. They become such by statute only, and the license fees recovered in the present case rest on the authority of the act of 1874. But that act was supplied and repealed by the act of May 23, 1889, P. L. 277. The act of 1874 confers the taxing powers for revenue in clauses 1, 2 & 3, of sect. 20, P. L. 238, the license tax power in clause 4, and then, in the following clauses, enumerates expressly the most usual and important police powers, over tippling houses, games and gambling houses, sanitary and quarantine regulations, etc. In this act the licensing of banks is apparently intended to be classed under police powers. The act of 1889 however enumerates and classifies the various municipal powers more fully and more accurately. Article V, sect. 3, clauses 1, 2 & 3 of the act of 1889 follow closely the language of clauses 1, 2 & 3 of sect. 20 of the act of 1874, and clause 4, like that of the prior act, relates to license taxes, but *459makes this important change in the language, “ to levy and collect, for general revenue purposes, a license tax,” etc., enumerating many kinds of business and occupation, but significantly omitting shows, theatres, etc., included in the corresponding section of the act of 1874. Then follow a number of clauses relating also to the revenue, as power to borrow money, to fund indebtedness, rates of interest, etc., and it is not until clause 16 that the usual police powers are reached, among which in clause 25 is included the power “ to license and collect license tax from skating rinks, theatres,” etc.

By the express language of clause 4 above referred to the authority given to cities by this act to license bankers is for general revenue, and as if to emphasize the chango of legislative purpose, the grant is transferred from its previous place in the enumeration of police powers to a place among the powers of taxation for revenue. It is therefore unquestionably a tax in the general sense and we have to consider whether appellant is exempted from it by the acts of June 30, 1885, and June 1, 1889. Of this there can be no doubt. The language of the act of 1885, sect 3, has already been quoted. It exempts from “ all other taxation under the laws of this commonwealth.” The words could not be broader. They apply not only to taxation for state but also for local purposes, and that they were intended to do so is clear from the exception of capital, etc., “ not invested in real estate.” It is matter of public history that there was no state tax on real estate in 1885 or for many years prior, and if exemption from local taxation was not intended it is hardly supposable that the legislature would have inserted an entirely unnecessary and useless clause. But to put the matter beyond all possible question, the act of June 1, 1889, sect. 25, P. L. 433, changes the language previously used and makes the exemption “ from local taxation, under the laws of this commonwealth.”

The result therefore is that banks are only subject to license tax by municipalities by virtue of express legislative authority ; that the only authority shown in cities of the third class since the act of 1889 is to license as a tax for revenue purposes; and that as to such tax the appellant was exempt during the years 1889 and 1890.

The judgment must therefore be reversed as to these years *460but as the facts are all set out in the point reserved we can enter the proper judgment without the delay and expense of a new trial.

Judgment reversed, and now judgment entered for plaintiff below $150 for ithe license tax for the years 1886,1887 and 1888. Costs of this appeal to be paid by appellee.

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