286 N.Y. 377 | NY | 1941
Section
The appellant, Knott Management Corporation, operates under its own name eight hotels and restaurants in the city of New York. Each of these hotels and restaurants is required to have a separate license but all the licenses have been applied for and issued in the name of Knott Management Corporation. A "floor tax" has been levied upon the appellant at the rate of fifty cents per gallon upon all the liquor which it held May 9, 1939, for purposes of sale in all eight hotels and restaurants over and above 250 gallons. The appellant claims that the tax should be levied only upon liquors over and above the "normal stock" of 250 gallons held for sale in each hotel and restaurant for which a separate license has been issued.
Outside of the city of New York the appellant operates other hotels and restaurants under management contracts, but there the licenses have been applied for and issued, *380
not in the name of the appellant but in the name of the owner. It is said that the appellant operates the eight hotels and restaurants in the city of New York under similar management contracts and that the circumstance that in the city of New York the appellant has chosen to apply for the licenses in its own name, rather than in the name of the actual owner, should not affect the amount of the tax payable by it. The record does not disclose the provisions of the contracts under which the appellant operates or manages the hotels and restaurants either in the city of New York or outside of the city, and in our opinion the provisions of the contract or the character in which the appellant operates these places of business is immaterial. Section
There is reasonable basis for defining a "normal stock" of liquors to be 250 gallons if the statutory definition is applied to the normal stock of separate hotels and restaurants. It is difficult to see any reasonable basis for such a definition if intended to apply in like manner to one restaurant and to a number of hotels and restaurants which happen to be under the same management. Argument, not without force, may be made that, reasonably or unreasonably, the Legislature has chosen to define at 250 gallons the *381 "normal stock" of "each person," regardless of whether such person is the owner or manager of one or a hundred restaurants or hotels where such liquor is offered for sale, and that the courts cannot change the definition adopted by the Legislature. When the Legislature has in unambiguous language made a classification, then it is true the courts cannot adopt a different classification, though they might be compelled to hold that the classification adopted by the Legislature is so unreasonable that it transcends the legislative power. In this case, the language of the statute is not so clear and unambiguous that the courts are constrained to construe it in manner which would raise doubt as to the validity of the statute. It is open to the construction that in using the terms "floor tax" and "normal stock" the Legislature indicated that its definition of the "normal stock" was to apply to the stock of liquors held in each place where liquor is sold and where a separate license is required.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, the determination of the Tax Commission annulled, and the matter remitted to the State Tax Commission to fix the tax in accordance with this opinion, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
LOUGHRAN, FINCH, RIPPEY, LEWIS, CONWAY and DESMOND, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *382