204 N.W. 137 | Mich. | 1925
Defendant took out a license under Act No. 85, Pub. Acts 1923. He erected a tent on a vacant lot in Flint and there sold the articles enumerated in the act. He also sold some confectionery. He did not pay the license fee provided for in Act No. 294, Pub. Acts 1913 (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 7001 etseq.), which in Flint would amount to $20 a day for the first five days and $10 a day thereafter. He was convicted of a violation of the last named act and reviews his conviction on exceptions before sentence. We need not determine whether the provisions of section 6 of the act of 1923 exempts payment of a license fee under the act of 1913 for the sale of articles covered by the act of 1923, because the sale of candy was not authorized by the license issued under the act of 1923, and it, therefore, becomes necessary to determine defendant's contention that the act of 1913 imposes an unreasonable, unjustified and excessive fee upon the business conducted by him and for that reason the act is invalid.
The exaction can not be sustained as a vocational tax, a specific tax; it does not purport to be such andVernor v. Secretary of State,
"Such a measure will be upheld by the courts when plainly intended as a police regulation, and the revenue derived therefrom is not disproportionate to the cost of issuing the license, and the regulation of the business to which it applies."
The act applies to all kinds of legitimate business conducted by transient merchants. It exacts a fee of over $3,000 a year. The service performed on behalf of the municipality consists of receiving the application and the issuance of the license by the clerk and receiving the money and accounting for it by him. The act provides for no policing or police regulation. Numerous cases have been before this and other courts involving licensing by municipalities and by the State itself, and while a considerable proportion of the cases involve municipal ordinances enacted under delegated authority which must be strictly construed, the underlying principles governing them must be the same. We shall first consider some of our own cases. In People v. Russell,
In Chaddock v. Day,
"It is quite common in these latter days for certain classes of citizens — those engaged in this or that business — to appeal to the government — national, State, or municipal — to aid them by legislation against another class of citizens engaged in the same business, but in some other way. This class legislation, when indulged in, seldom benefits the general public, but nearly always aids the few for whose benefit it is enacted, not only at the expense of the few against whom it is ostensibly directed, but also at the expense and to the detriment of the many, for whose benefit all legislation should be, in a republican form of government, framed and devised. This kind of legislation *378 should receive no encouragement at the hands of the courts, and be only upheld when it is strictly within the legitimate power of congress, or the State or municipal legislatures."
In Brooks v. Mangan,
"The ordinance required every person soliciting a license as a hawker or peddler to pay $10 for the first day, and $5 for each subsequent day, if he traveled on foot; if he traveled with one horse, $20 for the first day, and $15 for each subsequent day; if he traveled with two or more horses, $25 for the first day, and $15 for each subsequent day. We think the ordinance invalid on account of its unreasonableness. Practically, if enforced, it would amount to a prohibition of the business."
In City of Saginaw v. Saginaw Circuit Judge,
We shall now consider the holdings in other jurisdictions.State v. Foster,
"It may not be easy, in every case, to determine with precision, from the amount of the fee charged, whether it is intended as a regulation or a tax, and all reasonable intendment should be in favor of its fairness and justness as a fee."
In that case the ordinance was held invalid. A comparatively recent case, People v. Wilson,
"In this case the statute fixes the license fee to be paid by an itinerant vendor of patent and proprietary medicines at $100 per month, or $1,200 per annum. It would seem it would occur to any fair-minded man, at a glance, that the fee of $100 per month is so excessive that no itinerant vendor of patent and proprietary medicines could afford to Say such license, and that the license fee so impose would prohibit any person from vending such medicines except he had a drug store or other fixed place of business. In the Noel Case (
In Caldwell v. City of Lincoln,
"But we have no need to resort to comparisons to enable us to determine the invalidity of so much of the ordinance of 28th April, 1882, as relates to passenger *381 omnibuses. If there were no other subjects except the omnibuses mentioned therein, the amount attempted to be levied upon these omnibuses shows clearly upon its face that it was an attempt on the part of the city authorities to exercise the power of taxation which had not been granted them by the State."
See, also, State v. Blaser, 36 La. Ann. 363; City ofCarrollton v. Bazzette,
As we have pointed out, the license fee exacted under this statute exceeds $3,000 a year; this fee is levied under the guise of the police power for regulation. We have been unable to find any case which sustains the imposition of such a fee for regulation, for licensing alone. While a wide latitude must be given legislative discretion, and courts will not calculate to a nicety the exact expense of issuing licenses, there comes a point where the exaction is so palpably, so grossly excessive, that courts can not close their eyes to the fact that such legislation is either taxation under the guise of regulation, or enacted in restraint of trade and for the purpose of prohibiting the conduct of the business. The act applies to all transient merchants, both large and small dealers, and lays its hand upon all lawful business conducted by the class named. The exaction is upon its face so out of proportion to the expense of regulation of a lawful business, so unreasonable, so excessive that the act must fall.
The conviction will be reversed and the defendant discharged.
McDONALD, C.J., and CLARK, BIRD, SHARPE, MOORE, STEERE, and WIEST, JJ., concurred. *382