delivered the opinion of the court.
These are suits to prevent the collection of a tax on gross receipts for different years, derived from business done by the appellant in the State of Florida, and to have the laws under which the tax would be.assessed, declared contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment. The bills aré like those stated in
The cases come here upon an alleged, infringement of the Constitution of the United States, but are argued' mainly upon the constitution of the State. Of course the latter is not taken up into the Fourteenth Amendment.
Castillo
v.
McConnico,
The other objection urged is that the tax payer is not given a hearing. The statute, as we have said, requires the companies to make a report and fixes a percentage ($1.50 per $100) to be paid. If the report is not made the Comptroller is to estimate the gross receipts and add ten per cent, of the amount of the taxes as a penalty. If the companies do as required there is nothing to be heard about. They fix the amount and the statute establishes the proportion to be paid over.
Bell's Gap R. R. Co.
v.
Pennsylvania,
We do not feel called upon to- discuss the objections under the constitution of the State at length. Starting with the conceded proposition that the' tax to be valid must be either
ad valorem
or a license tax, the appellant argues that this cannot be a license tax, as was held by the Judges who refused the injunction, because the payment of it is not made a condition of the right to do business; because another tax-is imposed in terms for a license; and because the history of the law shows that for years it took the place of a property tax. These considerations
*27
undoubtedly are very strong. But as we are dealing with the validity of the law under the state constitution, a matter that must be decided finally by the state court, and as the state court has held other gross earning taxes to be license taxes,
Afro-American Industrial Benefit Ass'n
v.
Florida,
Decree affirmed.
