79 So. 820 | Miss. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
The state revenue agent filed suit in the circuit court against the Greenwood Lumber Company under three separate counts; the first count declaring for the privilege tax of one hundred dollars per year for the years beginning the 1st day of May, 1915, and the 1st day of May, 1916, due to the state for the privilege of carrying on a business of lumber yard and dealer in lumber. It also declared for damages for failure to pay the privilege tax as required by law. The second count of the declaration was for levee taxes for the same period of time against the same defendant due the Yazoo and Mississippi levee district, and for damages of ten per cent, for failure to procure the levee district privilege license. ■ The third count of the declaration declared against the defendant for privilege taxes due the city of Greenwood for the same period of time, it being declared that the privilege tax of the city was levied and assessed upon the same business by the proper and lawful authorities of the municipality, being a tax for the
The defendant demurred to this declaration: First, because there was a misjoinder of several separate and distinct causes of action. Second, that plaintiff sued in its own name. Third, that the. tax collector of Leflore county was not joined as a party to the suit, and that the amended declaration embraced separate and distinct causes of action which were not embraced in the original declaration, and that the amended declaration seeking to recover privilege taxes, damages, and penalties alléged to have been due for the years 1911 to 1914, inclusive, during which time the Alexander Lumber Company was operating as owner and the business of which was alleged to have been transferred to the Greenwood Lumber Company, was because these two counts each embraced separate and distinct causes of action not embraced in the original declaration; second, because the Greenwood Lumber Company could not be held liable for any privilege tax, damages, or penalties which became due for any period or for any time prior to the time when said business was 'transferred to the Greenwood Lumber Company by the Alexander Lumber Company, and because the Alexander Lumber Company is not joined as defendant.
The court below sustained the demurrer, allowed plaintiff thirty days in which to amend and adjudged that on failure of the plaintiff to amend in thirty days from date of judgment that his declaration would be dismissed, the plaintiff failed to amend his declaration and prosecutes this appeal from the dismissal of said cause.
The first question presented by the demurrer is whether or not the state revenue agent could bring these suits on behalf of the state of Mississippi, and the Ya-zoo and Mississippi levee district, and the city of
Section 4743, Code of 1906, section 7061, Hemingway’s Code, provides that the suits by the state revenue agent shall be in his own name for the use of the state, county, municipality, or levee board interested, and he shall not be liable for costs, and may appeal without bond, and that such suits may be tried at the return term and shall take precedence of other suits.
Under section 4738, Code of 1906, section 7056, Hemingway’s Code, the state revenue agent is given the power, and it is made his duty, to proceed by suit in the proper court against all officers, county contractors, persons, corporations, companies, and associations of persons for' all past-due and unpaid taxes of any kind whatever, or all penalties or forfeitures for all past-due obligations and indebtedness of any character whatever owing to the state, or any county, municipality, or levee board, and for damages growing out of the violation of any contract with the state, or any county, municipality, or levee board, etc.
Section 4739, Code of 1906, section 7057, Hemingway’s Code, makes it the duty of the revenue agent to investigate the accounts, vouchers and books of all fiscal officers of the state, and of every county, municipality, and levee board, and to sue for and collect and pay over all money improperly withheld from either, and he has the power to sue and right of action against all such officers and their sureties, etc.
Section 4740, Code of 1906, section 7058, Hemingway-way’s Code, provides that the revenue agent may cause additional assessments to be made on property escaping taxation.
Taking all these sections together, and considering the whole scope of the legislation bearing on the office, power, and duties of the state revenue agent, we think
As to that part of the declaration that seeks to recover against the defendant for privilege taxes for the period from 1911 to the 1st of May, 1915, when the defendant bought the business from the Alexander Lumber Company, we hold that the plaintiff had no cause of action against the Greenwood Lumber Company for such privilege taxes for said years 1911, 1912, 1913, and 1914.
Section 3900, Code of 1906, section 6629, Hemingway’s Code, requires the tax collector to keep a privilege tax register in which the names of all privilege taxpayers should be recorded showing the amounts, etc., paid for.
Section 3901, Code of 1906, section 6630, Hemingway’s Code, provides that the persons or corporations liable for privilege taxes who shall fail to procure a license during the month in which it is due shall be liable for double the amount of the tax, and it is made the duty of the tax collector to collect the amount, issue a seperate license therefor, and to indorse across its face the words “collected as damages.”
“On each lumber yard or dealer whose annual sale exceeds one-half million feet of lumber— one. hundred dollars,” etc.
Section 3906, Code of 1906, section 6636, Hemingway’s Code, provides the license herein provided shall be a personal privilege enjoyable only by the person to whom it was issued, and it shall not be transferable, and such license shall not exempt from taxation any property used in the business except as specifically provided for in this chapter.
The privilege license is the license due by the person conducting the business of lutnber yard or dealer and is measured by the amount of business done. The express language of section 3901 above referred to is that all persons or corporations liable for privilege taxes who shall fail to procure the license, etc. It is clear that from the provisions of the privilege tax laws that the legislature was imposing a license on persons or corporations conducting the business. It is difficult to see how a lumber yard could be proceeded against by a suit. In other words, the revenue agent could not sue a lumber yard as such, but he would have to sue the persons or corporations who were pursuing the business which was taxed. The^ revenue agent could proceed against the corporation doing the business in 1911 if such corporation had not paid its license; but the statute does not impose liability in terms upon the purchaser of such business, nor does it make the privilege tax a lien upon the property before the property is seized by the tax collector.
Section 3905 of the Code provides a method of seizing the property by distress by the tax collector, but it does not impose any lien upon the property prior to seizure. This section further expresses the idea of
“Any one failing to pay the privileges by this act imposed, and to obtain license as herein required, but pursuing the business taxed without such license, may be proceeded against by suit.”
The revenue agent therefore had no right to collect from the Greenwood Lumber Company privilege taxes for the business conducted by the Alexander Lumber Company prior to the purchase of the property by the Greenwood Lumber Company.
Reversed and remanded.