149 N.E. 812 | Ill. | 1925
December 22, 1924, the city council of the city of Jacksonville passed an ordinance, section I of which provided: "That every owner of a wagon, motor vehicle, motor bicycle or other vehicle, who, if a natural person or persons, resides within the corporate limits of the city of Jacksonville, Illinois, or who, if a firm or corporation, maintains and conducts its principal place of business in Illinois within the *216 corporate limits of the said city of Jacksonville, Illinois, shall be required to pay each year to the city of Jacksonville, Illinois, a tax or license fee for the use of each such wagon, motor vehicle, motor bicycle or other vehicle used within said city." The ordinance also provided that all such tax, when collected, should be used for the purpose of improving, paving, repairing or maintaining the streets within such city. Appellants filed their bill in the circuit court of Morgan county for an injunction to restrain appellee and its servants from proceeding in any manner toward the collection of the tax or license fee prescribed by the ordinance, on the ground that the ordinance is unconstitutional and invalid. Issue having been made, upon final hearing a decree was entered dismissing appellants' bill for want of equity, from which decree an appeal has been perfected to this court.
Two questions are raised upon this appeal: (1) Does section 26 of the Motor Vehicle act give authority to cities to charge a license fee or tax for motor vehicles not driven for hire? (2) If so, is said section constitutional?
It has long been the settled law of this State that the right or privilege of using vehicles on the streets is a proper subject of license taxation. (Gartside v. City of East St.Louis,
"Ninety-sixth — To direct, license and control all wagons and other vehicles conveying loads within the city, or any particular class of such wagons, and other vehicles, and prescribe the width and tire of the same, the license fee when collected to be kept as a separate fund and used only for paying the cost and expenses of street or alley improvement or repair."
Thereafter, in Harder's Storage Co. v. City of Chicago,
Section 26 of the Motor Vehicle act in effect at the time of the passage of the ordinance in question was as follows: "No owner of a motor vehicle or motor bicycle who shall have obtained a certificate from the Secretary of State and paid the registration fee as hereinbefore provided, shall be required by any city, village, town or other municipal corporation within the State other than that within which said owner resides to pay any tax or license fee for the use of such motor vehicle or motor bicycle; and no owner of a motor vehicle except motor trucks and motor-driven commercial vehicles and motor vehicles which are used for public hire, or motor bicycle, who shall have obtained such certificate and paid such fee shall be required by the city, village or town within which he resides (if he resides within a city, village or town), to pay a tax or license fee for the use of such motor vehicle or motor bicycle in excess of the sum of ten dollars per annum for motor vehicles or motor bicycles of thirty-five horse power or less or in excess of the sum of twenty dollars per annum for motor vehicles or motor bicycles of more than thirty-five horse power in [case] such city, village or town within which he resides shall have a population of 150,000 or over, or in excess of the sum of five dollars per annum for motor vehicles or motor bicycles of thirty-five horse power or less or in excess of the sum of ten dollars per annum for motor vehicles or motor bicycles of more than thirty-five horse power in *220 case such city, village or town within which he resides shall have a population of less than 150,000. The proceeds of all fees so collected by any city, town or village shall be used for the purpose of improving, paving, repairing or maintaining the streets and other public roadways within such city, town or village and shall never be devoted to any other use whatever:Provided, that the actual cost of the collection of such fees and the disbursement thereof may be deducted from the total amount collected." (Smith's Stat. 1925, p. 1825.)
The provisions of this section are general and apply alike to motor vehicles used for pleasure and for hire. The provisions are the same as those under discussion in Heartt v. Village ofDowners Grove, supra, and what is there said applies with equal force in this case. The constitutional questions raised in this case are all of them fully discussed in the cases cited.
It is contended by appellants that by the provisions of the ordinance in question a license fee is levied upon partnerships having their principal places of business in the city and whose members reside out of the city. There is no evidence in the record that at the time of the passage of this ordinance there was in the city of Jacksonville any partnership with its principal place of business in the city whose members resided outside of the city. Appellants, however, are not in a position to raise that question in this case as all of them reside in the city of Jacksonville. None of them are affected by this provision so far as this record shows, and they have no right to challenge its validity. Moy v. City of Chicago,
The ordinance in question is not invalid for the reasons alleged, and the court did not err in dismissing appellants' bill for want of equity.
Decree affirmed. *221