63 Neb. 829 | Neb. | 1902
Lead Opinion
The only question to be decided in this case is whether certain moneys collected by the respondent as treasurer of the' city of Auburn are license moneys, within the meaning of section 5, article 8, of the constitution. The fund in controversy was raised under an ordinance whose object, as expressed in its title, was to impose “an occupation tax on certain occupations or businesses.” By. the third section of this ordinance it is made unlawful for any person,
AFFTBWED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in conclusion only.
I concur only in the conclusion reached by the chief justice in the foregoing opinion, but find myself wholly unable to agree to many of the views therein expressed. To my mind, the tendency of the opinion is to unsettle, if not directly overthrow, several prior decisions of the court on the same general subject. The sole question, as presented by the record, is whether the moneys in dispute are license moneys within the meaning of section 5, article 8, of the constitution, belonging to the common-school fund, or whether they should be regarded as revenues derived from an exercise of the taxing power alone, and therefore subject to the control of the city of Auburn in defraying its expenses of municipal government. This court has frequently expressed itself on the question of the distinction between a license and an occupation tax. It has also laid down the doctrine that to engage in business declared unlawful, unless a license is first obtained, may be punished criminally, while the collecting of a tax levied solely for revenue purposes can only be enforced as other civil liabilities. With these decisions, and the soundness of the views supporting the same, I am satisfied, and believe they should be followed and adhered to.
In the case at bar the ordinance under which the revenues in controversy were collected, in my judgment, should be construed as an ordinance for the levying and
Section 5, article 8, of the constitution provides: “All * * * license moneys arising under the rules, by-laws, or ordinances of cities,' villages, towns, precincts, or other municipal subdivision less than a county, shall belong and be paid over to the same respectively. All such * * license moneys shall be appropriated exclusively to the use and support of common schools in the respective subdivisions where the same may accrue.” If moneys are collected under an ordinance providing for licensing; different occupations or callings, and as a license tax, it is license money, and no refinement of reasoning can change its character. It seems to me, the majority opinion sets up arbitrary standards by which to measure ordinanc.es imposing license and occupation taxes, and altogether loses sight of the constitutional provision quoted. A license is defined by Webster to be “a permission from authority to do some act; a grant of permission.” Bouvier says a license is “an official permit to carry on a business or trade or perforin other acts forbidden by law except to persons obtaining such permit.” By another authority, when applied to government, it is defined as “an authorization by the government to an individual to do certain acts, or carry on a certain business.” Cyclopedic Law Dictionary. How, then, can it be successfully contended that an occupation tax may be levied and enforced by requiring the issuance of a permit or license to do business, and making it unlawful to engage in the business until such tax is paid and a license is issued? This would permit the nullification of the provisions of the constitution, and the collection of the occupation tax by means that are the very essence and substance of a law providing for a license tax.
The provisions in the ordinance under consideration declaring it unlawful to engage in the occupation or calling-taxed unless the taxes levied thereon are paid, and providing for arrest and fine upon conviction of a violation of the ordinance by a criminal prosecution, are clearly in excess of the powers of the municipality, and, under repeated decisions of this court, are void and non-enforceable.
In an early case, State v. Green, 27 Nebr., 64, the subject first received judicial consideration, and it is there decided: “A village has authority to levy a reasonable occupation tax which conforms to the requirements of the constitution and statute; but such a tax is a mere civil liability to be collected by levy and sale of property and not
It is said the decisions of this court are in opposition to the authorities in other jurisdictions. An examination of the authorities, however, discloses that they are based on the principles underlying the collection and enforcement of license taxes, and not to revenue-producing acts alone. In principle, when so considered, they coincide with the prior utterances of this court on the same subject.