FAIRCLOTH, C. J., and CLARK, J., dissenting.
This is a prosecution for an alleged violation of an ordinance of the city of Greensboro. There was no objection or exception to the manner in which it was commenced, and it may be maintained if the defendant has violated the city ordinance (S. v. Higgs,
The defendant assigns as grounds of error: "(1) The facts set out in the special verdict do not make the defendant guilty of engaging in the business of delivering pictures without first *Page 358 (524) having obtained a license so to do, within the purview and contemplation of the ordinance of the city of Greensboro. (2) That, should defendant be held liable under the ordinance in controversy, said ordinance is unconstitutional, being in conflict with sec. 8 of Art. I of the Constitution of the United States, being an interference with, and an attempt to regulate, commerce among the States, and a burden upon the same." We will consider these assignments in the order in which they are stated; for, if the defendant has not been guilty of carrying on a business in violation of the city ordinance, then he is guilty of no offense — is not guilty — and there is nothing for the second assignment to rest upon.
It seems to us that a good way to test this exception is to divest our minds of the fact that the defendant was the agent of the Chicago Portrait Company, and to consider him as a citizen of Greensboro, who had bought these pictures, and had them shipped to him in the unfinished state they were. And if he had taken them to his house, opened them, assorted them, and put them together, and then sold and delivered them to parties in town, would he not have been a dealer engaged in selling and delivering pictures and picture frames in violation of the ordinance? We think he would, and would be guilty — would be, unless he is protected by reason of the unconstitutionality of the ordinance, as stated in the second assignment of error. And, it being claimed in this assignment that it involves a constitutional question — that it is in violation of "sec. 8 of Art. I of the Constitution of the United States, being an interference with, and an attempt to regulate, commerce among the States, and a burden upon the same" — it becomes an important question, and should be well considered. This has been well done, by arguments of the learned counsel, and the well-considered brief of defendant. It is contended in this brief that no State has a right to levy a tax on interstate commerce, (525) and for this Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania,