119 S.E. 488 | N.C. | 1923
The defendant was convicted of a violation of a tax ordinance of the city of Wilmington. He was an agent of the Liberty Yeast Company, of Baltimore, in the sale, delivery and collection of yeast.
The company in Baltimore each day shipped him a quantity of yeast by express. The box or boxes in which it was contained were taken out of the express office by the defendant, to whom the boxes were directed; the bulk was then broken, and he carried around to his customers on a truck the small packages contained in these boxes, that he might deliver to these customers any amount they wanted. He not only delivered the yeast in this way to regular customers, but he also sought to increase the trade by securing other purchasers when he delivered the yeast, and from whom he collected the cost price at the same time. When he sold the yeast in this way he took orders from his customers in advance and ascertained the quantity of yeast each person would want on the following day, and when he went around and delivered the yeast to the purchasers he took up what yeast was left over on the hands of the purchasers of the day before and destroyed it. *262
The defendant, on his cross-examination, stated: "I solicit the orders for the yeast. The yeast is shipped to me, and I distribute it. I collect for it and remit to the company. I collect for them. I send the collections on to my house. They cut the yeast in Baltimore at the plant and ship it down here to be distributed. They ship it in bulk packages, and I divide it and distribute it to my customers." Upon this testimony, which was uncontradicted, the court said: "If you believe the evidence, you will return a verdict of guilty; if you do not believe it, return a verdict of not guilty." Verdict of guilty. Appeal. The transaction, which was made taxable by the statute, was not the shipment of the goods from Baltimore to the defendant here, nor was the burden borne by such transportation. The transaction that was made subject to the tax was the sale and delivery of these articles to purchasers after the bulk was broken. Had the goods been lost in transit, the title thereto was in the shipper and would not have passed to the purchasers until the defendant on his daily rounds delivered them to the several purchasers. This transaction was an intrastate matter between the defendant and the purchasers, and the immunity by reason of the Federal Constitution does not exist.
There were no orders solicited for customers which were sent to the Baltimore house with the result that the Baltimore house shipped to the customers here, if approved by the yeast company, but it was the sending of the yeast by the Baltimore house to their agent, the defendant, upon his estimate of the amount which he could dispose of in his rounds next day by reason of his canvass for orders, and of the additional orders he calculated he might pick up in delivering the other orders.
This is not like Robbins v. Taxing District,
In S. v. French,
The whole subject has been fully discussed and the conclusion reached (upon which this opinion is based) in Sonneborne v. Keating, in the United States Supreme Court, opinion filed 11 June, 1923.
There being no conflict in the evidence, and no question of intent to be drawn, but purely a question of law upon the evidence, if believed, there was no error in the instruction of the court to the jury: "If you believe the evidence, you will return a verdict of guilty; if you do not believe it, return a verdict of not guilty." This was so held in S. v. Murphrey,ante, 113.
No error.