19 S.E. 861 | N.C. | 1894
AVERY, J., dissents. The defendant was charged with selling liquor in the city of Asheville without having obtained a license therefor, in violation of Ordinance No. 649 (adopted in 1887), which is as follows:
"If any person or persons shall retail spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, or any preparation containing alcohol, in the city of Asheville, without license, he shall, on conviction, be fined $50; and if such retailing be without State license, such person or persons shall be bound over to the Superior Court of Buncombe County."
On the trial it was admitted that an indictment against the defendant for the offense of retailing liquor in violation of the general statute (section 1076 of The Code) was pending in the Criminal Court of Buncombe County.
It was also admitted that the Board of Aldermen of Asheville, at their meeting in May, 1893, adopted the following ordinance, to wit:
"By virtue of the power conferred by sections 35 and 36 of an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina entitled `An Act to amend the charter of the city of Asheville,' ratified 8 March, 1893, for the purpose therein mentioned, and by virtue of the subsequent acts of said Legislature amendatory thereof, especially chapter 223, Laws 1889, the (875) Board of Aldermen of the city of Asheville do hereby impose and levy the following general, special and privilege taxes upon the subjects, etc., hereinafter mentioned, etc. . . .
"14. Upon every license to retail spirituous or malt liquors at each place of business, to be paid semiannually in advance, $1,000." *543
The defendant moved to quash the warrant, upon the following grounds:
1. That the mayor has no jurisdiction, in that the offense of retailing liquors without a license is prohibited by the general laws of the State.
2. The ordinance is void, in that the Board of Aldermen of the city of Asheville had no authority to pass such ordinance.
3. The mayor had no jurisdiction, in that the offense is not cognizable before a justice of the peace.
The motion to quash was sustained on the second ground, above set forth, and the State appealed. By section 36, chapter 111, Laws 1883, the aldermen of the city of Asheville were empowered to levy and collect "upon every license to retail spirituous or malt liquors a tax not exceeding $500." This provision, if it stood alone, would seem to indicate the intent to confer upon the municipal authorities the power to issue licenses to those whom they saw fit to allow to carry on this business, and to impose a tax not exceeding the sum named for privilege of so (876) doing. If these words are read in connection with section 19 of the said act, wherein the board of aldermen are authorized "to regulate and restrain tippling-houses," it becomes manifest, we think, that they had authority to impose a license tax on the business of retailing liquor, if carried on within the corporate limits of the city of Asheville.
Having this authority to impose a license tax on this business, and also to pass all laws and ordinances necessary to carry the intent and meaning of that act into effect, it must follow that the municipality was invested with power to enforce the payment of this license tax. The Code, sec. 3804. Taxes laid on property can be collected by seizing and selling the property taxed; but, inasmuch as license taxes are very often not collectible by seizure of the effects of the licensee, revenue laws provide for the enforcement of the payment of such taxes by the imposition of fines or penalties upon those who violate their provisions by carrying on the taxed trade or business without having paid the privilege tax and obtained the required license. The revenue laws, both of this State and the United States, contain such provisions. Indeed, without them such laws would be almost nugatory. The same act, as, for instance, the selling of a pint of whiskey, may be a violation of both the State and Federal laws, and may be punished in each jurisdiction; and this will imply no encroachment of one authority into the province of the other. This is well settled. And so the selling of a pint of spirits in the city of *544 Asheville may be a violation of the revenue law of the State and of its police regulations (The Code, sec. 1076) and also of the ordinance of the city, adopted to secure the collection of its revenue. While the act is one, the offenses are different, and the offender must answer for each offense in the proper jurisdiction. In the one prosecution he would (877) be charged with selling the spirituous liquor without having first obtained the license required by the State law, while in the other prosecution he would be charged with selling the spirits without having first obtained the license required by the city ordinance. The latter charge constitutes a distinct offense, and is not punishable, except under the provision of the ordinance and section 3820 of The Code.
Authorities need not be cited to show that if an ordinance of a city provides for the punishment by penalty of an act which is prohibited and punished by State law, the ordinance is invalid and void. That well established principle has no application here. An assault is punishable by the general law of the State. That act, in itself, whenever and however done, is a violation of the law of the State. Municipal councils are not permitted to legislate on that subject, for the State has assumed control of it. The act of selling a pint of spirituous liquor is not necessarily criminal or contrary to law. But that act, if done on Sunday, to an unmarried minor, by one who has no license to sell such liquor, either from the Federal, State or city authorities, becomes an ingredient of five or six different charges against the perpetrator that may be presented against him in different jurisdictions. A single act may be an offense against two statutes, and if each statute requires proof of an additional fact, which the other does not, an acquittal or conviction under either statute does not exempt the defendant from prosecution and punishment under the other.Arrington v. Commissioners,
The offense charged against this defendant, to wit, that he sold (878) spirituous liquors in the city of Asheville without having paid the tax levied on that business, and without having obtained from the city a license so to do, is, as we have said, a distinct and separate offense from that for which, it seems, he is indicted in the Criminal Court of Buncombe County; and this prosecution by the city for a violation of its ordinances can in no wise conflict with any criminal action that has been or may be instituted against the defendant on account of the alleged selling as an act violative of the general State law.
Our attention has been called to the provision of section 33, *545
chapter 294, Laws 1893 (Revenue Act), where it is enacted, in regard to the licensing of dealers in liquors by the county commissioners, that "the license authorized within an incorporated town or city under this section shall first be granted by the authorities of such town or city." The effect of this proviso is merely to require the licensing of an applicant by the city or town authorities as a condition precedent to the granting of a license by the county commissioners, and to declare that a license issued to one who has not complied therewith shall be void. Hillsboro v. Smith,
We conclude, therefore, that no one of the three reasons assigned for quashing the warrant was valid. The Board of Aldermen of the city of Asheville had authority to adopt such an ordinance, plainly conferred by the acts above referred to. The ordinance in no wise conflicts with any of the general laws of the State, and is reasonable. It being a valid ordinance, the violation of it is made by statute a misdemeanor, of which the mayor had jurisdiction.
The objection to the ordinance that it provides that one who violates it shall be fined, instead of imposing a penalty, is without force. In S. v.Cainan,
Error.
Cited: S. v. Reid,