135 A. 705 | Vt. | 1927
The respondent, domiciled at Grafton, N.H., is prosecuted for violating the Motor Vehicles Act, No.
So far as need here be specified, the Act provides: That a *149 motor bus is a motor vehicle which regularly and indiscriminately carries passengers over a fixed route; that a resident is one domiciled in this State, or one who lives in another state and continuously conducts a business in this State for three months in any calendar year. Section 3. That residents shall make annual registration of their motor vehicles, and all persons are forbidden to operate such a vehicle on any of our highways unless it is registered according to the Act. Section 17. That the registration fee of a motor bus shall be based upon its weight, plus its passenger carrying capacity at one hundred and fifty pounds per person. Section 33. That a motor vehicle owned by a non-resident and lawfully registered in the state of his domicile, shall be exempt from the provisions of the Act to the extent that the state of his residence grants like exemption to motor vehicles duly registered under the laws of this State. Section 64. That this exemption shall not allow a motor bus owner, maintaining a regular schedule of trips as a carrier of passengers to operate for more than thirty trips in any calendar year; that such person, after such thirty trips shall be deemed to be a resident under the Act. Section 64. That the definition of a resident shall be so construed as to persons domiciled in an adjoining state and conducting a business in this State as to conform to the registration requirements of such adjoining state applying to persons domiciled in this State and conducting a business in that state. Section 3.
So it comes to this: This New Hampshire owner, having had his motor bus lawfully registered in that state, but not in this, and having caused it to be operated on a regular schedule over the specified highway in this State for more than 30 trips within the year, is not entitled to the exemption provided for in section 64, but as to the excess trips is thereunder a resident, and has violated the terms of section 17 and incurred the penalty prescribed by section 109.
It may be that under the reciprocal provision of section 3 above referred to the term "resident" should be so construed as to exclude the respondent. But the record does not disclose sufficient facts to show this. It makes no difference with his situation here. If he is not to be classed as a "resident," he must be a "nonresident," for that term includes all persons living outside this State who are not "residents" under the Act. Section 3. If the respondent is to be classed as a "nonresident," he was required to register his bus under section 65; or under *150 section 66 if his residence entitled him to "zone registration" as therein provided. In either or any event, registry was required of him before he could lawfully make his thirty-first trip.
The demurrer challenges the complaint for defect of material allegations.
That a criminal complaint that fails to allege every fact necessary to constitute the offense charged, though that be statutory, is defective and demurrable, is a familiar rule of criminal pleading. State v. Brown,
The respondent attacks the constitutionality of the Act. He says the registration fee required by the Act is a tax, and that the classification made by the Act is arbitrary, unreasonable, and discriminatory in violation of both State and federal Constitutions.
The regulation of motor vehicles used upon the public highways in order to conserve the safety and general welfare of the people is an attribute of the police power of the State, and its exercise is nowhere disputed. It is everywhere conceded. And so long as the registration fee was confined to a sum fairly required to cover the expense of regulation and supervision it was regarded as a fee and not as a tax. But since such fees have been so increased as to produce a large surplus over such expenses though this be devoted to the maintenance and improvement of the highways, the "fee" has come to be looked upon as a tax, and the statute providing for it as a revenue measure. Thus, when the Massachusetts registration fee was only two dollars per year, it was held in Commonwealth v. Boyd,
That the Legislature has the power to impose such excise taxes is unquestioned. State v. Harrington,
The power of classification for taxing purposes is a valuable and legitimate legislative function. There is nothing in any of the provisions of the State or federal Constitutions that forbids it. Hardwick v. Wolcott,
Nor can the fault lie in the fact that commercial cars are separated from other motor vehicles. Hill v. Moody,
Nor in the fact that commercial vehicles are subdivided according to their use and load. Kennamer v. State,
Nor in the fact that busses are sub-classified according to their loaded weight. Weight has such a necessary and obvious relation to the road-wearing qualities of the vehicle that it is a common and proper basis for excise determination. Northern Ky.Transportation Co. v. Bellevue,
Nor in the mere fact that the respondent resides outside the State. "It would be strange if the state could not tax a motor vehicle making daily use of its highways for the profit of *154
its owner, merely because the owner happened to live and kept (keep) the vehicle when not in use just beyond the boundary line of the state." State v. Oligney,
Nor in the reciprocity provision, which merely gives credit to those who give credit to us, and which promotes the convenience of owners and prevents the relative hardship of having to pay the full registration fee for a brief use of the highways. Kane v.New Jersey, supra; Ex parte Schuler,
Nor, for reasons just stated, in the zone registration provision which grants limited use of our highways at a nominal fee by way of reciprocity. For, as we have seen, commercial cars may be classified by themselves and sub-classified according to the use to which they are put. Moreover, the respondent is in no position to raise this question for he has not asked for zone registration. Hendrick v. Maryland,
It remains to consider whether the respondent is discriminated against by being treated by the law more harshly than others in his class. For the law forbids such discrimination. State v.Hoyt,
That one state cannot pass a valid tax law that discriminates against a nonresident is shown by Sprague v. Fletcher,
That persons domiciled outside the State are so classified that some have to pay a higher tax than others is not of itself unlawful discrimination. It comes back to the validity of the classification. Those nonresidents temporarily in the State are in one class; those entitled to zone registration in another class; and the respondent is in another class. There is no inequality between persons in the same class.
What we have said is not to be taken as indicating that the respondent would be entitled to any advantage here, had he shown that his residence was such as to enable him to assert a claim to zone registration.
It should be kept in mind that the tax we are discussing is paid for using the highways for commercial purposes. These highways are primarily for use in the ordinary way — for the carriage of persons and property for non-commercial purposes — that is to say, without paying for such transportation. And the simple fact is that the use of them for direct financial gain may be conditioned very much as the Legislature deems proper. Packard
v. Banton,
The respondent insists that the statute amounts to an unwarrantable interference with interstate commerce.
There is no question of interstate commerce presented by this record. The question under the demurrer is: Do the facts charged constitute an offense? On this question, only what appears in the complaint, together with such facts as we take judicial notice of, if any, are to be considered. So stringent is this rule, that when a pleading is challenged by demurrer no facts de hors the record are for consideration though they be conceded at the hearing. Howard Nat. Bank v. Fidelity and Casualty Co.,
All that appears here is that the respondent lives in New Hampshire and operates his motor bus in Vermont. There is nothing said about interstate commerce, and nothing requiring an inference that the respondent is engaged in it. So far as shown, his business is all in this State. To be sure, one of the *156
specified grounds of demurrer, insisted upon below and insisted upon here, is that the statute interferes with interstate commerce. But to allow this specification of cause to have the force of an assertion of fact would be to make the demurrer "speak," and a speaking demurrer is properly overruled. 31 C.J. 816; Woods Malone v. Colony Bank,
The paramount authority of Congress over the whole subject of interstate commerce is, of course, admitted. But it is not everything that affects that commerce that burdens it. Minot v.Philadelphia, W. B.R.R. Co., 18 Wall. 206, 232,
So far as the Act in hand regulates motor vehicles in the interests of the public safety and welfare, there can be no question as to its validity. For it has been repeatedly and uniformly held that the commerce clause of the federal Constitution is not a limitation upon the proper and reasonable exercise of the police power abiding in the state; the question of the reasonableness of state action being a federal question. This proposition is too well established to require more than a single citation to support it. Atlantic Coast Line R.R. Co. v.Georgia
While a state may not require a private carrier engaged *157
in interstate commerce to become a public carrier, Michigan Pub.Util. Com. v. Duke,
The Supreme Court of the United States, the final and controlling authority on the question, has removed all uncertainty of the soundness of these cases. Hendrick v.Maryland,
The matter was before the court again in Kane v. New Jersey,
This doctrine was again approved in Michigan Public UtilitiesCommission v. Duke,
It may be true that in some of the foregoing cases the right under discussion is assigned to the police power rather than to the taxing power. But in our view this makes no difference in the result. You may call the charge imposed a "fee," or you may call it a "tax"; you may call the enactment imposing it a "police measure" or you may call it a "revenue measure"; it makes no difference. The validity of the Act in the respects here called in question is established.
*159Affirmed and remanded.