29 P. 855 | Idaho | 1892
This is an action brought to recover from the defendants the sum of $125, alleged to be due the state for a license for selling intoxicating liquors for the quarter commencing October 1, 1891, and involves the constitutionality of an act entitled “An act to regulate the sale of intoxicatingliquors,” approved February 6,1891. (See Idaho 1st Sess. Laws, p. 33.) The case was tried upon an agreed stipulation of facts, and judgment rendered by the court below in favor of the plaintiff, from which judgment this appeal was taken. The appellants contend that the court below erred (1) in holding that section 4 of said act approved February 6, 1891, was constitutional; and (2) in case said section is constitutional, then the court erred in rendering judgment against the defendants for more than seventy-five dollars.
After the case was submitted to this court, Messrs. Hawley & Reeves having been retained to present to the district court of the third judicial district, and from that court to this court, for final decision, a case involving the constitutionality of said act, approved February 6, 1891, upon their application were permitted to present their printed brief in this case, to be considered by this court in the final determination of the case. In addition to the two points raised by appellant’s specification of
We will first consider the point as to whether said act was legally enacted by the legislature. The passage of the act in question occurred as follows: The bill was introduced in the House of Representatives, January 5, 1891, a,nd designated as “House Bill No. 24,” and entitled “An act to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors in less quantities than one quart” (see House Jour. 1891, p. 45) and was thereafter passed and transmitted to the Senate. The Senate passed the bill, with amendments February 3, 1891. The bill was then returned to the House, with the Senate amendments, and on the fifth day of February, 1891, the bill, with the Senate amendments, was taken up by the House, and adopted and concurred in. It was then moved to amend the title to said bill by striking out the following words, to wit, “in less quantities that one quart,” which amendment was agreed to, and said words, stricken out. (See House Jour., pp. 114, 115.) The bill was not returned to the Senate for its concurrence in the House amendment of the title, but was referred to the committee on enrollment, and thereafter reported'as correctly enrolled, and presented to the governor for his approval, with the title as amended, on February 6, 1891, and approved by him on that day. The provisions of section 4 of said bill, when first introduced in and passed by the House of Representatives, related to the sale of intoxicating liquors in less quantities than one quart, but when amended by the Senate related or applied to intoxicating liquors to be drank in, on, or about the premises where sold, regardless of the quantity.
The Senate, after so amending the bill as to strike out all provisions contained therein in regard to the quantity of intoxicating liquors sold, omitted or failed to strike out of the title that part thereof referring to quantity. That failure or omission may be regarded as a mere oversight or clerical error.
It is contended that section 4 of the act in question is in conflict with the provisions of sections 2 and 5 of article 7 of the constitution of Idaho, requiring equality and uniformity of taxation upon the same class of subjects. Section 4 of said act provides as follows: “The amount to be paid by each applicant for such license shall be the sum of $500 per year, or a proportionate amount for each fraction of a year, in any city, town, village, or hamlet where, at the last general election next preceding the date of the application for license, the total vote for governor exceeded one hundred and fifty votes, and $300 per year in all other cities, towns, villages, or hamlets; provided, that all persons engaged in retailing liquors in connection with a hotel or tavern where meals and lodgings are kept and furnished in good faith for the entertainment of travelers, at any point distant three miles or more outside of the limits of any city, town, village, or hamlet, shall pay a license therefor of $100 per year or a proportionate amount for each fractional part of a year; and provided, further, that no license issued under the provisions of this act shall be for a less time than three months, and no license shall be granted for a longer period than one year.” Section 2, article 7 of the constitution is as follows: “The legislature shall provide such revenue as •may be needful, by levying a tax by valuation, so that every person or corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her, or its property, except as in this article hereinafter otherwise provided. The legislature may also impose a license tax both upon natural persons and upon corporations, other than municipal, doing business in this state; also a per capita tax; provided, the legislature may exempt a limited amount of improvements upon land from taxation.” Section 5 of said article 7 is as follows: “All taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects, within the territorial limits of the authority levying
We are of the opinion that the provisions of said sections of the constitution requiring equality and uniformity of taxation upon the same class of subjects do not apply to the license tax provided for in said section 4 of said act. No one can doubt, (who reads the act in question) that the intention of the legislature, in its passage, was to regulate a traffic which was believed by them to be pernicious in its effects upon society, and not for the purpose of raising revenue. The principal object was to regulate such trafie, not to raise revenue. The constitutional provision in regard to equality and uniformity of taxation has reference solely to “taxation,” pure and simple, according to the commonly accepted meaning of that term, for the purpose of revenue only. It does not apply to those impositions made under the police power of the state, as a means of constraining and regulating a business that may be regarded as evil in its effects upon society. In Burroughs on Taxation (page 147) it is stated that the provisions of the constitution as to equality and uniformity of taxation do not apply to licenses. (See, also, 1 Desty on Taxation, 305, note 5; 2 Desty on Taxation, 1385 et seq.; Fahey v. State, 27 Tex. App. 146, 11 Am. St. Rep. 182, 11 S. W. 108; Allentown v. Gross, 132 Pa. St. 319, 19 Atl. 269; Pleuler v. State, 11 Neb. 547, 10 N. W. 481; East St. Louis v. Wehrung, 46 Ill. 392; People v. Thurber, 13 Ill. 554; Wiggins Ferry Co. v. East St. Louis, 102 Ill. 560; Distilling Co. v. Chicago, 112 Ill. 19; New Orleans v. Railroad Co., 41 La. Ann. 519, 7 South. 83.)
The contention that said section 4 is unconstitutional, for the reason that the license tax is not the same on each person engaged in selling intoxicating liquors, is fully answered by the authorities last above cited. Under said act the license tax is