43 S.E. 936 | N.C. | 1903
This action was tried upon appeal from the decision of the mayor of the city of Salisbury upon a warrant charging the defendant with "engaging in the business of an itinerant merchant *733 and peddler, without first having paid the license tax as required by law, in violation of the charter of said city."
The jury, after being impaneled to try the issue in the case, found the following special verdict:
1. That Salisbury, in the county of Rowan, is a city duly incorporated by the General Assembly of the State of North Carolina.
2. That the charter of the said city of Salisbury, sec. 54, subsecs. 1 and 12, provides as follows:
"(1) On all itinerant merchants or peddlers offering to vend in said city, a privilege tax not exceeding $50 a year in addition to a tax not exceeding 1 per centum on the amount of their purchases, respectively; and among such itinerant merchants or peddlers (1040) shall be included, also, all itinerant venders of medicines or other articles."
"(12) Said board of aldermen may require and provide for the payment in advance of any license tax or privilege tax in this act authorized, and any person who in such case shall engage in any business, trade, occupation, calling, or profession upon or for which in any manner any such tax is allowed to be imposed without having paid such tax shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be fined not more than $50 or imprisoned not more than thirty days."
3. That there is in the city of High Point, North Carolina, about ______ miles from said city of Salisbury, a firm known as Ninestein Jarratt, and the defendant in this case is the senior member of the said firm.
4. That the said firm are wholesale dealers in produce, also in oranges, bananas, lemons, fruits, melons, etc., and sell only by wholesale.
5. That the defendant herein, senior member as aforesaid, travels for said firm, going from town to town in this State as traveling salesman.
6. On Monday, 30 June, 1902, the defendant came to Salisbury, and went to various merchants doing business in the said city, and offered to sell them watermelons in wholesale lots.
7. That said Ninestein went to see no one except merchants and refused to sell to anybody else.
8. That the defendant stated to said merchants that the melons were in High Point, in the wholesale house of Ninestein Jarratt, and that defendant was selling for them, and that if they gave an order, that the melons would be delivered as soon as he could send in the several orders, and goods would be shipped by freight. *734
9. That when the negotiations of sale were pending, the purchasers stated to defendant that they would rather wait and see the (1041) fruit and melons before buying. Defendant replied that he could not sell that way. That he would have to take their order and have it filled from High Point. That he would send the order by phone to High Point and have them loaded on afternoon freight.
10. That defendant took orders from C. J. Jeffress for 50 melons, D. M. Miller 25, and from various other merchants orders, amounting in the aggregate to 360 melons.
11. That the defendant sent the said orders to the house of Ninestein Jarratt at High Point by phone.
12. That Ninestein Jarratt shipped at once by freight to this defendant at Salisbury 360 melons, the waybill being marked N. J. consignor, consignee A. H. Ninestein.
13. That said melons were, by the railway, delivered to the defendant about 9 o'clock Tuesday morning, 1 July, 1902, and he employed one Julius Malone, a drayman in Salisbury, to assist him in the delivery of the melons. This defendant went around with the said Malone in the delivery of the melons to the various purchasers; said melons were delivered, and the defendant collected for some of the sales and the drayman for the others.
14. That no sale or delivery was made except to those firms from whom orders had been taken.
15. That the tax collector of the city of Salisbury demanded of the defendant the tax of $5 as a peddler, which the defendant refused to pay.
16. That he then demanded a tax of $25 as itinerant merchant, and he refused to pay this tax.
17. That the board of aldermen, as they had the right at law to do, had fixed the tax of a peddler at $5 and of an itinerant merchant at $25.
18. That the defendant sold said melons in the manner (1042) aforesaid without having paid any tax.
If upon the foregoing facts the court should be of the opinion that the defendant is guilty, then the jury so find; but if the court should be of the opinion that the defendant is not guilty, then the jury find him not guilty. Upon the special verdict the defendant is adjudged guilty and that he pay a fine of $25 and costs.
We think that the defendant was entitled to a judgment of acquittal upon the special verdict. It is evident that the defendant was not an itinerant merchant or salesman as defined in S. v. Gibbs, *735
The only remaining question is whether he was a statutory peddler under the definition of the Revenue Act. Ordinarily the General Assembly has no power to construe an act, but when it imposes a tax upon peddlers and in the same act defines who are peddlers, it is equivalent to imposing a tax upon all persons engaged in the occupations therein specified. Section 54, chapter 9, Laws 1901, declares that "any person carrying a wagon, cart or buggy for the purpose of exhibiting or delivering any wares or merchandise, shall be considered a peddler." But the same section expressly provides that: "This section shall not apply to those who sell or offer for sale ice, fuel, fish, vegetables, fruits or any articles of the (1043) farm or dairy." This language is certainly broad enough to include watermelons. The judgment is reversed and the court below will enter a verdict of not guilty.
Reversed.
Cited: Plymouth v. Cooper,