49 S.E. 348 | N.C. | 1904
The defendant was indicted for violating section 74, chap. 247, Laws 1903, in the following words: "The jurors for the State, upon their oath, present: That J. W. Roberson, late of the county of Franklin, at and in said *427 county * * * did engage in procuring laborers for employment out of the State without having first paid the license tax," etc., etc. The defendant made a motion in this Court to arrest the judgment for defect in the bill of indictment, in that it did not (588) charge that the defendant engaged in the business of procuringlaborers, etc.
The statute is in the following words: "On every emigrant agent or person engaged in procuring laborers for employment out of this State an annual license tax of one hundred dollars for the State and one hundred dollars for the county for each county in which such agent or person does business, the same to be collected by the sheriff. Any person engaging in this business without first paying said tax shall be guilty of a misdemeanor," etc. It is insisted by defendant's counsel that the statute is enacted and must be sustained under the power conferred upon the Legislature to tax trades, professions, franchises and incomes. Const., Art. V, sec. 3. That this section does not empower the Legislature to impose a tax upon the single act of procuring laborers, etc., but upon the business of doing so. That the last clause of the statute makes "engaging in this business," a misdemeanor, and that the charge in the bill must be as broad as the language of the statute. The well prepared brief cites a number of authorities sustaining this position. We do not question its correctness, and if the bill upon a reasonable construction simply charges a procuring of laborers, etc., the motion should be allowed. We are of the opinion, however, that the words "engaged in procuring laborers," etc., is equivalent to the charge of engaging in the business, etc. To say that one is engaged in an occupation signifies much more than the doing of one act in the line of such occupation. It is an expression in common use, and well understood, that one is engaged in merchandizing or in practicing law. Webster's International Dictionary defines — "Engage": "To embark in a business; to employ or involve oneself; to enlist." Century Dictionary: "To occupy oneself; be busied." 11 Am. Eng. Ency. (2 Ed.), 33. To charge that the defendant "did keep (589) a tenpin alley" was held not to be equivalent to charging that the defendant engaged in the business of keeping a tenpin alley.Eubanks v. State,
The jury found for their special verdict "That in February, 1904, the defendant J. W. Roberson did engage in the business of procuring laborers for employment out of the State, to-wit, for one R. H. Jones in the State of Georgia, without having paid or offered to pay the license tax, either to the State or county, required by section 74 of chap. 247, Laws 1903. The Court upon the special verdict adjudged the defendant guilty and pronounced judgment, to which he excepted and appealed. His first exception is based upon the contention that the tax imposed by the statute "is unreasonable, excessive, restrictive and prohibitive." It is conceded, and we have no difficulty in holding, that the statute is an exercise of the power to tax trades, professions, etc., and not a police regulation. The brief of the defendant seems to suggest that this Court in S. v. Moore,
No error.
Cited: Carr v. Comrs., ante, 126; S. v. Roberson, post, 592; S. v.Sheppard,