106 Mo. 149 | Mo. | 1891
Defendant was prosecuted upon information before a justice of the peace in Sullivan county, Missouri. The cause was taken to the circuit court and there heard upon the following agreed statement of facts, made by the prosecuting attorney and the counsel for the defendant:
“agreement.
“State oe Missouri, ss. “Sullivan County,
“I. N. Smithson. ‘ ‘ State of Missouri v.
“Whereas, I. N. Smithson has been arrested by the constable of Jackson township, county of Sullivan, state of Missouri, on a warrant and information sworn out before J. C. Watson, justice of the peace, in and for said township, and whereas, a question of law is the only question involved, and the facts are substantially agreed to. Therefore, it is agreed, by and between the parties hereto, that said I. N. Smithson has, without license, sold and delivered, at the time and place of sale, medicine in Sullivan county, Missouri, traveling from place to place in a two-horse wagon ; that said I. N. Smithson is an employe,'or traveling salesman of S. F. Baker & Son, of Keokuk, Lee county, in the state of Iowa, working on a salary by the year; that the property he sold, as above set out, is the property of S. P. Baker & Son; that said S. P. Baker & Son are manufacturers of proprietary medicines, residing in the state of Iowa, and sell the same by use of traveling salesmen, such as I. N. Smithson. It is further agreed that this case shall be submitted on this agreed statement of facts to the circuit court, at its next term, held*152 on the third Monday in May, 1889, at Milan, Missouri, and that, pending this case, said I. N. Smithson shall go on with his business in Sullivan county, and in case the decision is adverse to said I. N. Smithson, and the circuit court should hold, he was liable to the license law under which he was arrested, then said I. N. Smithson shall take out a license dating back to the time when he began to do business in Sullivan county, viz., February 7, 1889, and he agrees to pay said license, reserving the right to an appeal to the supreme court of Missouri and supreme court of the United States. Said Smithson is a resident of Iowa and sells from samples of medicines left with the purchasers and circulars left in advertising.
“ Craig, McCrary & Craig,
“Attorneys fori. N. Smithson, defendant.
“D. M. Wilson,
“Prosecuting Attorney, Sullivan county, Missouri.”
On this agreed statement of facts the matter came up for trial before Judge Burgess, of the circuit court at Milan, Missouri, on the twenty-fifth day of May, 1889, and defendant was fined $50. From this judgment he has appealed to this court on the ground that a constitutional question is involved.
Prior to the year 1877, the first section of chapter 106, 2 Wagner’s Missouri Statutes, entitled “peddlers’ licenses,” was as follows: “Whoever shall deal in the selling of patent or* other medicines, goods, wares and merchandise, except books, charts, maps and stationery, which are not the growth, produce or manufacture of this state, by going from place to place to sell the same, is declared to be a peddler.” Section 2 provided no person should deal as a, peddler without a license, and section 7 fixed the license tax on all peddlers’ licenses.
In 1874, Welton was indicted in Henry county, Missouri, for selling goods as a peddler without a License. He claimed that the above-quoted statute was
In deference, presumably, to this decision of the supreme court of the United States, the statute was amended in 1877, so that it now reads : Section 7211. “Whoever shall deal in the selling of patents, patent rights, patent or other medicines, lightning rods, goods, wares or merchandise, except books, charts, maps and stationery, by going from place to place to sell the same, is declared to be a peddler.” Section 7212 provides that no person shall deal as a peddler without a license. Section 7217 fixes the license fee for peddling in a cart or other land carriage, $20 for six months. Section 7219 fixes a penalty of $50 for dealing as a peddler with horse and wagon, without license.
By the amendment of the statute the discriminating feature has been eliminated, and it would seem it is no longer open to the objection upon which it was held unconstitutional.
In the case of State v. Emert, 103 Mo. 241, upon a review of all the decisions, this court held that the present statute “makes no distinction between articles manufactured and owned by residents of other states and those manufactured and owned by residents of this
The acts of the defendant constituted him a peddler within the statute, section 7211. That the state has the right to require a license tax on different occupations is, we think, well settled both by state and federal decisions. Machine Co. v. Gage, 100 U. S. 676; Simmons v. State, 12 Mo. 271; St. Louis v. Laughlin, 49 Mo. 559 ; St. Louis v. Sternberg, 69 Mo. 289.
Defendant insists, however, that the state of Missouri cannot exact a license of him as a condition precedent to his right to sell under the facts disclosed in the agreed state of case. Questions like this require the greatest care and deliberation. Many of these questions have been settled as pointed out by Judge Macfarlane in State v. Emert, supra. We do not think that the defendant has raised a constitutional question on the admitted facts. It does not appear that the medicines he was selling were manufactured beyond the limits of this state. It does not appear,, if they were so manufactured or compounded, when, or in what shape, or what size packages they were transported into this state; nor are we informed in what size packages he was selling these, whether in the original package or otherwise. Indeed, only inferentially can we surmise they were the products oí S. P. Baker & Co.’s own compounding. That firm might have bought a drug store in this state. They manufactured medicines in Iowa, but were these medicines that were sold by defendant in Sullivan county some of their manufacture ? If so, when sold were they in the original package in which they were brought into this state ? The answer to these questions might bring up a federal question, but, until then, we see no reason for entering upon a discussion that is always more or less delicate. We decide the case upon grounds that we think are clear, and have no disposition to discuss matters not in the record.