Steidl v. State ex rel. School District

63 Neb. 695 | Neb. | 1902

Pound, 0.

Tbis is an application for a writ of mandamus to compel respondent, as treasurer of tbe city of Crete, to turn into tbe school funds certain moneys, alleged to bave been collected upon saloon licenses. Tbe lower court granted tbe writ, and respondent comes bere on error. Tbe case, as far as its merits are concerned, differs from State v. Aitken, 61 Nebr., 490, only in that it is much more clear. In the Aitken Case there were somewhat skilfully drawn provisions in tbe ordinance levying tbe alleged occupation tax, *696intended to cover np and conceal the design to evade the requirements of the constitution as to disposition of license moneys. No one could well doubt in either case that the purpose of levying the j>retended occupation tax was to divert a portion of the moneys rightfully belonging to the school district to other purposes. In the case at bar, not only do the history of the ordinances and the course of practice under them, as shown in evidence, indicate as much, but the ordinance itself, under which the alleged occupation tax is collected, is as clearly a licensing ordinance as express language and express provisions can make it. In the Aitken Case there may have been some doubt upon the face of the ordinance. In this case we eee no, room for any. Section 1 of the ordinance in question provides that “each and every person, firm, association or corporation carrying on the occupation or business herein mentioned, within the limits of the city of Crete, shall pay into the city treasury annually, the sums named as hereinafter provided as a special license tax.” Section 2 provides that “the money paid into the city treasury under the provisions of this ordinance, shall constitute and be known as the special license tax fund.” Section 4 provides that “under the provisions of this ordinance and the powers vested in cities of the second class, there is hereby levied on * * * saloons retailing liquors as a beverage, in addition to such sums as are now or hereafter shall be required under the laws of Nebraska, per annum |500. Amended, and each saloon retailing as above can not take out a license for a less term than one year.” Section 5 provides that “all licenses provided for under this ordinance shall be issued and signed by the clerk and mayor. They shall specify the amount of money paid, the kind of business licensed, the name of the person to whom issued, and the length of time for which the same was signed. The city clerk shall attest all licenses with the corporate seal, and shall deliver the same to the person applying therefor only on the production of a receipt signed by the city treasurer for the sum of money required by the ordi*697nance. The person or persons to whom license is issued shall produce same for inspection, on demand of any resident of the city. No license shall be transferable in any manner whatever.” * * * Section 6 provides that “all licenses issued under the provisions of this ordinance shall commence and end with the fiscal year.” Section 8 provides that “all persons who are required to take out a license other than per day or week, under the provision of this ordinance, shall apply to the city clerk for the same, on or before the first Tuesday in May, of each year, or as soon thereafter as they engage in business.” Section 9 provides that “any person violating any of the provisions of this ordinance, or transacting any of the kinds of business herein taxed without having first obtained license therefor, as herein provided, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall pay a fine of not less than five (5) dollars, and not more than one hundred ($100) dollars or may be imprisoned not more than ten days; and, moreover, be liable to a civil action for the amount of each license taxed.” A case more squarely within the rules laid down in State v. Aitken, supra, and Magneau v. City of Fremont, 30 Nebr., 843, could scarcely be conceived. But those cases apart, and the circumstances ■ disregarded which show, as they did in the Aitken Case, that the pretended occupation tax and the admitted license fee are merely parts of one payment required as condition of a license, every feature of the ordinance stamps it as a licensing, as distinguished from an ordinary taxing, measure. Pleuler v. State, 11 Nebr., 547.

Some questions of practice' are raised which require brief notice. The application for the tvrit was in the form of a petition, verified by one of the officers of the relator on information and belief. Afterwards a motion was filed as required by the statute?** Treating the verified petition as__ an affidavit, it was obviously defective because not sworn to positively/ State v. County Commissioners, 49 Nebr., 51. '"But we think it no less clear that the defect was an in- — formality which might be cured by amendment,-finder sec*698tion 653, Code of Civil Procedure. Another officer of the corporation, prior to the hearing, made an affidavit in which he testified positively to the essential facts alleged in the application. We see no reason why this was not equivalent to amendment, and a sufficient amendment, under the section cited. Hence we think the court properly refused to strike the latter affidavit from the files, and that the several objections to the original verification do not require our attention. The only other points made relate to the demand prior to application for the writ, which we think was sufficiently alleged and proved.

It is recommended that the judgment he affirmed.

Barnes and Oldham, CC., concur.

By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is

Affirmed.

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