117 Ga. 292 | Ga. | 1903
The plaintiff in error, Stone, was brought to trial under an accusation in a city court, charging that he was “ a peddler or itinerant trader,” and that on or about the 29th day of March, 1902; in the county of Polk, in this State, he “ did sell goods, wares, merchandise, to wit, clocks, etc., . . . without license from the proper authorities,” contrary to law. A trial by jury being waived, the presiding judge heard the case upon the following agreed statement of facts: The accused “ was engaged in selling clocks by making a house-to-house canvass, soliciting orders for the same,” and “ he did make sales in Polk county, Georgia, on or about the 29th day of March, 1902, and had no license.” He “isa resident of Alabama, and is a traveling salesman for the L. B. Price Mercantile Co., a corporation chartered under the laws of Tennessee, and having [its] store in the city of Chattanooga. As such salesman Stone traveled and sold merchandise, clocks, etc., for the Price Mercantile Co. Defendant first came into Polk county and took orders for the various goods handled by the Price Mercantile Co. He then sent the orders to the office of the Price Mercantile Co., at Chattanooga, where the goods were. If the company approved the sales or orders, they would box up the goods sold and ship them to defendant Stone, all in one package, and Stone would receive them and deliver them
In view of previous rulings of this court, the accused was a peddler. Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Johnson, 84 Ga. 754; Racine Iron Co. v. McCommons, 111 Ga. 547. The controlling question made by the record is, whether the business carried on by the accused in the county of Polk comes within the protection afforded by the “interstate-commerce clause” of the Federal constitution. If we were free to follow the ruling and reasoning of this court, we would have to answer the question in the negative. Racine Iron Co. v. McCommons, supra. A decision of the Supreme Court of the United States construing a clause of theFederal constitution is, upon the question involved, the supreme law of this State, and consequently must be followed by this court, whatever may be our views as to the soundness of such a decision. In the case of Caldwell v. North Carolina, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on the 12th of January last, that court rendered a decision which requires us to hold that the business of the accused was protected by the “interstate-commerce clause” of the Federal, constitution. At the June term of the superior court of Guilford county, North Carolina, Caldwell was convicted of the alleged offense of having engaged in the business of delivering pictures without having first obtained a license so to do. An ordinance of the City of Greensboro, N. C., provided, “ That every person engaged in the business of selling or delivering picture-frames, pictures, photographs or likenesses of the human face, in the City of Greensboro, whether an order for the same shall have been previously taken or nob, unless the said business is carried on by the same person in connection with some other business for which a license has already been paid to the city, shall pay a license tax of ten dollars for each year. Any person engaging in said business without having paid the license tax required herein, shall be fined twenty dollars, and each and every sale or delivery shall constitute a separate and distinct offense.” It appeared that during 1900 the accused, being employed by the Chicago Portrait Company, a foreign corporation of Chicago, Ill., went to Greensboro, N. C.,
The Supreme Court of North Carolina endeavored to distinguish the case from that of Brennan v. Titusville, 153 U. S. 289, and Purches, J., who delivered the opinion, said: “ The defendant insists that Brennan v. City of Titusville . . ' is directly in point, —is in every essential fact this case, — and should control the opinion of the court on this appeal. And it is in many respects like this case, but there is one material difference between that case and this, which marks the distinction. In that case the goods were shipped directly to the purchaser. In this case they were shipped by the Chicago Company to itself, in the city of Greensboro ; and when they reached Greensboro the defendant, as the agent of the Chicago Company, received them from the railroad at its depot, carried them to its rooms in Greensboro, opened the boxes in which they were shipped, took out the pictures and picture-frames, assorted them and put them together, and delivered them to the purchaser in the city of Greensboro, and had been engaged in this work two days when arrested. If they had been completed and shipped directly to the parties for whom they were intended, this case would have fallen within the decision of Bren
It will be observed that the same line of reasoning was used in Racine Iron Co. v. McCommons, supra, in distinguishing that case from the cases in which decisions had then been rendered on the. subject by the Supreme Court of the United States. Mr. Justice Shiras, delivering the opinion in the Caldwell case, said: “ We are not persuaded by this reasoning. It seems to proceed upon'two propositions — first, that the pictures in question were not completed before they were brought to Greensboro; and, second, that' the articles were not shipped directly to the purchasers, but to the agent of the senders in Greensboro.” After disposing of the first of these propositions, the discussion of which is- not pertinent to the case which we have in hand, the learned Justice proceeded to say : “Nor does the fact that these articles were not shipped separately •and directly to eacli individual purchaser, but were sent to an agent ■of the vendor at Greensboro, who delivered them to the purchasers,