OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment. The complaint alleged that the defendant had failed to pass an ordinance imposing a lawful license tax for the tax period beginning July 1, 1967, in accordance with the provisions of § 46-4 — 2, N.M.S.A. 1953. The defendant answered and, upon consideration of appellees’ motion, the pleadings and the deposition of the Mayor of the City of Carlsbad, the court granted summary judgment, and the city has appealed.
Ordinance No. 298, upon which the city relies, was enacted in 1945, the pertinent provisions of which read:
“ARTICLE III.
License Ta-v
“SECTION 1. That there is hereby imposed an annual license tax upon retailers, dispensers, and clubs selling, possessing for the purpose of sale, or offering for sale, alcoholic liquors within the City of Carlsbad, New Mexico. “SECTION 2. That the amount of said license tax is as follows:
For retailers ...............$2,000.00
For dispensers .............$2,000.00
For clubs ...................$175.00
“SECTION 3. The license tax period shall begin July 1st of each year and •end June 30th of the following year,
The ordinance was enacted pursuant to authority vested by § 46-4-2, supra, which in part reads:
“Municipalities within or composing local option districts are hereby empowered, by duly adopted ordinance, to im•pose an annual, nonprohibitive municipal 'license tax upon the privileges of persons holding state licenses under the provisions of this act to operate within such municipalities as retailers, dispensers or clubs. The amount of such license tax and the dates and manner of the payment thereof shall be fixed on or before the first day of June of each year by the ordinance imposing the same. n¡ * *»
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The narrow point on appeal is whether the ordinance, thus enacted, imposed a valid license tax for the tax period beginning July 1, 1967. Admittedly, it had never been modified since its enactment. Appellant contends that the ordinance remains in effect until it is amended or repealed. Appellees contend that the statute requires the enactment of a license tax ordinance annually in order to have a valid imposition of the tax. The trial court sustained appellees’ contention and granted their motion for summary judgment.
We find the statute free of ambiguity; hence, it must be given its literal meaning. Weiser v. Albuquerque Oil and Gasoline Company,
We conclude that the tax imposed by the ordinance is a privilege tax imposed on a certain class of persons for the privilege of carrying on businesses for which a license is required. See American Nat. Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. City of Baltimore,
Appellees challenge the constitutionality of the statute and the ordinance as an abridgment of due process and the equal protection clause of Art. 2, § 18 and Art. 8, § 1, New Mexico Constitution and the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. In support of their position they argue that had evidence been presented it would have shown a gross disparity of annual income between the various retailers, dispensers and clubs operating within the municipality. The claim of unconstitutionality must be rejected. Having concluded that the tax involved is a privilege tax, appellees’ argument must fail, for, as such, it is in the nature of a non-property tax to which Art. 8, § 1, is not applicable. See Flynn, Welch & Yates v. State Tax Commission,
The judgment should be reversed, and it is so ordered.
