14 S.E.2d 714 | Ga. | 1941
A corporation causing to be made by its employees more than two trips per month into this State with a motor truck is liable for the maintenance tax provided for in the act approved December 24, 1937 (Ga. L. Ex. Sess. 1937-8, pp. 259 et seq.), regardless of whether it be shown that the trips were made by the same truck or different trucks.
The record calls for a construction of so much of the act of the General Assembly of this State, relating to motor vehicles, approved December 24, 1937 (Georgia L. Ex. Sess. 1937-8, pp. 259 et seq.), as is contained in section 8 thereof, as follows: "Be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that all persons, firms, corporations or associations, whether resident or non-resident of this State, making or causing to be made by or through any of their agents, servants, or employees more than two trips per month into this State with any of the vehicles herein named, shall be liable to and shall pay the tax herein provided for, except that any of the named vehicles named herein shall be allowed a maximum of ten trips per month into this State, for the purpose of hauling seasonable agricultural products grown in this State, without payment of the tax herein provided for." It is the contention of the plaintiff that under this section each truck or any truck of a non-resident of the State is permitted to make two trips a month into the State without payment of the maintenance tax elsewhere provided for in the act, but that should any particular truck make more than two trips per month into the State, as allowed by this section, then and thereupon the owner of such truck becomes liable for the maintenance tax on that particular truck. On the other *88
hand, it is the contention of the defendants that a non-resident truck owner is limited to a total of two trips per month into the State, whether by a single truck or by different trucks; and that when this limit is exceeded, the owner becomes liable to tax, although a particular truck may never have made more than one trip into the State. The judge, under the evidence in the record, was authorized to find that during a certain month more than two trucks of plaintiff did enter the State. The tax here involved has been held to be a maintenance tax. It is not a tax on the truck itself, but upon the owner. Compare Dixie-Ohio ExpressCo. v. State Revenue Com.,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.