299 P. 652 | Wash. | 1931
L.L. Swaney was convicted of the crime of conducting a drug store in Bucoda, Washington, *44 a town of the fourth class, without complying with an ordinance requiring a license to carry on such business, and has appealed from a fine and judgment of one dollar and costs.
The facts were stipulated. The case presents the sole question of the validity of the ordinance enacted by the town council of Bucoda under § 1, chapter 207, Laws of 1927, p. 302; Rem. 1927 Sup., § 9175, relating to the power of municipal corporations of the fourth class to levy and collect taxes and license certain kinds of business, subdivision ten of which provides that such municipal corporations shall have power "to license, for purposes of regulation and revenue, all and every kind of business, authorized by law and transacted and carried on in such town," etc. Concededly, the ordinance is a revenue measure, and prescribes license fees for forty-one different kinds of business, fixing the amount for each and providing that such fee shall be paid by all persons, firms or corporations carrying on such business.
The question of power conferred by the legislature upon municipal corporations to levy taxes for revenue purposes upon different kinds of business conducted in the city was discussed and sustained in Stull v. De Mattos,
[1] Appellant, admitting that the purpose of the ordinance is revenue, does not claim that the amount of the license fee for conducting a drug store is unreasonable, or that there is any discrimination or unjust classification in the scheme of the ordinance. One objection urged by him, as we understand, is that his business, being a common and useful one, can be made to pay only such license fee as is necessary to make *45
compensation for services of inspection and regulation, but that it cannot be taxed. He relies on the case of Seattle v.Dencker,
In that case, it was said:
". . . that it is a well-known attribute of sovereignty to tax occupations for the purpose of raising revenue, and that such tax may be imposed in the form of a license fee."
It is true that, in a somewhat general discussion in that case, upon speaking of the useful trades and employments, it was said to be well settled that the license required of employments of that character "can carry with it only such fee as is necessary to make compensation for the regulation services and cannot be perverted into a tax." Clearly, however, that statement was not necessary to the decision, because the case did not involve either a statute or ordinance providing for the exercise of the power to license for revenue, but only involved "an ordinance licensing certain automatic devices, and provided a penalty for violation," which ordinance was held to be invalid because discriminatory, as heretofore stated.
Later, in Seattle v. King,
And further and more specifically answering the contention that the ordinance was void because the license fee was more than enough to reimburse the city for issuing the license, and for expenses incident to the regulation of the business, attention was called to the meaning of the statute as explained inFleetwood v. Read,
That statute, applicable to cities of the first class, as construed in the cases of Fleetwood v. Read and Seattle v.King, supra, confers the same power upon cities of that class as is given in the statute involved in this case to cities and towns of the fourth class. And in Pacific Tel. Tel. Co. v. Everett,
Other cases cited by counsel for the appellant are In reAubrey,
The only language of the ordinance referred to for that argument is found in § 5 and, in our opinion, is misunderstood by counsel. That section provides that it shall be unlawful to engage in any of forty-one kinds of business, that are enumerated, without first obtaining a license; "application for which shall be made to and approved by the town council." The provision is not that application shall be made to some subordinate official who is directed to make an examination, exercise discretion, and favor or refuse an application, nor that the council itself shall conduct an examination, exercise discretion, or have the power of arbitrary choice or refusal, as ordinarily found in ordinances of a regulatory sort that have from time to time been declared by the courts to be invalid.
Here, the language is plain and mandatory with respect to the application, to the effect that it shall be made to, and approved by, the town council, and, without question, reasonably construed, means that the application complying in form with the terms of the ordinance as to kind of business, length of time, and the amount of the license fee, shall or must be approved by the town council. This being a revenue measure relating to forty-one different kinds of ordinary, common businesses that may be licensed, the approval of *48 the city council to an application in proper form may be compelled, for aught that appears in the language of the ordinance.
Affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., MAIN, MILLARD, and HOLCOMB, JJ., concur.