79 Mo. 210 | Mo. | 1883
This is an action instituted by the town of Pacific against the appellant to recover the sum of $90, as a penalty for refusing to take out a merchant’s license from said town. It appears from the evidence that Pacific was incorporated as a town in 1859 by an act of the legislature. Laws of 1859, p. 179. It is clear to my mind that no power was conferred upon the municipal authorities of this town to exact a merchant’s license by the original charter. This fact seems to have been recognized by the plaintiff, for, in 1874, it procured from the legislature an amendment to its charter, (Laws 1874, p. 353,) conferring on the trustees of said town authority “ by ordinance to impose a license tax on merchants ” and “ to provide for the collection of the same.” Judgment was rendered by the justice for the town, and defendant appealed to the circuit court, where, on a trial de novo, judgment was rendered again in favor of plaintiff, for the sum of $25, from which defendant has appealed to this court.
By section 7 of the charter of this town, as published in the laws of 1859, supra, it is provided that the trustees “ may impose fines or imprisonment for breach of any of their ordinances, such fine not to exceed $20, and such imprisonment not to-exceed ten days.” Under this statute, as published, it is quite clear there was no power vested by the charter in the trustees to pass an ordinance authorizing the imposition of a greater fine than $20. To meet this palpable objection the plaintiff at the trial offered and read
Eor twenty years the charter of the municipal corporation in question has stood with the word “ twenty ” unchallenged in the published statutes of the State. The defendant, with other citizens of that town, had a right to assume that the published statute was correct, and to act accordingly. It is contrary to the whole genius and spirit of our institutions that our penal statutes, or other statutes, affecting the personal property and rights of the citizens, should remain a sealed volume, or for twenty years lie unpublished in the vaults of the Secretary of State, to be brought forth for the first time on the arraignment of a citizen for a violation of some of its provisions, especially in a case like the one at bar.
"We make no controversy with the correctness of the rule, that in the case of a contest as to what is the best evidence of a legislative enactment, the original roll as deposited with the Secretary of State is to be preferred; for this is what the authorities and adjudications denominate “the statute roll.” Pacific R. R. Co. v. The Governor, 23 Mo. 353. Nor are we unmindful in the expression of these views of the danger suggested that the mere blunder of the secretary in his copying, or of the printer in publishing, might make a law without the legislative sanction. "We rely on the exceptional circumstances of the case at bar, on a very ancient and wise maxim that “ the law so favors the public good that it will permit a common error to pass for right.” Noy’s Maxims, 37, 4 Inst. 240.
This point came before the. Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Pease v. Peck, 18 How. 595. Mr. Justice Grier said: “ It is no doubt true, as a general mile, that the mistake of a transcriber or printer cannot change the law; and that when the statute published by authority is found to differ from the original on file among the public archives, the courts will receive the latter as containing the expressed will of the legislature in preference
There is another view of this case equally fatal to the-proceeding instituted in this case. Section 1 of the ordi2. an ordinance, nance passed by said town fixes a license tax on merchants of $10. Section 2 requires merchants tO’ pay an ad valorem tax equal to that assessed upon real estate. Section 3 provides that it shall be the duty of every such merchant, on or before a given time, who shall have-obtained a license, to file with a named officer a statement of the goods held by him between certain dates. This statement is to be abstracted and filed by the town clerk, certified and delivered to the collector, to be by him collected. Section 4 requires the merchant to verify this statement by affidavit. Section 5 is as follows: “ Every person, or co-partnership of persons, to whom a license shall have been granted, or who are required to obtain a
It is to be observed that two taxes are provided for in this ordinance. A revenue and license tax, which are distinct. Now, does section 5 provide anything more than a conviction, as for a misdemeanor, for failing to pay the revenue or ad valorem, tax ? Only the person who has obtained the license, or is required to obtain one, “and who shall have filed a statement as herein required and failed to pay, or refused to pay, the amount of revenue so owing to the collector of the town, or who shall fail to make the statements above required, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be punished by a fine. The words “failed to pay” from their context refer evidently to “ the revenue so owing to the collector.” It does not, in terms, provide any penalty for the failure to take out the license. The statute being in its nature penal must be strictly construed, and its provisions cannot be carried beyond its express terms. Fowler v. City of St. Joseph, 37 Mo. 228; Ellis v. Whitlock, 10 Mo. 781.
It is obvious, from the whole context of this section 5, that the subject matter in tho mind of the framer of it was the enforcement of tho duty of tho merchant to furnish a “ statement ” and to pay the collector the amount of that “ revenue.” The recognized distinction between a revenue taxation and a mere license, pertaining to police regulation, gives a clear meaning to the word “ revenue ” employed in the section under consideration.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court is not sustainable. The same is accordingly reversed and the action dismissed.