The plaintiff sued the City and County of San Francisco to recover license taxes paid during the years 1933 to 1936, inclusive. The judgment was for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.
During the period involved, the plaintiff was engaged in the business of outdoor advertising, as defined in ordinance No. 4059 (new series) adopted bjr the board of supervisors of the city and county and approved by the mayor in 1917. Pursuant to that ordinance as amended in 1920 by ordinance No. 5133 (new series), and ordinance No. 5132 (new series), entitled “An Ordinance imposing License Taxes on Certain Businesses, Callings, Trades, or employments within the City and County of San Francisco”, as adopted in 1920, the plaintiff paid each quarter-yearly license fee of $90. On the trial of the action it was stipulated and found by the court that the tax paid by the plaintiff was a tax imposed for revenue only. The judgment for the plaintiff was based on the trial court’s conclusion that the charter of the City and County of San Francisco does not authorize the imposition and collection of license taxes for revenue purposes.
On this appeal the defendant concedes that the charter provisions do not purport in express words to confer a grant of power upon the city to impose license taxes for revenue purposes. But the city contends that the present charter, which contains the provisions permitted by sections 6 and 8 of article XI of the state Constitution as amended in 1914, is an instrument of restrictions and limitations only; that no restriction appears therein upon the exercise of the taxing power evidenced by the ordinances here involved; therefore that the power may so be exercised without an express grant thereof in the charter.
The plaintiff relies in part upon the general state policy reflected in sections 3366 and 4041.14 of the Political Code to the effect that legislative bodies of counties and cities shall, for purposes of regulation and not otherwise, have power to license all and every kind of business not prohibited
Prior to 1914 the Constitution (art. XI, sec. 6) provided that cities and towns, except in municipal affairs, should be subject to and be controlled by general laws. The defendant’s charter of 1899 was framed in conformity with the opinion then prevailing that a city charter must contain a specific grant of power with reference to its conduct of municipal affairs. That charter (subd. 15, sec. 1, chap. 2, art. II, Stats. 1899, pp. 241, 249) contained an express grant of power to levy license taxes for revenue purposes.
(In re Higgins, 50
Cal. App. 533 [
The amendment of section 6 of article XI of the Constitution, adopted in 1914, provided that cities and towns theretofore or thereafter organized, by creating new charters or by amending existing charters, could become empowered “to make and enforce all laws and regulations in respect to municipal affairs, subject only to the restrictions and limitations provided in their several charters, and in respect to other matters, they shall be subject to and controlled by general laws”. At the same time the following sentence was included in an amendment to section 8 (providing the manner whereby a city having a designated population may frame and adopt a charter for its own government) : “It shall be competent in any charter framed under the authority of this section to provide that the municipality governed thereunder may make and enforce all laws and regulations in respect to municipal affairs, subject only to the restrictions and limitations provided in their several charters, and in respect to other matters they shall be subject to general laws. ’ ’
Since the 1914 amendments to the Constitution San Francisco has adopted a new charter, called the charter of 1932. (Stats. 1931, pp. 2973, 2978.) Section 2 of that charter contains the following provision: 11 The city and county may make and enforce all laws, ordinances and regulations necessary, convenient or incidental to the exercise of all rights and powers in respect to its affairs, officers and employees, and shall have all the rights and powers appropriate to a county, a city, and a city and county, subject only to the restrictions and limitations provided in this charter, . . . The specification or enumeration in this charter of particular powers shall not be exclusive. The exercise of all rights and powers of the city and county when not prescribed in this charter shall be as provided by ordinance or resolution of the board of supervisors.” That section also provides that all ordinances or resolutions in force at the effective date of the charter and not inconsistent therewith shall continue in force until amended or repealed.
Section 24 of said charter, treating of “permits and inspections”, is the section which states the limitations and restrictions upon the power to issue licenses. The pertinent portions of that section are as follows:
“The board of supervisors shall regulate, by ordinance, the issuance and revocation of licenses and permits for the use of, obstruction of • or encroachment on public streets and places, . . . ;. and for the operation of business or privileges which affect the health, fire-prevention, fire-fighting, crime, policing, welfare or zoning conditions of or in the city and county; and for such other matters as the board of supervisors may deem advisable. Such ordinance shall fix the fees or licenses to be charged, which shall be not less thanthe cost to the city and county of regulation and inspection; . . . The chief of police in the performance of police duties shall have power to examine at any time the books and premises of pawnbrokers, peddlers, junk and second-hand dealers, auctioneers and other businesses designated by the board of supervisors, and the tax collector shall have power to examine the books of any business for which a license is issued and a fee charged on the basis of the receipts of such business, . . .
“No license tax shall be imposed on any seller or manufacturer of goods, wares or merchandise operating at a fixed place of business in the city and county, except such as require permits or licenses in accordance with or under authority of any local health, sanitary or other ordinance under the police power. ’ ’
As noted, it is the plaintiff’s contention that inasmuch as the foregoing section does not contain an express provision granting the right to impose license taxes for revenue purposes, and because, so it is claimed, a charter is a grant of power, the right to levy such taxes may not be implied.
It is now established by a line of decisions of the courts of this state that a city which has availed itself of the provisions of the Constitution as amended in 1914 has full control over its municipal affairs unaffected by general laws on the same subject-matters, and that it has such control whether or not its charter specifically provides for the particular power sought to be exercised, so long as the power is exercised within the limitations or restrictions placed in the charter.
(Siege
v.
City of Richmond,
The decisions relied upon by the plaintiff such as
City and County of San Francisco
v.
Boyle, supra, Whitmore
v.
Brown,
The plaintiff also places special reliance upon the case of
City of Pasadena
v.
Charleville, supra.
It urges the conclusion from the decision in that case that the present charter of the City and County of San Francisco was not drawn as an acceptance of the general grant contained in the amended sections of article XI of the Constitution, and as an instrument of limitations and restrictions ; but that it was framed as a grant of express powers. By an amendment to its charter in 1923 the city of Pasadena had availed itself of the privilege extended by sections 6 and 8 of article XI as amended. In that ease it was said: “But it is not necessary that the charter specifically legislate on the subject. In order to remove the city’s municipal
No doubt is entertained upon the proposition that the levy of taxes by a municipality for revenue purposes, including license taxes, is strictly a municipal affair.
(Ex parte Braun,
It follows that if the charter does not contain any limitation or restriction upon the power of the City of San Francisco to levy license taxes for revenue purposes, such taxes may legally be imposed and collected. An analysis of the pertinent charter provisions discloses that the framers thereof were careful to preserve rather than to prohibit the right to exercise the power here asserted by the city. There is no provision in the charter which denies the city’s right to levy license taxes for revenue purposes on the business of the plaintiff herein. The plaintiff refers to the clause,
Further rules of construction invoked by the plaintiff are inappropriate here. The contentions in respect to such rules presuppose and are based upon the assumption that the charter is a grant of enumerated powers, rather than an instrument of limitations and restrictions upon the exercise of existing powers relating to municipal affairs. Inasmuch as it is the latter, the rule that taxing statutes must be strictly construed against the taxing power cannot, under the authorities hereinabove cited, have the effect to restrict the city’s power to exercise the right except to the extent that such right is expressly limited by the provisions of the charter. Also, inasmuch as the instrument is one of limitations and restrictions only, the rule
expressio unius est exclusio alterius
would not operate as contended by the plaintiff. The only express limitation upon the right to impose license taxes for revenue purposes having been directed to include certain specified businesses, we may not infer a limitation upon the exercise of that power in respect to businesses not mentioned. Similar rules of construction were rejected in
In re Nowak (supra,
at p. 707). Even if section 24 of the charter should, according to the plaintiff’s view,
We therefore conclude that the Constitution and not the charter is the source of the city’s power to levy taxes; that pursuant to the constitutional grant which has been accepted by the city, it has acquired complete control over its municipal affairs, including the power to levy license taxes for revenue purposes; that the restrictions on the exercise of that power are only the limitations and restrictions appearing in the Constitution and in the charter itself; and that inasmuch as the charter contains no express limitation upon the power to impose license taxes for revenue purposes upon the class of business conducted by the plaintiff herein, the taxes paid by it and herein sought to be recovered were not illegally imposed. It is not contended that the tax ordinance violates any provision of the Constitution.
The foregoing conclusion renders it unnecessary to discuss other questions presented.
The judgment is reversed.
Curtis, J., Waste, C. J., Carter, J., Houser, J., and Gibson, J., concurred.
