61 So. 488 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
The appellant, to save its agent from prosecution, paid under protest to the city of Troy, the sum of-§100 as a license tax for doing business in said
“Any person, firm, or corporation engaged in any trade, business or profession * * * within the corporate limits of said city of Troy, Alabama, shall pay a license therefor as follows: * * *
“237. Telegraph Companies. Each firm, person or corporation engaged in the business of a telegraph company in the city in sending messages from the city to any point in the state * * * $100.00.”
Then follows a penal provision, making it an offense, and fixing the punishment, for persons to engage in any business or occupation for which a license is required without first paying for and taking out such license.
This suit is to recover the license tax mentioned as so paid by appellant under protest, and the present is the second appeal of the case. On the former appeal (see City of Troy v. Western Union Tel. Co., 164 Ala. 482, 51 South. 523, 27 L. R. A. [N. S.] 627), which was before the creation of this court, only one question was considered, and that was as to whether or not the ordinance, being a measure designed to raise revenue, was void as exacting an unreasonable or prohibitive amount as a'license for doing the business in which the appellant was engaged. Following the rule that when the question as to the reasonableness of a city ordinance is raised, and it has reference to a subject-matter within the corporate jurisdiction, it will, if nothing to the contrary appears on its face, be presumed to be reasonable, until the contrary is established by proper evidence, our Supreme Court held that the evidence before them on that appeal, showing that during the year (1908) for which the license was collected, the appellant’s intrastate business was conducted at a loss, was not sufficient, as a matter of law, to overcome the presumption
Pending this appeal, tbe appellant by writ of error carried for review to the Supreme Court of the United States tbe judgment of our Supreme Court in another case, that of Williams v. City of Talladega, reported in 164 Ala. 633, 51 South. 330, involving the identical federal questions here presented in the last two points stated as to the invalidity of the ordinance before us; and we have purposely delayed a decision in this case, awaiting the determination of that review, to the end that we might conform our decision to that of the Supreme Court of the United States on those matters. 'Recently that court handed down its opinion, reported in D. G. Williams v. City of Talladega, 226 U. S. 404, 33 Sup. Ct. 116, 57 L. Ed. —, reversing the judgment of our Supreme Court in the same styled case reported in 164 Ala. 633, 51 South. 330, supra. The second ground upon which the ordinance before us is attacked, as here-inbefore set out, was there determined adversely to the contention of the appellant, and the third ground favorably to that contention. The questions involved and there adjudicated are of such wide public interest, affecting probably every municipality in the state, that we deem it wise to quote at length from that opinion, to the end that the information thereof may the sooner reach all parts of the state for the future guidance of the officers of the towns and cities that may be concerned.
Mr. Justice Day, delivering the said opinion of the United States Supreme Court in the case cited, said: “Williams, the plaintiff in error, was convicted of doing
This point was decided against the stated contention, and the court, after citing numerous decisions of its own sustaining its view, adds this conclusion in final disposition of that question: “These cases [the ones cited], taken together, establish the proposition that
Dealing with the next point there urged as to the invalidity of the ordinance, that court further said: “It is further contended that the tax is unreasonable and the ordinance therefore void because of its effect upon interstate business. The reasonableness of the ordinance, unless some federal right set up and claimed is violated, is a matter for the state to determine. It is contended that the result of the tax upon the intrastate business conducted at a loss is to impose a burden upon the interstate business and is therefore void. The Supreme Court of Alabama (Williams v. City of Talladega, 164 Ala. 623 [51 South. 330]), however, reached the conclusion that the attempted test (by the income and expenses) for 11 months, showing a loss of 86 cents, is not a sufficiently accurate representation of the business of the company conducted at Talladega to render the tax void. With this view we agree, and we are not satisfied that the tax is such as to impose a burden upon interstate commerce, and therefore make it subject to attack as a denial of federal right.”
Coming to the last point insisted upon in that case, the opinion proceeds: • “It is further contended that this ordinance is void because it makes no exception as
It will be observed that the ordinance here under consideration has the same defect as pointed out in that —it makes no exception from the business taxed of that part of it done by the telegraph company in sending and receiving government messages — -and, under the authority cited, must fall. Being void for this reason, it becomes unnecessary to determine as to whether or not it is also void as exacting an unreasonable amount for the privilege of engaging in the business licensed.