American Tobacco Co. v. City of Danville

99 S.E. 733, 125 Va. 12, 1919 Va. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1919
DocketNo. 1; No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 733 (American Tobacco Co. v. City of Danville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Tobacco Co. v. City of Danville, 99 S.E. 733, 125 Va. 12, 1919 Va. LEXIS 2 (Va. 1919).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

These cases, while depending upon different principles, were submitted together, and hence will be disposed of in one opinion.

1. The pertinent facts in Case No. 1 may be thus stated: The city of Danville filed its motion for judgment (Acts 1916, p. 729) against the American Tobacco Company for the recovery of $5,724.26, alleged to be the balance due on "the omitted and corrected assessment of its license tax on the business of purchasing leaf tobacco in that city for the year ending April 1, 1917, and there was a judgment in favor of the city, of which the company is here complaining. Danville has been for many years a very large tobacco market, targe manufacturers of tobacco have for years had their agents there engaged in the business of purchasing leaf tobacco. The American Tobacco Company had been a large purchaser. For more than twenty years the city has annually imposed a license tax on the business, and until it refused to pay the increased tax here involved, the company has always paid every similar tax assessed against it. Section 56 of the license tax ordinance for the year beginning May 1, 1916, approved on April 29, 1916, imposed a tax of $10 on the first $1,000 of purchases of leaf tobacco, and five cents on each $100 of purchases in excess of the first $1,000 upon “every person or firm for the privilege of conducting the business of purchasing leaf tobacco in the city of Danville, whether fox manufacture, resale or other purpose, except as a commission merchant.” The licensee was required to report purchases on October 1st and April [16]*161st. On October 1, 1916, the company reported purchases for the preceding six months amounting to $98,384.44, and on April 1, 1917, for the preceding six months of $665,-849.75, and the assessments at five cents on the $100 were made and the tax thereon paid. For many years the city of Danville has also assessed the leaf tobacco held by the company and other owners thereof in the city of Danville on the first of February of each year and collected taxes thereon at the rate imposed on other tangible personal property. It had done so for the years 1916 and 1917, but by reason of the segregation act of 1915 (Laws 1915, C. 85) and the classification of “materials on hand,” held by manufacturers as invested capital, and hence taxable as intangible personal property, the local authorities were confronted with a very large deficit on account of taxes thus erroneously assessed and collected of this and other owners of leaf tobacco, as tangible personal propeDy. So that in January, 1917, the finance committee of the council recommended an amended ordinance increasing the license tax on purchasers of leaf tobacco from five cents to eighty cents on every $100 of purchases, and this amendment passed through various stages until it had been enacted and approved by the mayor March 15, 1917. By its terms it became immediately effective. This amended ordinance provided that credit should be given for amounts paid for such license privilege under the original ordinance. The commissioner of the revenue ignored this amended ordinance, and assessed the company on April 1, 1917, after the new ordinance had become effective, with a license tax at the rate provided for by the original and repealed ordinance; that is, with five cents on every $100 of purchases. Later, however, on March 29, 1918, the commissioner corrected his assessment so as to make it accord with the amended ordinance. Corrections for omitted local license taxes are expressly authorized by section 508 of the Code, [17]*17as amended (Acts 1916, p. 826). Payment thereof having been refused, this litigation is the result.

The company denies its liability upon several grounds.

[1,2] (a) It claims that the amended ordinance does not, by its terms, apply to it. To sustain this proposition, many authorities are cited, which announce familiar and well-settled rules for the construction of statutes, the meaning of which is obscure. A sufficient reply to this argument is that if the statute is clear these rules do not apply. In this case, while the original ordinance imposed the tax “on every person or firm for the privilege of conducting the business of purchasing leaf tobacco in the city of Dan-ville, whether for manufacture, resale or other purpose, except as a commission merchant,” the amended ordinance imposed it on “every person, firm, company or corporation for the privilege of conducting the business of purchasing leaf tobacco in the city of Danville, whether on commission, for resale, or for other purpose.” In our view, the only substantial difference between the two ordinances is that commission merchants were excepted from the original ordinance while they appear to be included in the amended ordinance. Neither expressly imposes a tax upon the business of manufacturing leaf tobacco; but the tax is, specifically, upon those engaged in the business of purchasing leaf tobacco, and we have no doubt of its application to the company, it being admitted that it habitually purchased large quantities of leaf tobacco upon the open market in Danville, which it thereafter shipped to its various factories in this and in other States for manufacture.

[3] (b) It is urged that the ordinance is in conflict with the charter of Danville, and that clause of the charter which authorizes the city council annually “to lay and collect taxes on the real and personal property in said city according to its value,” seems to be relied upon. It is clear that this clause does not affect the question. Sections 3 [18]*18and 4 of the charter are the sections which apply. Section 8, so far as it is necessary to quote it, provides: “The council may grant or refuse licenses, and may regulate the taxes to be paid on such licenses * * * to agents for the sale or renting of real estate, and all other business which cannot be reached by the ad valorem system, under any of the preceding sections * * * ” Section 4 contains this language, omitting such as does not appear to be pertinent: “The council may impose a tax on all corporations located in the city, or having their principal office therein * * * It may also impose a tax on * * * traders * * * manufacturers * * * and agents for the transaction of any taxable business; and the council may impose a tax upon any other business, trade, person or employment, whether such business, trade, person or employment be herein specially enumerated or not, and whether any tax be imposed thereon by the State or not. As to all such business, trade, persons, or employment, the council may lay a direct tax, or may require a license therefor, as may be most expedient and proper, under such regulations as it may nreseribe and levy a tax thereon.”

We think- it unnecessary to say more than that these sections confer upon the city of Danville a general grant of power to tax occupations or businesses for revenue. Town of Danville v. Shelton, 76 Va. 325; Newport News, Etc., Co. v. Newport News, 100 Va. 157, 40 S. E. 645; Woodall v. Lynchburg, 100 Va. 318, 40 S. E. 915; Norfolk v. Griffith, 102 Va. 115, 45 S. E. 889; Gordon v. Newport News, 102 Va. 649, 47 S. E. 828; N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Suffolk, 103 Va. 498, 49 S. E. 658; Scottish Union, Etc., Co. v. Winchester, 110 Va. 451, 66 S. E. 84; Bradley v. Richmond, 110 Va. 521, 66 S. E. 872; Hardin v. Radford, 112 Va. 547, 72 S. E. 101; Postal Telegraph Co. v. Norfolk,

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 733, 125 Va. 12, 1919 Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tobacco-co-v-city-of-danville-va-1919.