Austin v. City of Seattle

30 P.2d 646, 176 Wash. 654, 93 A.L.R. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 510
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1934
DocketNo. 24752. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 646 (Austin v. City of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. City of Seattle, 30 P.2d 646, 176 Wash. 654, 93 A.L.R. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 510 (Wash. 1934).

Opinions

Blake, J.

— -Appellants were each separately charged by a complaint filed with a justice of the peace with the violation of certain ordinances of the city of Seattle imposing an occupational tax. They were found not guilty, and the city appealed to the superior court. Thereupon, the appellants, as plaintiffs, joined in a civil action against the city, seeking to enjoin it from enforcing the ordinances upon which its criminal prosecutions were based.

The city demurred to the complaint in the civil action, and all of these matters were brought on for hearing at the same time in the superior court.

In the criminal cases, the appellants admitted the facts charged, but pleaded not guilty because of the claimed invalidity of the ordinances. The trial court sustained the demurrer to the complaint in the civil case, and the appellants electing to stand on their complaint, judgment followed dismissing the action with prejudice.

The appellants were each adjudged guilty under the criminal charge, fined ten dollars and costs, and ordered committed until the payment thereof. Separate appeals from these several judgments have been consolidated for hearing in this court.

The original ordinance here under attack is the ordinance considered and largely quoted in Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Seattle, 172 Wash. 649, 21 P. (2d) 721, and Puget Sound Power & Light Co. v. Seattle, 172 Wash. 668, 21 P. (2d) 727, together with a later amending ordinance which added a new sec *656 tion covering the business activities in which the appellants were engaged, which new section reads:

“Section 7-A. Occupations and Privileges Subject to Tax — Amount: There are hereby levied and shall be collected annual license fees or occupation taxes against the persons on account of the business activities or privileges, and in the amounts hereinafter fixed, as follows:
“(a) Upon every person, except national banking associations, engaged in the business of loaning or advancing money on assignments of salaries or wages due or to become due, or discounting salaries or wages due or to become due, a fee or tax of Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($250) per annum.
“(b) Upon every person, except national banking associations, engaged in the business of loaning or advancing money, or negotiating for the loan or advance of money, on chattel mortgages, or of loaning or advancing money on, or purchasing, agreements of any kind whether in the form of conditional sales contracts, leases or mortgages, whereby title to chattels is to pass upon condition of the payment of the purchase price thereof in installments, a fee or tax of Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($250) per annum.”

Appellants divide their attack upon the ordinance into four headings, and we can best meet the situation by following the course they have • outlined.

Is subdivision (b) of section 7-A void because the classification is arbitrary and not based upon any substantial difference between those occupations which are taxed and those which are not taxed?

This is, of course, an excise tax. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Seattle, supra.

“This being an excise tax, the legislature, under the 14th amendment to our state constitution, has very broad power, and we cannot interfere with that power except for arbitrary action, clear abuse, or constructive fraud appearing on the face of the act or from facts of which we may take judicial knowledge.” State *657 ex rel. Stiner v. Yelle, 174 Wash. 402, 25 P. (2d) 91, and cases there cited.

Within its limited sphere, the city council has the same power to legislate upon such a question as has the legislature itself. Detamore v. Hindley, 83 Wash. 322, 145 Pac. 462.

We see nothing in the classification here attacked which smacks of arbitrary action, capriciousness or constructive fraud. The class or classes here designated may be broadly designated as those engaged in the business of making chattel loans, and it is a matter of common knowledge, of which we take judicial notice, that those making chattel loans are, in very many important particulars, doing a distinctively different sort of business than that which is usual and customary in commercial banking and other forms of money loaning not covered by the ordinance.

The method or mode of securing the payment is one important distinction, but it is not, as appellants seem to argue, the only distinguishing difference. Those who lend on chattels deal generally with persons who have little or no commercial credit, and the security rather than the debtor is relied upon. Higher interest rates are charged, partly, no doubt, because of the greater risk, partly because of the greater expense of handling small loans, and partly, no doubt, because of the necessity of the borrower. Defaults are more frequent, necessitating the taking over and resale of the property which stands as security, thus making one engaged in the chattel loan business more or less a dealer in secondhand property. What the profits of the chattel loan business may be, as compared to the profits of loaning money otherwise, we are not prepared to say, but the city council may have had knowledge upon that subject leading to the honest belief *658 that the percentage earned on money invested in the chattel loan business is greater than that commonly earned by money loaned otherwise.

Perhaps other distinguishing features exist, but enough have been pointed out to indicate that it does not appear from the ordinance or from facts of which we may take judicial notice that the classification is either capricious or arbitrary.

Appellants rely very largely upon the case of Seattle v. Dencker, 58 Wash. 501, 108 Pac. 1086, 137 Am. St. 1076, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 446, decided by this court in 1910. Whether that case has been modified by more recent cases based upon the growth and development of modern business methods, we need not now stop to decide, because it is clearly distinguishable from this case.

That case had to do with a license tax on an automatic selling device which sold the same merchandise for the same price to the same consumers as was done by others not taxed. Clearly, the thing there taxed was the automatic device alone. No such a situation is here presented. The chattel loan business is inherently different from other methods of money loaning, and that case is not in point.

We cannot review the multitude of authorities which have been cited, but after considering them all we conclude that the answer to appellants’ first question must be “no.” The classification here made is well within the rule laid down in State ex rel. Stiner v. Yelle, supra.

The second question is as to subdivision (b) of the section of the ordinance quoted which excepts national banks. It is urged that this exception, like the classification which we have just been discussing, is arbitrary and discriminatory.

*659

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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 646, 176 Wash. 654, 93 A.L.R. 203, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1934.