Bramman v. City of Alameda

124 P. 243, 162 Cal. 648, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 579
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1912
DocketS.F. No. 5527.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 124 P. 243 (Bramman v. City of Alameda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bramman v. City of Alameda, 124 P. 243, 162 Cal. 648, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 579 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought to restrain defendants from enforcing against plaintiff the provisions of an ordinance of the city of Alameda—No. 484—providing, among other things, for a license-tax on wagons and vehicles used in connection with any business.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a retail dealer in meats, having a shop in the city of Alameda where meats are sold and from which shop plaintiff delivers them to his customers in the city of Alameda by means of carts drawn by horses; that he has paid the license-tax imposed by said ordinance for the carrying on of his general business as a retail dealer in meats but has refused to pay a license-tax assessed by said ordinance upon the wagons used by him in connection with his business, upon the ground that said wagon license-tax is unconstitutional and void. The provisions of the ordinance which are attacked are set forth in the complaint and then follow allegations of interference with the business of plaintiff and injury thereto sustained through the conduct of defendants in delaying, detaining, and harassing upon the public streets of said city, the drivers of the delivery wagons of plaintiff in an effort to compel the payment of said wagon license-tax and the threatened arrest of plaintiff and his employees if said license-tax is not paid. The prayer was for a perpetual injunction restraining the enforcement or attempt to enforce the collection of said wagon license-tax from plaintiff or his employees.

The defendants challenged by demurrer the sufficiency of the facts set forth in the complaint to constitute a cause of action. It was stipulated on the hearing of the demurrer that the general business license-tax referred to in the complaint as having been paid by the plaintiff under the same ordinance imposing the said wagon license-tax was the sum of ten dollars and that the carts referred to in the complaint used by plaintiff in the delivery of meats to his customers consisted of two each drawn by one horse.

*650 The demurrer to the complaint was overruled and the defendants declining to answer, judgment was entered against them granting plaintiff the relief prayed for and from this judgment defendants appeal.

The only point in the case is as to the validity of the section of the ordinance dealing with the wagon license-tax, it being conceded that if this section is invalid the complaint states a cause of action; if valid the demurrer of the defendants should have been sustained.

A proper consideration of the point involved necessitates a reference to some of the provisions of the charter of the city of Alameda, as also to some of the provisions of the ordinance in question.

Since 1907 the city of Alameda has been organized and existing under a freeholders’ charter (Stats. 1907, p. 1051), which provides as to the powers and limitations of the council thereof (art. II, chap. 2) that it shall have power (see. 17, subd. 17) “to impose all license-taxes subject to the restrictions elsewhere in this charter contained, and to provide for the collection thereof.”

Subdivision 19: “to authorize the granting of licenses for any lawful purpose for revenue and regulation and to fix by ordinance the amount to be paid therefor and to provide for revoking the same; provided that no license shall be granted for a longer period than one year.”

In 1908 the ordinance entitled: “Ordinance No. 484, providing for municipal licenses for regulation and revenue and' establishing the license-tax therefor,” some of the provisions of which are here in question, was adopted. The opening section of the ordinance makes the usual provision declaring it unlawful to- commence or carry on any “trade, calling or occupation” specified in the ordinance or to “keep, emplojr or use any article or thing” for which a license-tax is imposed without first having procured a license from the city so to do.

Section 10 of the ordinance declares: “Except as hereinafter otherwise provided, where more than one occupation or business of those upon which a license-tax is hereinafter imposed is carried on or conducted by one person, firm or corporation at any one location, the license-tax for such combined business or occupation shall be the tax hereinafter imposed on that one of said occupations or business which is most *651 heavily taxed hereunder.” Then follow provisions imposing a license-tax upon various specified occupations and businesses in the form xisually pertaining to such ordinances. On the business of a retail meat dealer is imposed a general business license of ten dollars a year, which is the license plaintiff paid.

Coming now to the sections of the ordinance particularly involved here.

Section 85 is as follows: “For every person, firm or corporation who owns, keeps or uses any wagon or vehicle hereinafter described the license-tax shall be as follows:

“Subdivision A. • For every hack, coach, carriage, omnibus or automobile used for the carrying of passengers for hire with driver, $5.00 per year for each such vehicle.

“Subdivision B. For every wagon or cart drawn by two or more animals and used for the hauling of rock, dirt, manure, sand, loam, gravel, lumber, coal, hay, brick, cement, ice or oil, $6.00 per year for each such vehicle. For every such wagon or cart drawn by one animal, $3.00 per year.

“Subdivision C. For every truck or dray, express wagon, garbage wagon, or cart, vegetable garden wagon, or peddlers’ wagon, $8.00 per year when drawn by two or more animals, and $5.00 per year when drawn by one animal.

“Subdivision D. For every motor vehicle used in transporting merchandise, $15.00 per year.

“Subdivision E. For every vehicle or wagon not herein-before in this section included, where used in connection with any business, $5.00 per year when drawn by two or more animals and $3.00 per year when drawn by one animal.

“Subdivision F. The provisions of section 10 of this ordinance shall not apply to license-taxes imposed by this section.”

It is asserted by the appellant in his brief on this appeal, that the view taken by the trial court holding section 85 of the ordinance invalid was, that the power conferred by the charter upon the council “to authorize the granting of licenses for any lawful purpose for revenue or regulation” extended only to the granting of licenses for the lawful purposes followed by the licensee, and that the “lawful purpose” specified in the charter means the main business, pursuit or occupation of the licensee and that the plaintiff is not pursuing the business of operating a horse and wagon but the operation of a horse and wagon is merely incidental to his main pursuit, *652 which is that of conducting the business of a retail meat market, upon which alone a license-tax may be imposed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P. 243, 162 Cal. 648, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bramman-v-city-of-alameda-cal-1912.