Chandler v. City of Tifton

55 S.E.2d 568, 206 Ga. 43, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 11, 1949
Docket16779.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 55 S.E.2d 568 (Chandler v. City of Tifton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. City of Tifton, 55 S.E.2d 568, 206 Ga. 43, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 616 (Ga. 1949).

Opinion

Almand, Justice.

Under the act of 1935 (Ga. L. 1935, p. 492), as amended by the act of 1941 (Ga. L. 1941, p. 234), the sale of wine at retail in any county in this State is legal, if such sale has not been prohibited by an election held pur *45 suant to section 4 of the act of 1935, supra, as amended by the acts of 1937 and 1947 (Ga. L. 1937, p. 851; Ga. L. 1947, p. 1178). Such business is a lawful one, and though a municipality has the power to require the payment of a license fee and may refuse to grant a license for the sale of wine upon proper cause or revoke a license upon proper cause after notice and hearing (sec. 4, act of 1935, as amended by act of 1941, supra), it cannot arbitrarily and without cause prohibit one from engaging in the' business of selling wine at retail. McKown v. Atlanta, 184 Ga. 221 (190 S. E. 571); Walker v. Carrollton, 187 Ga. 237 (200 S. E. 268).

A municipal corporation under charter power can levy and collect a license tax upon persons carrying on a trade or business, but it does not have power to impose on a lawful business a prohibitory tax. Morton v. Macon, 111 Ga. 162 (36 S. E. 627). In that case, this court said: “The question before us is, therefore, resolved into simply this: Does a power given by law to a municipal corporation to tax a useful and legitimate business include the right of imposing upon it a tax so high as to render it impossible to pay the same and carry on the business profitably?

“As the purpose of such taxation is to raise money for the support of the municipal government, and as the power of taxing is given exclusively for the accomplishment of this needful purpose, ordinances adopted in pursuance of this power must tend to effectuate, and not to defeat, the end in view. Cooley’s Const. Lim. (6th ed.) 240, 241. We find the following in Cooley on Taxation (2d ed.) 597-8: ‘If a revenue authority is what seems to be conferred, the extent of the tax, when not limited by the grant itself, must be understood to be left to the judgment and discretion of the municipal government, to be determined in the usual mode in which its legislative authority is exercised; but the grant of authority to impose fees for the purposes of revenue would not warrant their being made so heavy as to be prohibitory, thereby defeating the purpose.’ ” Pp. 164, 165.

The plaintiff asserts that the annual license tax of $5000 which was imposed upon retail dealers in wine in Tifton is “arbitrary, unreasonable, and confiscatory.” The reasonableness of a *46 municipal ordinance is reviewable by the courts, and if found to be unreasonable, the ordinance will be declared void. Atlantic Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. v. Savannah, 133 Ga. 66 (2) (65 S. E. 184); Richardson v. Coker, 188 Ga. 170 (2) (3 S. E. 2d, 636); Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Columbus, 189 Ga. 458 (2) (6 S. E. 2d, 320). “The reasonableness of a tax is not dependent upon the amount of business conducted or the profit received by a particular individual, but is determined by ascertaining whether the conditions in the municipality as a whole will justify the tax. If so, the tax is not invalid as being unreasonable merely because the business as conducted by a particular individual may not be able to pay it.” Steuer v. Atlanta, 176 Ga. 433, 436 (168 S. E. 7). We therefore pass to the question as to whether, in view of all the facts disclosed by this record, the annual license tax of $5000 sought to be imposed upon the plaintiff as a condition precedent to his engaging in the business of selling wine at retail was or was not unreasonable.

The plaintiff testified that the volume of business done by him in 1948 was approximately $15,000 to $18,000; that the annual tax imposed upon retail dealers in wine in Albany, Georgia, a city of 40,000 population, was $100, and the tax imposed upon such dealers in Columbus, a city having a population in excess of 100,000, was $75; that no other business in the City of Tifton was required to pay an annual license fee in excess of $500, and only on two other classes of business were license taxes fixed at $500.

H. M. Paulk, a member of the Board of City Commissioners of Tifton, testified that “the City of Tifton proper has a population of approximately five thousand people, and that Metropolitan Tifton or the metropolitan area has a population of from twelve to fifteen thousand.”

Bearing in mind that the ordinance providing for the license fee assessed in this case was enacted for the purpose of raising revenue and not as a regulatory measure under the police powers of the municipality, we are of the opinion that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, the assessment of an annual license tax of $5000 was unreasonable. See, in this connection, Morton v. Macon, 111 Ga. 162, and Atlantic Postal *47 Telegraph-Cable Co. v. Savannah, 133 Ga. 66 (supra); Williams v. Waynesboro, 152 Ga. 696 (111 S. E. 47); Huguley-McCulloh Auto Co. v. LaGrange, 159 Ga. 352 (125 S. E. 799); National Linen Service Corp. v. Milledgeville, 51 Ga. App. 167 (179 S. E. 837).

The Chief of Police of Tifton testified that, after passage of the ordinance fixing a license fee of $5000, he advised the plaintiff’s employee to move the wine out, and that he expected to make cases against the employee if he sold wine without a license. He further testified that the plaintiff’s place had been operated as a nuisance, and was very objectionable; that people frequently got drunk in the wine store, and there was frequent cursing, obscene and vulgar language carried on in the plaintiff’s place of business; that the majority of arrests in 1948 and up to April, 1949, were of people who had drunk wine to excess, and since passage of the ordinance of April 7, 1949, arrests arising from drunkenness and disorderly conduct' had fallen off at least 70%.

It. M. Kinnon, a member of the Board of City Commissioners, testified that one of the reasons why the high license tax was fixed was because reports had come to the commission that the places where wine was sold were nuisances, and that about ten licenses were sold by the City of Tifton in 1948, whereas no licenses were sold at the new license fee. He further testified that the commissioners thought that, in fixing a license fee at $5000, no one else would pay the license except Mr. Chandler and, in this way, there would be only one wine store in the City of Tifton, and it would be much easier to police same than it would from ten to fifteen places scattered over the city.” Another commissioner, H. M. Paulk, testified the same in substance as the witness Kinnon.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.E.2d 568, 206 Ga. 43, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-city-of-tifton-ga-1949.