City of Leavenworth v. Smith

48 P. 924, 5 Kan. App. 165, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 30, 1897
DocketNo. 493
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 P. 924 (City of Leavenworth v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Leavenworth v. Smith, 48 P. 924, 5 Kan. App. 165, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 519 (kanctapp 1897).

Opinion

Wells J.

The appellant, who was agent of the United States Express Company at Leavenworth, was arrested because said Company refused to pay a license tax of seventy-five dollars per year, as required by a city ordinance ; and was convicted in the police court and fined one hundred and fifty dollars. On appeal to the District Court, he was again convicted and fined, and from that judgment he appeals. So far as it relates to this case, the ordinance reads as follows :

“ Section 1. No person, firm, or corporation, either as principal or agent, shall carry on or conduct or managó any business, occupation, trade, profession, or calling hereinafter named within the City of Leavenworth, without first paying into the city treasury the sums named hereinafter and taking a license therefor as provided in this ordinance.
“Sec. 2. Every express company, corporation or agency for business done exclusively within the City of Leavenworth, and not including any business done to and from points without the State, and not including any business done for the Government of the United States its officers or agents, shall pay the sum of seventy-five dollars per annum.
“ Sec. 3. Every person, firm or corporation required by this ordinance to pay a license tax shall pay the same to the city treasurer before conducting or carrying on such business, occupation or calling, except payments which are to be made monthly or otherwise as herein provided, which payment shall be made in advance of the time of exercising such privilege; and shall take a receipt therefor and deposit the same with the city clerk who shall issue a license to such person signed by himself and the mayor of the city, describing [167]*167the business, occupation or profession for which such license shall be given.
“ Sec. 4. Any person who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinance shall on conviction thereof be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined in any sum not less than the amount of the license tax required to be paid nor more than double the amount thereof.”

The first claim of error is, that “the ordinance is void because it attempts to extend and vary the powers delegated to the City by the State of Kansas.” The law under which said ordinance was passed, so far as necessary to cite in this connection, reads as follows :

“The mayor and council shall have the care, management and control of the city and its property and finances, and shall have power to enact ordinances for the purposes hereinafter named, not repugnant to the constitution and laws of this state, and such ordinances to alter, modify and repeal, and shall have power,—
“Third. To levy and collect a license tax upon and regulate any and all callings, trades, professions and occupations conducted, pursued, carried on or operated within the limits of such city, including auctioneers, . dentists, druggists, express companies and agencies, . . . railroad and railroad companies, (including street or horse railroads,) . . . telegraph and telephone companies, . . . and any and all other businesses, trades, avocations or professions whatever, not above mentioned.” ¶ 555, Gen. Stat. 1889.

The contention is, that the following part of section two of the ordinance was not authorized by the statute, and renders the ordinance void: “And not including any business done to and from points without the State, and not including any business done for [168]*168the Government of the United States its officers or agents.” We fail to see wherein this attempts to extend or vary the powers delegated to the City by the State. It may be that it does not use all the power the State has given, but it does not assume to use more than was given; and the latter is what is prohibited by the authorities cited by plaintiff in error in support of this objection. We think it is well settled that the law authorizing a city to tax certain callings, trades, professions and occupations empowers the legislative body of the city to use some discretion as to what kinds of business in the classes mentioned it will tax. For instance, it may tax all lawyers and no ministers ; or it may tax doctors as a class, but exempt those engaged exclusively in the practice of their profession in public hospitals. In this instance, the business so excepted was probably not taxable under the law of the State, nor of the United States ; admitting that the company did some business for which it was taxable.

The remaining grounds of error can, we think, be properly considered together under the general question : Can a city collect a license tax from an express company, doing no business that both begins and ends within its limits, under an ordinance providing that “every express company, corporation, or agency for business done exclusively within the City of Leavenworth . . . shall pay the sum of seventy-five dollars per annum ” ?

Assuming that the statute and the ordinance referred to are each valid as they read, are the facts such as to render the express company liable for said taxes? The ordinance says : “For business done exclusively within the City of Leavenworth.” What meaning shall be given to the word ‘ ‘ business ’ ’ ? The [169]*169unloading of the goods from the car by the railroad express-agent; the hauling them to the city office or the consignee; the receiving the charges thereon by the city agent; the keeping of the office and books of the company by the agent, or any of the other numerous details of the business in the City ; — are these, or any or all of them, at one office, what is meant by the word? We think not. The business for which express companies- are organized and conducted is to receive goods or packages at one place, and transport them, and deliver them at another place, as directed by the consignor. When we speak of business done by an express, company, we understand it. to have reference to one or more items of this kind of business ; and if this express company received any goods or packages in one part of the City of Leavenworth and delivered them to another part of the city, this business would be done exclusively within the City of Leavenworth, and, under the ordinance, could be properly taxed.

This principle is clearly stated and fully recognized in Western Union Telegraph Company v. Alabama State Board of Assessment (132 U. S. 472). Mr. Justice Miller says: “That principle is . . . that they shall not be taxed by the authorities of a State for any messages, or receipts arising from messages, from points within the State to points without or from points without the State to points within, but that such taxes may be levied upon all messages carried and delivered exclusively within the State ; ’ ’ citing a long list of authorities. In that case, the Legislature of Alabama authorized the State Board of Assessment to levy a tax of two per cent, upon the gross amount of the receipts by any telegraph company, etc., from business done by it in the State. The State sought to include the receipts from all messages, whether [170]*170carried wholly within or partly without the State, and the court held that this could not be done.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 924, 5 Kan. App. 165, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-leavenworth-v-smith-kanctapp-1897.