City of Los Angeles v. Tannahill

233 P.2d 671, 105 Cal. App. 2d 541, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1507
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 18, 1951
DocketCiv. 18254
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 233 P.2d 671 (City of Los Angeles v. Tannahill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Los Angeles v. Tannahill, 233 P.2d 671, 105 Cal. App. 2d 541, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1507 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

The question for decision is whether a municipality can impose a valid license tax on trucks operated for hire and graduate such tax in proportion to their unladen weights where their domicile is in a suburban city and they visit the taxing municipality “on an average of more than once a week during at least one quarter of the calendar year involved. ’ ’

Appellants were conducting a for-hire trucking business with headquarters only in Vernon, a city buried in the heart of the manufacturing district of Los Angeles. They held permits as city carriers, contract carriers and radial highway common carriers and also a certificate from the Interstate Commerce Commission to operate as common carriers in interstate commerce points within 325 miles of the city of Los Angeles. From Vernon their trucks operate throughout Southern California, hauling merchandise into Los Angeles, but -never *543 moving a cargo from one point to another within that municipality. There was no evidence of the frequency of the trips into the city other than the stipulation that they averaged “more than once a week in any quarter of the year,” which fact is an essential to make such carriers liable for the license tax under subsection G- of section 21.159 of ordinance 77,000 of Los Angeles, to wit:

“Exemptions and Exceptions. No fee hereunder shall be required for the operation of any motor vehicle or equipment along the streets of this city if such operation is merely occasional and incidental to a business conducted elsewhere; provided, however, that no operation shall be deemed merely occasional if trips or hauls are made beginning or ending at points within this City upon an average more than once a week in any quarter, and a business shall be deemed to be conducted within this City if an office or agency is maintained here or if transportation business is solicited here. ’ ’

To escape the force of the provision that a fee will not be required where the “operation is merely occasional and incidental” and to show that appellants come within the ordinance respondent caused the stipulation to include the recital that trips were on the average made into the city “more than once a week in any quarter of the year.”

The ordinance forbids (section 21.10) every person who engages in any occupation for which a license is required, to do so “until such license is first obtained.” Section 21.159, subsection 4(b) provides:

“Every person whose business ... is that of operator of any motor vehicle for the transportation of property for hire or reward, and who in the course of that business uses public streets and highways of this city for purpose of such operation, shall pay a license fee for each year, or fractional part thereof, of such operation, the amount of which shall be determined as provided in this section. ’ ’

By subsection (c) the fees are computed as follows:

“1. Por each vehicle," other than a tractor, or a trailer or semi-trailer, used to receive or discharge, pick-up or deliver property within this city, the annual fee shall be as follows, where the unladen weight thereof is:
4000 lbs. or less........................................$ 4.00
Over 4000 lbs. and not more than 8000 lbs................ 8.00
Over 8000 lbs.......................................... 10.00
*544 2. For each trailer or semi-trailer so used, where the unladen weight thereof is :
1000 lbs. or less........................................$ 2.00
Over 1000 lbs. and not more than 3000 lbs...-............. 4.00
Over 3000 lbs.................................'.......... 6.00
3. For each tractor which is used to haul one or more trailers or semi-trailers not permanently affixed thereto.......$10.00.”

During the four years involved in this action appellants operated its -several trucks and trailers on the streets and highwa3rs of Los Angeles. By virtue of such ordinance the city made demand for payment of the following sums for the four years indicated, to wit: $212 for 1945, $308 for 1946, $326 for 1947, $326 for 1948. In addition, penalties for nonpayment aggregating $586 for the four years were demanded, as provided by the ordinance for nonpayment of such license fees 1 which were based upon the unladen weight of the vehicles.

Appellants contend that (1) the license tax imposed violates article I, section 3(5) of the city’s charter; (2) the license tax must be levied under general and uniform laws “(art. I, §2(11) (e)); (3) no discrimination in the amount of license tax shall be made between persons engaged in the same business, (art. I, § 3(5).) Because of such provisions appellants argue that they are the victims of an unjust discrimination; that a truck weighing 4,000 pounds can, and often does, handle more business than an 8,000 pound truck. In making such contention appellants overlook constitutional provisions, the law as declared by the appellate courts and as created by statute and practice.

By section 6 of article XI of the Constitution a city is empowered to make and enforce all laws and regulations in respect to municipal affairs subject only to the restrictions and limitations provided in its charter. Licensing, taxing and regulating occupations operating within a city is a municipal affair. The power of a city to make and enforce laws and regulations with respect to municipal affairs is reinforced by section 8 of the same article. By section 23 of article XII, every transportation entity is a public utility and is subject to control and regulation by the city in which it operates. The city’s charter is not a grant of powers to the municipality. The power for lev3Úng taxes is a consti *545 tutional grant which is not limited by the charter, but is accentuated by that instrument which details the city’s powers of assessing, collecting and enforcing taxes and licensing and regulating any lawful business and imposing license fees. (City charter, § 2, subsec. 11 (d) (e); West Coast Advertising Co. v. San Francisco, 14 Cal.2d 516, 521 [95 P.2d 138]; In re Montgomery, 163 Cal. 457, 459 [125 P. 1070, Ann.Cas. 1914A 130] ; Glass v. City of Fresno, 17 Cal.App.2d 555, 560 [62 P.2d 765].)

The only limitation founded upon the city’s power to levy license taxes for revenue is as follows:

“No discrimination in the amount of license tax shall be made between persons engaged in the same business, otherwise than by proportioning the tax to the amount of the business done.” (Charter, §3(5), Stats, 1925, p. 1031.) But in Barker Bros., Inc. v. City of Los Angeles,

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Bluebook (online)
233 P.2d 671, 105 Cal. App. 2d 541, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-los-angeles-v-tannahill-calctapp-1951.