City of New Orleans v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance

52 La. Ann. 1904
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,438
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 1904 (City of New Orleans v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of New Orleans v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance, 52 La. Ann. 1904 (La. 1900).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nici-iolls, O. J.

The defendant in this case was, on the petition of the Oity of New Orleans, ruled by the District Court to show cause why it should not pay the sum of twenty-five hundred and fifty dollars to the city for a license for the privilege of conducting the business of fire insurance during the year 1899, with interest and costs, or be.restrained from carrying on the same until the license, interest, costs and penalties be paid, and why judgment should not be rendered against it for the said amount, with privilege.

The application was based upon allegations that the defendant, a foreign corporation, domiciled in England, was conducting the business of fire insurance on Carondelet street, in said city, without having obtained a license on said business from the Oity of New Orleans for the year 1899, and that their gross annual receipts on said business, for the past year and for the current year, would be more than $170,000.00, and less than $180,000.00. That all persons who conduct any business without license from the City of New Orleans, after March 1st, 1899, were delinquent; that the defendant corporation had not 'paid to the city the amount of license due by it for carrying on said business for the year 1899, and under the terms of section 13 of ordinance No. 14,884, Council Series of said city, there was due and owing to the city by defendant company, the sum of twenty-five hundred and fifty dolllars for a license for carrying on said business for the year 1899, and that the city had a first lien and privilege on its property for the payment of the license claimed.

Defendant for answer pleaded, first, the general issue. It then averred that its liability for a license tax to the Oity of New Orleans, for the year 1899, was limited to the sum of sixteen hundred and fifty [1906]*1906dollars, and that payment of this sum had been duly tendered to the city, but had been and continued to be refused by' the city.

That the city based the license on section^,13 of ordinance No. 14,884, O. S., and that the latter was a copy of the revenue act of the State of Louisiana, No. 171, section 9 of the acts of 1898, and it had proceeded in the rule as if it had the same right to recover a license tax of defendant for the year 1899 as the State had.

That while the State might have authority to exact a license tax of it, for the year on all business done within the State, that it was not liable to the City of New Orleans for a license tax for 1899, except as the business is carried on! by the company within the boundaries of the city, being those of the Parish of Orleans, where alone the company receives the protection of the municipality, and that in so far as said ordinance No. 14,884 is designed to apply, beyond the limits in question, it is ultra vires null and void.

The District Court rendered judgment in favor of the city, against the defendant company, for the sum of sixteen hundred and fifty dollars, without interest or costs, and rejected and dismissed the demand of the City of New Orleans for any amount over that sum.

The City of New Orleans appealed. •

Article 229, of the Constitution of 1898, declares: That “the General Assembly may levy a license tax, and in such case shall graduate the amount of such tax to be collected from the persons pursuing the several trades, professions, vocations and callings. All persons, associations of persons and corporations pursuing any trade, profession, business or calling, may be rendered liable to such tax, except (giving a list of exceptions), * * *

“No political corporation shall impose a greater license than is imposed by the General Assembly for State purposes. This restriction shall not apply to dealers in distilled, alcoholic or malt liquors. The General Assembly shall have authority to provide that municipalities levying license taxes equal in amount to those levied by police juries for parish purposes, shall be exempted from the payment of such parochial licenses.”

Under this authority the General Assembly of the State, by its Act No. 171, classified the different avocations and businesses,, and graded the licenses demanded according- to the class into which each particular corporation, association or person should fall. The fire insurance busi[1907]*1907ness was provided for in this statute under its ninth section, which was as follows:

“Be it further enacted etc., That each and every fire and marine and river insurance, guarantee, surety or indemnity company, society, association, corporation or other organization, or firm, or individual, doing’ and conducting a fire, or marine, or river insurance, guarantee, surety or indemnity business of any kind in this State, or any other insurance business not otherwise provided for, whether such company, society, association, corporation or other organization, or firm, or individual, is located or domiciled here or operating here through a branch, department, resident board, local office, firm, company, corporation, or agency, of any kind whatever shall pay a separate and distinct license on said business for each company represented, and said license shall be based on the gross annual amount of premium on all risks located within this State, and upon risks located in other States, or foreign countries, upon which no license has been paid thereon, as follows, to-wit:

First Glass, when said premiums are three hundred thousand dollars; the license shall be forty-five hundred dollars. * * *

Fourteenth Glass, when said premiums are one hundred and sixty thousand dollars, and less than one hundred and seventy thousand dollars, the license shall be twenty-four hundred dollars. * * *

Nineteenth Glass, when said premiums are one hundred and ten thousand dollars, and less than one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, the license shall be sixteen hundred and fifty dollars. * * *

By the sixteenth section of the act it was provided that “any municipal or parochial corporation in the State shall have the right to impose a license tax on any business, occupation or profession herein provided for; that all such license taxes shall conform to the provisions of Article 229 of the Constitution,” and by the thirtieth section that “a person, firm or .company, having more than one place of business, shall pay a separate license for each place of business.”

The claim of the insurance company, that it should only pay sixteen hundred and fifty dollars to the city for a license, is based upon the contention that of the one hundred and sixty-one thousand, one hundred and fifty-seven dollars of premiums, only one hundred and twenty thousand dollars were for premiums on policies issued in the City of New Orleans.

Appellant says in its brief:

[1908]*1908“Practically the sole contention is whether or not the city has the right in exacting a license tax to count as a basis of the same, the total premium receipts of the office in New Orleans, regardless of the source of such receipts. The city claims that the defendant company comes under Glass Fourteen, while it contends it falls under Glass Nineteen of the license classification. ’That no where in the law is the city obliged to grade her licenses. All it has to do is to be careful that the amount which it requires as a license tax shall not be more than the Statq exacts.”

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Related

State ex rel. Employers' Liability Corp. v. Fitzpatrick
73 So. 244 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1916)
City of Lake Charles v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.
38 So. 578 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 1904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-orleans-v-liverpool-london-globe-insurance-la-1900.