County of Galveston v. Gorham

49 Tex. 279
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 49 Tex. 279 (County of Galveston v. Gorham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Galveston v. Gorham, 49 Tex. 279 (Tex. 1878).

Opinions

Roberts, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court, in which appellee recovered back occupation taxes paid to the collector of county taxes by appellee and others, as wholesale merchants, doing business as such in the county of Galveston.

It has been advanced to a hearing out of its order, under rule 59 of this court, with propositions presented and agreed to, authorities cited, and arguments made by the parties, the whole being printed together, in accordance with said rule.

The first proposition is as follows:

“Does the third section of the act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, entitled ‘An act regulating taxation,’ approved June 3, 1873, and under which the tax, for which the judgment was rendered, was collected, discriminate in favor of wholesale merchants who buy and sell goods, wares, and merchandise that are exclusively of the manufactures of this State, and against wholesale merchants who buy and sell goods, wares, and merchandise not exclusively of the manufactures of this State ? ”

[284]*284It is contended by appellee, in support of the judgment rendered, in his favor, that “ the third section of an act entitled ‘An act regulating taxation,’ approved June 3, 1873, in so far as it imposes a tax upon persons pursuing the occupation of buying and selling goods, wares, and merchandise, or merchants, is a regulation of commerce, and is repugnant to article 8 of section 1, paragraph 4, of the Constitution of the United States,” citing Welton v. State of Missouri, 1 Otto, 275. ,

The Constitution of 1869, under which the law referred to was passed, provides, that “ taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State. All property in the State shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as directed by law, except such property as two-thirds of both houses of the Legislature may think proper to exempt from taxation. The' Legislature shall have power to levy an income tax, and to tax all persons pursuing any occupation, trade, or profession; Provided, That the term occupation shall not be construed to apply to pursuits either agricultural or mechanical.” (Paschal’s- Dig., p. 1127, General Prov. Const., 'art. 12, sec. 19.) This was inserted in the Constitution of 1845, and in every other Constitution of this State that has been adopted up to the present time.

The law of 1873 levied an ad-valorem tax upon property, to be assessed on all of the property in the State, including merchandise, possessed by each individual, firm, or corporation, with certain exceptions, on the first day of January of each year, and an occupation tax upon the numerous occupations therein designated by name, description, or definition, omitting any taxation Upon incomes. The third section of said act, so far as it is necessary to be herein copied, reads as follows :

“Section.3. That there shall be levied on and collected from every person, firm, or association of persons pursuing any of the following-named occupations, an annual tax (except when herein otherwise provided) on every such occupa[285]*285tion or separate establishment, as follows: # * * * *

“From every wholesale merchant, an annual tax of twenty-five dollars; from every first-class retail merchant, an annual tax of twenty dollars.” The act proceeds to levy a tax on the second, third, and fourth classes of retail merchants, of fifteen, ten, and five dollars, and defines the classes by the amounts of their annual purchases, fixing that of a wholesale merchant the highest, at one hundred thousand dollars, and then proceeds to define the occupation of a merchant, as follows : “ A merchant is any person or firm engaged in buying and selling goods, wares, or merchandise of any kind whatever.” Immediately following this definition of a merchant is the following, as a distinct sentence: “ Every person, firm, or association of persons selling goods by sample, card, or otherwise, shall pay a tax of fifty dollars annually to the State, and five dollars to each county in which he may sell goods: provided, no person, firm, or association of persons selling exclusively goods manufactured in this State, shall be considered a merchant.” (General Laws, 1873, p. 201, 202.) Said act, in section 4, authorized the County Court to levy taxes equal to one-half of the State taxes, in pursuance to a provision in the Constitution to that effect, which, having been levied and collected, is the money sought to be recovered back in this suit, and for which the judgment appealed from has been rendered against the county of Galveston.

The portion of the act-which it is claimed to render the occupation tax of twenty-five dollars imposed on wholesale merchants void, as being violative of the Constitution of the United States, is the proviso in the distinct sentence last quoted: “Every person, firm, or association of persons selling goods by sample, card, or otherwise, shall pay a tax of fifty dollars annually to the State, and five dollars to each county in which he may sell such goods: provided, no person, firm, or association of persons selling exclusively goods manufactured in this State, shall be considered a merchant.”

It is contended, that this proviso relates back to, and quali[286]*286fies, the preceding sentence, in which wholesale merchants are defined and taxed, and is a regulation of commerce to their prejudice, by discriminating against them to the extent of thirty-seven dollars and a half annually, inasmuch as they buy and sell goods, wares, and merchandise by the wholesale, including those manufactured in other States of the Union, thereby intrenching upon the powers of government exclusively delegated to the Federal government by a provision in the Constitution, which reads as follows:

“ Section VII. The Congress shall have power * * * To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.” (Const. U. S., Paschal’s Dig., p. 5.) The decision of the Supreme Court cited by counsel in support of this view of the case was made upon a statute of the State of Missouri, levying an occupation tax upon peddlers, making it a penal offense for them to peddle without a license, and defining a peddler as follows, to wit: “ Whoever shall deal in the selling of patent or other medicines, goods, wares, or merchandise, except books, charts, and stationery, which are not of the growth, product, or manufacture of this State, by going from place to place to sell the same, is declared to be a peddler.” In deciding this ease, it was said that “no license is required for selling in a similar way, by going from place to place in the State, goods which are the growth or product of the State.” Or, in other words, a person who is a peddler in fact of such articles in the State, pays no taxes- lor the occupation of peddling. That is, in effect, to levy a tax upon goods not of the growth and product of the State, because of their foreign origin, upon being brought into the State and sold by a peddler, which is a regulation of commerce between the States, within the power of Congress on this subject, thereby being prohibited from being exercised by the States, either directly or indirectly, as was, in effect, done by that law of the State of Missouri.And it had this effect, because a license tax levied upon the peddler selling goods introduced from another State [287]

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Bluebook (online)
49 Tex. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-galveston-v-gorham-tex-1878.