Dalton v. George C. Brown & Co.

75 S.E. 40, 159 N.C. 175, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 S.E. 40 (Dalton v. George C. Brown & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dalton v. George C. Brown & Co., 75 S.E. 40, 159 N.C. 175, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 254 (N.C. 1912).

Opinions

BROWN, J., dissenting; ALLEN, J., concurring in the dissenting opinion. Chapter 115, Public-Local Laws 1911, entitled "An act to provide a better system for working and keeping up the public roads of Macon County," is a substitute for the former system of working the roads in that county. Section 15 of said chapter provides: "Any lumber company, corporation, person or persons engaged in the lumber business and desiring to use any of the public roads of any of the townships of Macon County for the purpose of carrying on its or their business of hauling, either by itself or themselves, or by hiring or contracting with other persons, mill logs, lumber, or other heavy material with log wagons, log carts, or other heavy vehicles, shall pay a license or privilege tax of two (2) cents per mile on each 1,000 feet of (177) mill logs, lumber, or other heavy material so hauled."

Then this section provides that such corporations, firms, or persons shall make a monthly report to the road trustees of the amount of feet hauled each month, and a penalty of $10 per day for each day they fail to make report, etc. *Page 143

This action was begun before a justice of the peace for accumulated penalties aggregating $50 for failure to make the monthly reports required by the statute. On appeal to the Superior Court by the defendant from the judgment of $50 imposed by the justice, the defendant filed a written demurrer alleging that the statute was unconstitutional because in violation of the fourteenth amendment and in violation of the Constitution of North Carolina, Art. V, sec. 3, which requires taxation by uniform rule of all property, and also because in violation of Article I, sec. 7, of the State Constitution, which prohibits special privileges, and also in violation of Article I, sec. 17, which prohibits the deprivation of life, liberty, or property except by the law of the land.

The demurrer was overruled. The only point actually presented is as to the power of the Legislature to require reports by lumber companies of the quantity of lumber hauled by them each month over the roads of Macon County. The statute expressly provides this penalty for failure to perform that duty. The failure to pay is made a misdemeanor subject to a fine of $50, and the civil action for failure to make the report is expressed to be in addition to the fine for failure to pay. There can be no question as to the right of the Legislature to require such report. The State is certainly sovereign as to the regulation of its dirt roads. S. v. Sharp, 125 N.C. 632;S. v. Wheeler, 141 N.C. 776. This would dispose of this appeal. But the question was debated before us upon the broader proposition, whether the act was unconstitutional by reason of the tax being a discrimination and therefore in violation of the constitutional provisions referred to in the demurrer.

It is a matter of common knowledge that lumber companies and others engaged in lumber business do great injury to the public roads. The Legislature deemed it unjust to make the owners of farm land and free labor pay road tax and work the public roads and (178) then to allow lumber companies and others hauling lumber to cut them to pieces without any remuneration or any legal method provided to make them bear an adequate proportion of the burdens. It does not appear upon the face of the fact, which is all that is before us upon this demurrer, that there is any other business carried on in that community which would tend to cut up the roads as the hauling of lumber is calculated to do. But even if this did appear, the Legislature can classify vocations and lay a tax of a different amount upon the different occupations. The only requirement is that the tax shall be uniform upon all in each classification.

In S. v. Powell, 100 N.C. 526, the town of Morganton was authorized to levy privilege taxes of different sums on general occupations, including livery stables, selling sewing machines, etc., and fixing a penalty for carrying on each business without paying the license. This Court held that *Page 144 "A tax is uniform which is the same upon all persons in the same class," and that it is in the discretion of the taxing power to place different rates of taxation on the different classes, citing R. R. Tax Cases,92 U.S. 575, and Puitt v. Commissioners, 94 N.C. 709. Smith, C. J., pointed out that the error in opposing the validity of the taxation consisted "in regarding such tax as imposed on property, in which both uniformity and the ad valorem principle must be observed. This is not a property tax, but a tax upon an occupation or vocation, and is not less so because the appurtenances to a livery stable necessary in conducting the business may be carriages, horses, and other property. Indeed, these articles, though so used, are still subject to the ad valorem assessment as property. As other trades, purely personal, without regard to the magnitude of the business carried, on, may be subjected to a tax of a fixed sum, we see no reason why those which require the use of property may not be."

On turnpike roads, which are kept up by private enterprise, there is one rate for lighter vehicles and a higher rate for heavier vehicles. There is no reason why the Legislature cannot authorize the county to lay a rate of two cents per 1,000 feet for the use of roads in (179) hauling lumber over them and content itself with exacting no tax upon other conveyances which do less damage, and for which the legislative judgment is that the regular road tax was a sufficient return.

In R. R. v. Reidsville, 101 N.C. 404, the Court sustained the validity of an ordinance of the town which levied a $50 tax on every railroad running through the town, saying that it was not repugnant to our own Constitution nor to the Constitution of the United States. In Worth v. R.R., 89 N.C. 295, Smith, C. J., said: The uniform rule to be observed in the exercise of the taxing power seems to be so far applicable to the taxes imposed upon trades, professions, franchises, and incomes as to require no discriminating tax to be imposed upon persons for pursuing the samevocation, while varying amounts may be assessed upon vocations oremployments of different kinds." It was further added that this principle had been sustained by Mr. Justice Miller in R. R. Tax Cases, 92 U.S. 663, which held that it was sufficient "that the rule as to innkeepers be uniform as to all innkeepers, that the rule as to ferries be uniform as to all ferries, and that the rule as to railroad companies be uniform as to all railroad companies."

In Rosenbaum v. New Bern, 118 N.C. 92, Avery, J., says: "The law of uniformity does not prohibit the classification by the municipality of dealers in a particular kind of merchandise separately from those whose business it is to sell other articles falling within the same general terms." To the same effect, Schaul v. Charlotte, 118 N.C. 733. *Page 145

In Lacy v. Packing Co., 134 N.C. 572

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.E. 40, 159 N.C. 175, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalton-v-george-c-brown-co-nc-1912.