Estes v. City of Richmond

68 S.E.2d 109, 193 Va. 181, 1951 Va. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 3, 1951
DocketRecord 3924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 S.E.2d 109 (Estes v. City of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estes v. City of Richmond, 68 S.E.2d 109, 193 Va. 181, 1951 Va. LEXIS 253 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this proceeding W. W. Estes, doing business as Estes Express Lines, and referred to herein as petitioner, contends that the City of Richmond, hereinafter called the City, illegally assessed business license taxes against him for the years 1948 and 1949 in the respective sums of $907.11 and $908.32.

Petitioner is the owner and operator of a fleet of trucks and is engaged in the business of a common carrier of freight by motor vehicle. He holds fifteen certificates of public convenience and necessity from the State Corporation Commission of Virginia, under which he is authorized to transport freight by motor vehicles to and from certain termini and over designated routes in intrastate commerce. Though he also renders ■ interstate freight service under authorization from the Interstate Commerce Commission, that service is not involved in this proceeding, for the license tax assessments complained of were based solely upon gross receipts from intrastate operations.

Under some of petitioner’s Virginia certificates, he renders intrastate freight service over designated routes to and from Richmond to other cities and towns in this State, and by these routes, shipments originating in, or consigned to, Richmond, are hauled. Certain other of his State certificates permit and require service to and from other cities and towns, and over some of these designated routes shipments may pass through Richmond en route to destination. Still other certificates held by him authorize and require service over routes remote from Richmond, and shipments thus transported never enter this city.

An office and a freight depot are maintained and operated by petitioner in Chase City, Virginia, but the major part of the administrative and managerial functions of the business are carried on at the office and depot located at Richmond. However, in his intrastate business there are also maintained and operated five other depots in Virginia, which are located at Kilmarnock, Mathews, Gloucester, Warsaw and Norfolk respectively.

All of petitioner’s intrastate business consists of hauling *183 goods to and from points on Ms certificated routes, and tMis no freigM is transported wholly within the city.

The City relies upon section 62 of its 1926 Charter (Acts of General Assembly 1926, ch. 318, pp. 533, 573), as amended by Acts of the General Assembly of 1938, ch. 339, pp. 533, 535, 1 as the source of power under which it ordained imposition of the license taxes for the years in question. The material part of section 62 follows:

The council may grant or refuse licenses and may prohibit the conduct of business without such a license, and may require taxes to be paid on such licenses to all business which cannot, in the opinion of the council,- be reached by the ad valorem system * *

For its immediate right to assess and collect the specific license taxes imposed upon petitioner for the years 1948 and 1949, the City relies upon section 10.203, chapter 10 of the Richmond City Code, as re-ordained December 23, 1947. The material parts of that section follow:

“Every person engaged in one or more of the following businesses shall pay a license tax equal to—$20.00 and thirty-four hundredths of one per centum of the gross receipts of the business or businesses conducted by him, as follows: * * *
‘ ‘ (b) The business of: * * *
“Packing, Crating, Shipping, Hauling or Moving Goods or Chattels for others. * * *”
“Every person engaged in one or more of the foregoing businesses, other than the operation of a laundry, and having no place- of business in the City of Richmond, shall pay a license tax of—$300.00.
1 The license taxes prescribed in this section shall be in addition to the license taxes prescribed elsewhere upon slot machines *184 or upon vehicles of any kind.” Richmond City Code of 1937, as amended by ordinance of December 23, 1947; Ordinances and Resolutions of the City of Richmond 1946 to 1948, section 10.203, p. 611. 2

The assessments imposed upon petitioner were based and computed upon the total gross receipts derived from his entire intrastate business and were levied under section (b) of the above ordinance, for conducting the business of “Hauling* or Moving Goods or Chattels for others.” The trial court concluded that the City could legally assess petitioner with a city license tax for conducting the business in question. However, it held that the yearly license tax was to be based upon and limited to that portion of petitioner’s gross receipts that “arise out of and are connected with the handling of goods or chattels, the intrastate shipment of which either originates in, terminates in, or physically passes through the corporate limits of the City of Richmond, regardless of origin and destination, and regardless of whether they go into the Richmond depot of the petitioner or do not go through that depot # * * ”

The result of the order and judgment which carried into effect the court’s finding and conclusion was to reduce the assessed license taxes which were based upon the entire intrastate gross receipts and to authorize and order the imposition and collection of a yearly license tax for 1948 and 1949 based upon petitioner’s gross receipts received from its intrastate shipments which arose in, terminated in, or passed through the city. Gross receipts from shipments that did not.arise or terminate in, or pass through the city were excluded from the receipts upon which the tax was to be computed.

Petitioner’s contention that the business license tax imposed upon him was illegal and should be cancelled is twofold. He insists:

(1) that the City’s then charter granted no authority to impose through ordinance license taxes upon the business of conducting and operating intrastate certificated motor vehicle carriers of freight. In this connection he says that he is not doing business in the City, for there is no intracity transportation of freight; and

(2) that whether or not the City is empowered to require *185 payment of a license tax by petitioner on tbe business conducted, tbe words and terminology of the ordinance, i. e., “the business of * * * Packing, Crating, Shipping, Hauling, or Moving Goods or Chattels for others * * *” are not sufficiently descriptive or specific to include the business of operating certificated freight motor vehicle carriers.

The City assigned cross-error and asserts that the court should have concluded that petitioner was liable for a license tax based on his entire gross intrastate receipts and thus should have refused to alter or abate in any degree the assessments for the years involved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E.2d 109, 193 Va. 181, 1951 Va. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estes-v-city-of-richmond-va-1951.