Ex Parte Dickison

1928 OK 538, 280 P. 797, 138 Okla. 266, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 966
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1928
Docket18510
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1928 OK 538 (Ex Parte Dickison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Dickison, 1928 OK 538, 280 P. 797, 138 Okla. 266, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 966 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

RILEY, ,T.

Lou Dickison, petitioner, was restrained of his liberty by M. C. Binion, chief of police of Oklahoma City, because of nonpayment of a fine and cost assessed against him in the municipal court of Oklahoma City, based upon violation of Ordinance 2740, as amended by ordinance 3057,. of said city.

Section l of ordinance 2740 reads as follows :

“There is hereby levied a license tax on the callings, trades, businesses, avocations- and occupations hereinafter named, in the following -sums respectively set opposite the-name of such calling, trade, business, avocation or occupation, to wit: * * * Huckster 6 mo., $30.00.”

Section 2 defines the terms “hawking,” “peddling,” and “canvassing.”

Section 3 provides a penalty for every person “violating any provision of this ordinance,” and fixes the amount of the fine or imprisonment to be assessed upon conviction.

S'ection 4 fixes the emergency clause.

Ordinance. 3057 amends section 3 of ordinance 2740 by omission of reference to imprisonment and by limiting the amount of cost to be assessed tp $1.

Petitioner bases his petition upon three grounds as follows:

First, because, he has been unfairly and unreasonably discriminated against by the state and by Oklahoma Oity allowing certain rights and privileges to needy' or disabled ex-service persons and the widows of ex-service persons contrary to the provisions of section 51, art. 5, of the Constitution of Oklahoma, and section 7,. art, 2, of the Bill of Rights, and section 1 of 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.,

Second, because the legislative, body of the city had no authority to enact said ordinance No. 2740 and ordinance. No. 3070; arid

Third, because the said ordinance No. 2740 does not provide or make it unlawful to-engage in the occupation of a huckster without paying the tax or obtaining a license.

We consider the second ground for the obvious !reason that unless there existed authority for the enactment of the ordinances our labors are at an end. We hold that the ordinances presented are revenue-raising measures as distinguished from regulatory enactments under police power, for no word or phrase of the measure. attempts .to regulate or control, whereas the sum assessed for the license discloses the purpose to be for revenue. Ex parte Mayes, 64 Okla. 260, *267 167 Pac. 749; Royal v. State of Va., 116 U. S. 672, 6 S. Ct. 510, 29 L. Ed. 735.

In the latter case it was said:

“That the party complying with the statutory conditions is entitled as of right to the license is conclusive that the payment is a tax laid for revenue, and not an exaction for purposes of regulation. * * * Th'e occupation, which is the subject of the. license, is lawful in itself, and is only prohibited for the purpose of the license; that is to say, prohibited in order to compel the taking out a license, and the license is required only as a convenient method of assessing and collecting the tax.”

Section 4556, C. O. S. 1921. was construed in Ex parte Mayes, supra.

“Neither section 581, R. L. 1910, nor the city ordinance for the violation of which the petitioner was convicted, contemplates the regulation or control of the business or traffic of transporting passengers for hire within and over the streets and public places of the city, but, on the other hand, provide for a license tax for revenue, as distinguished from a license fee collected on account of necessary regulation.”

It is probable that, in the absence of) any grant of power from the sovereignty, the city would have authority under police power to enact regulatory ordinances, restricted as it would be, as to the amount of license fee to be charged, to the cost of issuance and regulation. Ex parte Simmons, 5 Okla. Cr. 399; 115 Pac. 380; State v. City of Billings (Mont.) 255 Pac. 11; Ex parte Bachman, 20 Okla. 78, 201 Pac. 537. But the ordinances under consideration, as we analyze them, are not regulatory, but for revenue. Erom whence comes the authority for such enactments The answer is, from section 4556, C. O. S. 1921, wherein express authority is given by the statute “to levy and collect a license tax upon various exhibitions, professions and avocations, including therein merchants of all kinds,” and to make more certain that it is not regulation but revenue which is authorized, the section closes with a proviso as follows: “Provided, however, that all scientific and literary lectures * * * shall be exempt from such taxation.” Ex parte Mayes, supra.

Such was the construction placed upon the statute prior to its adoption by th’e state from whenee it came. Fretwell v. City of Troy, 18 Kan. 271. It is presumed that the statute was adopted in view of the construction theretofore placed upon it. City of Lyons v. Cooper, (Kan.) 18 Pac. 296.

Therefore, we hold that the* enactments under consideration were within the powér and authority of the city by virtue of the grant of power. Moreover, the act, section 4556, supra, was within the discretion of the Legislature, for by section 20, art. 10 (Wms. 285), Const. of Oklahoma, it is provided:

“The Legislature shall not impose taxes for the purpose of any county, city, town, or other municipal corporation, but may, by general law, .confer on the proper authorities thereof, respectively, the power to assess and collect such taxes.” West v. City of Mt. sterling (Ky.) 65 S. W. 120; City of Carlisle v. Heckinger & Co., 103 Ky. 381, 45 S. W. 358.

Section 4556, supra, in fact, was a general law conferring authority such as was exercised by! enactment of th'e ordinances here considered.

We may consider some expressions of this court upon this subject-matter.

City of Tulsa v. Metropolitan Jewelry Co., 74 Okla. 107, 176 Pac. 956. That cause turned upon the provision of th'e city charter which prohibited the levying of an occupational tax for general revenue purposes.

Mitchell v. City of Lawton, 124 Okla. 60, 253 Pac. 999, expressly holds that the city “had the power to levy and collect a license tax on auctioneers for the purpose of revenue (section 4556, C. O. S. 1921). It also had authority to levy a license tax for the purpose of regulating the business of auc-tioneering as an exercise of the police power.” That opinion held the ordinance to be. “a police regulation and not a revenue measure.” And being merely regulatory, “the license fee charged must not exceed the 'expense of issuing the. license and regulating the business.” Since the ordinance th'ere considered did exceed such cost, it was held void. The writer did not concur in that opinion, for the reason that it seemed illogical to strike down the ordinance for being revenue raising when authority to enact such measures existed, even though the measure be considered regulatory as authorized under the police power. Is there any reason why the ordinance could not be conceived by a union of police power and specifically granted revenue powers, and live as a revenue raising as well as a regulatory-enactment?

Gundling v. Chicago, 177 U. S. 183, 44 L. Ed. 725, 37 C. J. 168, holds in the affirmative where it says:

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 538, 280 P. 797, 138 Okla. 266, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-dickison-okla-1928.