Ex parte Thornton

12 F. 538, 4 Hughes 220, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedJune 22, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 F. 538 (Ex parte Thornton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Thornton, 12 F. 538, 4 Hughes 220, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540 (circtedva 1882).

Opinion

Hughes, D. J.

On the sixth of June, 1882, the petitioner, Hay T. Thornton, was committed to jail by a justice of the peace of Norfolk city on a charge of having sold and offered to sell in the said, city, goods, wares, and merchandise by sample, card, description, or other representation, without having obtained a sample-merchant’s license in accordance with sections 31 and 32 of tho act of the general assembly of Virginia, approved April 22, 1882, entitled “An act for the assessment of taxes on persons, property, income, and licenses, and imposing taxes thereon for the support of the government and free schools, and to pay the interest on the public debt.” [540]*540On the same day he filed his petition before this court, praying the award of the writ of habeas cordis, and objecting to his arrest on the ground that the provisions of the law under which he was held in custody were in violation of the constitution of the United States, and therefore null and void. The writ was issued as of course, and the sergeant of' the city brought the petitioner before this court at once, and made return according to the facts. Thereupon the petitioner was admitted to bail on his recognizance to appear on a future day named to answer the judgment of the court in this matter. The case was adjourned to Richmond for hearing on the fifteenth of June, and directions were given that notice of the hearing should be filed with the attorney general of Virginia. On that day the case was heard on the papers in the cause, and on arghment by the attorney general of Virginia for the state, and by counsel for the petitioner.

The petition sets out, among other things, the following facts: The petitioner is an employe of Samuel D. Egerton & Co., wholesale grocers in the city of Baltimore, Maryland. His duty is to travel and take orders for the sale of goods of the house named. His sales are made by sample, card, or description, and the goods, after sales are made, are shipped directly from the warehouse of Egerton & Co. in Baltimore to the purchaser. The petition concedes that the petitioner was selling by sample or card, etc., when he was arrested. It does not aver that the firm employing him had taken out a license as sample merchants in Virginia, or that he had power of attorney to act for them, as is required by law. The petition avers that the firm of Egerton & Co. had paid to the state of Maryland and to the city of Baltimore the taxes required to be paid there by law for conducting their business as wholesale grocers there.

The act of assembly under which the petitioner was arrested classifies tradesmen doing business in Virginia as follows: (1) Merchants; (2) commission merchants; (8) sample merchants;' and so on.

The complaint of the petitioner is based upon sections 27 and 28 of the act of assembly in question, which relate to merchants; compared with sections'31 and 3,2, which relate to sample merchants. These sections provide that a sample merchant must pay $250 for the privilege of selling by sample in the state, by means of one agent; and, if he employs more than one, then he must pay $50 additional for 'each additional agent; and they provide that any merchant who pays a license tax of as much as $250 may sell by sample agents, without limit to the number of agents. But, although the merchant may employ an unrestricted number of sample agents without [541]*541an increase of fax merely on account of the increase of their number, yet his tax is increased on another scale. If his purchases amount to §50,000, he pays a tax of §220; and if they are more than §50,000, he pays at the rate of 10 cents per §100, or §1 for every $1,000 of the increase; that is to say, he pays $300 on $100,-000; $400 on §200,000; §500 on §300,000; §600 on §400,000; and so on. And no merchant can soil by means of sample agents unless he pays a tax of at least §250'. If there was intention on the part of the legislature to assimilate the tax on sample merchants with that on merchants, they seemed to assume that after each had been required to secure a license by paying each a tax of $250, every sample agent after the first would sell goods to the amount of $50,-000, for license to do which lie would pay §50, while the merchant, if increasing his sales by agent or otherwise, is charged the same additional tax of §50 for each increase in sales of §50,000.

The charge of the petition before me is that those of the foregoing provisions of the Virginia law relating to merchants are meant for residents and designed to favor the business of residents, while those relating to sample merchants are meant for non-residents and designed to prejudice the business of non-residents, and that these provisions, taken together, are an injurious discrimination against nonresidents in favor of residents, and are therefore repugnant to tho following clauses of the constitution of the United States:

“ The citizens of each state shall ho entitled to fill immunities and privileges of citizens in the seyeral .states.” Art. 4, § 2. “ Congress shall have power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes.” Art. 1, § B. “hfo state shall, without the consent of congress, lay any imposts, or duties on imports or exports, except what may he absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws; * * * and all such laws shall he subject to the revision and control of the congress.” Art. 1, § 10, sub. 2.

It is a fundamental principle that statutes are subordinate to constitutions, and that, where these conflict, the statute must; to the extent of the conflict, be held inoperative. The power of deciding whether or not such conflict exists, is, for the most part, reposed in the courts, state or federal; and although they exercise it with reluctance, they exercise it without hesitation. They are, however, naturally inclined, whenever called upon to scrutinize adversely the statute law, to confine their purview within the narrowest practicable limits, and to endeavor rather to preserve than to overthrow.

[542]*542In tbe present instance I am at liberty to consider only those provisions of tbe Virginia license and tax act of April 22, 1882, which bear upon the case of the petitioner. If, among other provisions of that act, there be those liable to such objections as are urged against these, they are beyond my present cognizance, and, in point of fact, have not at all entered into the consideration of this case. I am to pass only upon a very few of the provisions of the voluminous act of which sections 27, 28, 31, and 32 are part, and I wish to exclude the conclusion that the whole act, or any considerable part of it, has been under review on this occasion. Nor am I at liberty to'deal with the present case except upon the facts specifically averred in the petition before me. If there are facts connected with the petitioner’s case or conduct, other than those formally alleged in the petition under oath, they are dehors the record and beyond my purview. The petition omits to allege that Egerton & Co. had paid the tax as sample merchants to the state of Virginia required by the license and tax act of 1882. It omits to allege that the petitioner, Thornton, at the time of selling by sample, had with him, as that act requires, any copy of a certificate from the clerk of some county or corporation of the'state showing that,his employers had obtained license to sell by sample in Virginia. It omits to allege that Thornton had with him his employers’ power of attorney authorizing him to sell by sample for them, as the same act requires.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. 538, 4 Hughes 220, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-thornton-circtedva-1882.