Grantham v. City of Chickasha

1932 OK 123, 9 P.2d 747, 156 Okla. 56, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 16, 1932
Docket22609
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1932 OK 123 (Grantham v. City of Chickasha) 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
Grantham v. City of Chickasha, 1932 OK 123, 9 P.2d 747, 156 Okla. 56, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 182 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This was an action filed in the district court of Grady county, Okla., for an injunction enjoining and restraining the city of Chickasha and its officers from enforcing ordinance No. 1032, of said city, which sought to levy a license tax on hawkers, peddlers, and itinerant merchants on the grounds that the ordinance was void and unconstitutional, and that the enforcement of same would result in irreparable damage to said plaintiffs.

*57 The defendants filed a general demurrer to the petition. The trial court sustained said demurrer, refused to grant an injunction, and dismissed plaintiffs’ petition. Plaintiffs have appealed to this court. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiffs urge three grounds for reversal of the judgment of the trial court as follows:

(1) Said court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the defendants to the petition of plaintiffs.

(2) Said court erred in dismissing the petition of plaintiffs.

(3) The judgment of the court is contrary to law.

The ordinance, in part, provides as follows :

“Ordinance No. 1032.
“An ordinance levying a license tax upon hawkers, peddlers and itinerant merchants: making it unlawful to engage in any such business without first having obtained a license therefor; prescribing a penalty and declaring an emergency.
“Be it ordained by the mayor and councilmen of the city of Chickasha, Okla. Section One (1) : That license tax be, and the same is hereby, levied and imposed upon each and every hawker, peddler, or itinerant merchant, as follows, to wit: * * *
“For each and every hawker, peddler or itinerant merchant dealing in goods, wares, or merchandise of every kind or character, not hereinabove specifically enumerated, the sum of $100 per annum. Provided, however, that nothing in this ordinance shall be deemed to impose a license tax for the sale of agricultural or farm produce raised in the state of Oklahoma, where the same is being sold by the person raising or producing the same.
“Section Two (2) : That the term itinerant merchant as herein used in this ordinance, shall be deemed to mean and include any and all itinerant vendors, transit vendors, itinerant traders, itinerant merchants and traveling merchants or persons coming in and offering for sale any items of merchandise, or persons who sell or offer for sale goods, wares or merchandise by traveling around the city or by delivering them from cars or freight depots, who have no fixed or established store, warehouse, or other place of business within the city of Chickasha.
“Section Four (4) : That it shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation, to hawk, peddle or engage in business as an itinerant merchant, as in this ordinance defined, without first having obtained a license therefor, and any person, firm or corporation so engaged in hawking or peddling as an itinerant merchant, without having first obtained ,a license therefior, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction therefor shall be fined in any sum not to exceed $19. Provided, each and every day that any such person, firm or corporation shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinance shall be deemed a separate offense.”

It will be observed that section 1 of said ordinance provides a license tax upon each hawker, peddler, or itinerant merchant at different rates based upon the commodity or product dealt in by such persons. Under section 2 thereof, the term “itinerant merchant” is defined in broad and sweeping terms. This ordinance is attacked by the Campbell Baking Company, Colonial Baking Company, and the drivers of their respective trucks, each of which companies has a manufacturing plant in Oklahoma City, where bread and bakery goods are manufactured by said companies in such quantities as are sufficient to meet the immediate needs and demands of the various communities to which said companies deliver their bakery products. These food products are delivered in trucks of said companies by said drivers and are sold in towns and cities within the trade territory surrounding Oklahoma City, and which includes the city of Chickasha, and are distributed primarily to retail merchants, grocery stores, hotels, and restaurants for resale to the consuming public. The plaintiffs operate these trucks daily, except on Sunday, and the ordinance in controversy levies a tax of $100 a year on each of said plaintiffs, and exempts merchants and others doing business in a like manner with plaintiffs, provided they have a fixed store, warehouse, or other place of business within the city of Chickasha. There are no house-to-house salesmen and the drivers of the trucks usually make the collections.

It is the contention of the plaintiffs, based' upon the pleadings, that the ordinance is designed and passed for the purpose of enforcement against business being conducted by those whose place of business is maintained outside of the city of Chickasha, and that it applies to plaintiffs by reason of the fact that they do not have an “established store, warehouse, or other place of business in said city” of Chickasha; that the ordinance is unconstitutional and void; that it is discriminatory; that those who are similarly engaged in the city of Chick-asha do not pay any tax under said ordinance; that the enforcement of said ordinance would confiscate and destroy the business of each of said plaintiffs, and that the *58 jurisdiction of a court of equity is invoked to avoid a multiplicity of suits and to prevent irreparable injury to plaintiffs’ business.

Section 4556, C. O. S. 1921, provides in part:

“4556. Occupation and License Tax. The city council shall have authority to levy and collect a license tax on auctioneers, contractors, druggists, hawkers, peddlers, .bankers, brokers, pawnbrokers, merchants of all kinds, grocers, confectioners, restaurants, butchers, taverns, public boarding houses, billiard tables, bowling alleys (and other amusement devices, drays, hacks, carriages, omnibuses, carts, wagons, and other vehicles used in the city for pay, hay scales, lumber dealers, furniture dealers, saddle or harness dealers, stationers, jewelers, livery stable keepers, real estate agents, express companies or agencies, life or. fire insurance companies or agencies, telegraph companies or agencies, shows, theaters, all kinds of exhibitions for pay. * * *”

Counsel for plaintiffs urge that the city of Chickasha cannot extend its powers granted to it under section 4556, C. O. S. 1921, by including avocations, trades, or lines of business which are not expressly enumerated therein; that said section of the statute which authorizes the city of Chickasha to levy an occupational tax as set forth therein does not include an occupational tax upon bakers, manufacturing bakers, or manufacturers.

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 123, 9 P.2d 747, 156 Okla. 56, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grantham-v-city-of-chickasha-okla-1932.