H. G. Hill Co. v. Whitice

149 Tenn. 168
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 Tenn. 168 (H. G. Hill Co. v. Whitice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. G. Hill Co. v. Whitice, 149 Tenn. 168 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original bills in these causes were filed by complainants, who are retail grocery merchants in the city of Chattanooga, Hamilton county, Tenn., against W. A. Whitice, county court clerk of Hamilton county, Horace Humphreys, sheriff of said county, Hamilton county, city of Chattanooga, and the mayor and board of commissioners of said city, challénging the right of.said defendants to collect from them certain privilege taxes levied by chapter 75 of the Public Acts of 1923. This act is the general revenue act passed by the General Assembly for that year, and the levy in question appears in section. 4 on page 250 of said act, and is as follows:

r “Every person, firm, or corporation, whether principal or agent, who operates what is known as a rolling or traveling store, that is a store on a truck or motor vehicle carrying stocks of groceries or other goods and selling the same to the public, shall pay for each such store, per annum, $150.”

The defendant Whitice, as clerk of the county court of Hamilton county, having issued distress warrants against said complainants for said privilege tax, they paid the same under protest, and filed the present bills to recover back the tax so paid, and to enjoin defendants from hereafter collecting any further privilege tax from them under said act.

The city of Chattanooga and mayor and board of commissioners of the city were made defendants to the bill upon the theory that, unless enjoined from doing so, the city of Chattanooga, through its municipal authorities, [171]*171would undertake to collect from complainants a similar tax under said act.

Complainants alleged in their bills that they were not subject to said privilege tax; and that the levy was void because oppressive and unreasonable; and that the entire Revenue Act of 1923 is unconstitutional and void, because a large portion of the taxes therein levied is based on the population according to the federal census of 1920, and without reference to any subsequent federal census.

The bills further alleged that, while complainants operated retail grocery stores in the city of Chattanooga at certain designated places in said city, for which, they paid a privilege tax to the State, county and municipality, and also an ad valorem tax on their stocks of goods, they operated various large motor trucks of the capacity from one and one-half to two tons, and upon which were constructed large wooden bodies or beds into which groceries were loaded from their retail stores at stated periods, and each of said trucks were placed in charge of a manager, and were operated by such managers over designated routes in the city of Chattanooga each day,' and from which such groceries were sold and delivered by the managers in charge .of said trucks to the public and persons living upon said routes, and the money collected for said purchases by said managers at the time and place of sale.

The bills alleged that said trucks so operated by complainants were an incident and integral part of their retail grocery business, and do not come within the definition of “rolling stores” as defined by said act, and are not, therefore, subject to the privilege tax levied by said act. And, in view of the fact that complainants have already paid to the State, county, and municipality a privilege tax [172]*172far the privilege of conducting their retail grocery business, the levy of this additional tax of $150 on the trucks operated by them is double taxation, and for that reason is illegal and .void, and cannot be collected by defendants.

Temporary injunctions were issued upon fiats of the chancellor in accordance with the prayers of the bills.

Defendants demurred to each of the bills upon the following grounds:

(1) That they showed that complainants were engaged in operating various rolling or traveling stores in the city of Chattanooga, and' were engaged in selling groceries from said rolling or traveling stores to the public, and the operation of each of said stores is made and defined as a privilege by chapter 75 of the Acts of 1923.

(2) That chapter 75 of the Acts of 1923, making and defining the operation of such stores a privilege, and levying a tax thereon, is a valid enactment, and complainants are liable for the tax so levied.

The causes were consolidated in the court below, and heard upon the bills and demurrers, when the chancellor sustained the demurrers and dismissed complainants’ bills and taxed them with the costs. Prom this decree complainants have appealed to this court and assigned errors.

By their first assignment of error complainants insist that the whole of chapter 75 of the Acts of 1923 is void for the reason that a number of the privileges declared taxable by said act are predicated on a population basis according to the federal census'of 1920, and without reference to any subsequent federal census, under section 13 of said act.

This is true, but complainants do not fall within that [173]*173class of privileges but an entirely different class. The privilege of operating rolling stores is declared and a tax levied thereon without reference to population. The failure of the legislature to provide that certain other privileges, which were fixed on a population basis, should be according to the federal census of 1920, or any subsequent federal census, does not render the entire act void. This defect could only affect those provisions of the act which undertake to fix the tax upon privileges, the amount of which is graduated according to population. In other words, it would not render the whole act void, but only such provisions as make and define the privileges on a population basis and tax them accordingly. These provisions of the act are not connected with, but are wholly independent of, the provisions declaring rolling stores a privilege, and taxing them as such. Therefore, if the other provisions of the act referred ¡to were unconstitutional, which question we need not decide, they could be elided, and the remainder of the act held valid. State v. Scott, 98 Tenn., 255, 39 S. W., 1, 36 L. R. A., 461; Dugger v. Insurance Co., 95 Tenn., 246, 32 S. W., 5, 28 L. R. A. 796; Reelfoot Lake Levee District v. Dawson, 97 Tenn., 151, 36 S. W., 1041, 34 L. R. A., 725; Baker v. Miller, 137 Tenn., 55, 191 S. W., 527; McCamey v. Cummings, 130 Tenn., 494, 172 S. W., 311.

It is next insisted by complainants that the operation of said trucks are a mere incident and integral part of their retail grocery business, and, since they have paid the usual privilege and ad valorem taxes as such grocery merchants, they have the right to operate such rolling stores and sell goods from them to the public without being-liable for any additional tax. .

[174]*174We cannot assent to this contention. The operation of - these trucks form a distinct and independent means of selling groceries by complainants to the public. It is not different to the operation by them of several independent stores in the city of Chattanooga. ^ Each one of these rolling stores is a separate and distinct entity in charge of a manager, and is engaged in selling at retail groceries to the general public just as much as complainants’ stationary stores.

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