Harris Bros. v. State

198 So. 437, 29 Ala. App. 538, 1940 Ala. App. LEXIS 78
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1940
Docket4 Div. 597.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 So. 437 (Harris Bros. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris Bros. v. State, 198 So. 437, 29 Ala. App. 538, 1940 Ala. App. LEXIS 78 (Ala. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

The State of Alabama brought suit against Harris Brothers, appellants, to recover a special tobacco license, or privilege tax, for each of the years 1936-37 and 1937-38, alleged to have been fixed under the General Revenue Act of Alabama, 1935, and under an amendatory act thereof, approved March 2, 1937, which privilege tax for said years the State alleged was due from the defendants for selling tobacco and tobacco products from a rolling store operated by them in Geneva County, during said years, and which tax the State alleged the defendants, after citation, had refused and failed to pay.

The complaint filed by the State, and also the judgment of the lower court, from which this appeal was taken, appear in full in the report of the case.

The defendants, a partnership, were engaged in the mercantile business at Slocomb, Geneva County, Alabama, a town of less than 1,000 inhabitants, in the years 1936, 1937 and 1938. Their store, or place of business, in said town, was kept open during business hours throughout each of *Page 541 said years, and for the privilege of conducting their said mercantile business aforesaid, said partnership paid the regular license, or privilege tax, levied by law, to the State of Alabama, County of Geneva. Among the articles of merchandise sold by said partnership from their said store in Slocomb were tobacco and tobacco products, for the privilege of selling which from said store said partnership also paid the special tobacco tax levied by law.

In addition to the merchandise business conducted by the defendants in the town of Slocomb, said partnership took from their said store a part of their stock of goods, wares and merchandise, including tobacco and tobacco products and loaded it upon and into a motor vehicle, property equipped for the purpose, and sent said merchandise out on a regular route, or itinerary, and on a regular schedule each business day. This motor vehicle, or rolling store, would leave defendants' place of business in Slocomb at approximately 8 o'clock A. M. and would return thereto that same day, upon the completion of its regular schedule route for that day, usually completing the outgoing and incoming round trip by 8 o'clock P. M.

The defendants sold goods, wares and merchandise, including tobacco and tobacco products, from this motor vehicle, or rolling store, to its customers each day, on the schedule route for that day in Geneva County. For the privilege of operating its rolling store over and along the public highways of Geneva County, and selling goods, wares and merchandise therefrom, the defendants paid to the State of Alabama, and County of Geneva, a license or privilege tax of $150 for each of said years, as provided by law, $100 of said amount being for the State, and $50 thereof for Geneva County.

With reference to the special tobacco and tobacco products license, or privilege tax, Mr. W. E. Harris testified as follows: "On demand of the State of (or) some agent of the State for 1936-37, and subsequent years we paid the tobacco tax charged against the rolling store in the sum of $3.50 obtaining the license from the Judge of Probate; the population of Slocomb, according to the last census, is a little less than one thousand people and we do business at that place."

The above was all the testimony with respect to the special tobacco license, or privilege tax for the year 1936-37. With reference to said special tax for the year 1937-38, the defendants produced two licenses, Nos. 75 and 76, each issued to Harris Brothers and each countersigned by the Probate Judge of Geneva County. Each of these licenses acknowledged the deposit with said Judge of Probate of the sum of $2.00 for the State, and of the sum of $1 for the use of the county, as required by law, under each of which said licenses said Harris Bros. were authorized from and after the date of said licenses (October 13, 1937) to transact business as Dealer in Cig., Tob., Snuff, Cigars and Stogies at Slocomb, Alabama. As to these licenses Mr. W. E. Harris testified that one was for the store at Slocomb, and the other for the rolling store.

The rolling store license for which defendants paid $150 was countersigned by the Judge of Probate of Geneva County on October 13, 1937, and authorized defendants to transact business as "Operate Rolling Store at Geneva County, Alabama," and was numbered 74. Of course it is apparent that the rolling store license, and the two special tobacco licenses were obtained by the defendants at the same time, and it is also equally apparent that one of the special tobacco licenses was obtained for the rolling store, and one for the store, or place of business of defendants at Slocomb.

It, therefore, appears from the undisputed testimony that the defendants paid at special license or privilege tax of $3 for the years 1936-37, and 1937-38, two years, each respectively for the privilege of selling tobacco and tobacco products from their rolling store, operated in Geneva County, and for the operation of which in said county, they without dispute paid for each of said two years a privilege or license tax of $150.

The State contends, however, that the amount of the special tobacco license tax due from the defendants and which they should have paid for each of said two years was not $2 to the State, and $1 to the county, but that the sum was $15 to the State, and $7.50 to the county, or $22 for each of said years. So the question at issue between the parties is what was the correct amount of special tobacco license, or privilege tax which Harris Bros. should have paid to the State and county for the privilege of selling tobacco and tobacco products from their rolling store in Geneva County, during the years 1936-37 and 1937-38. *Page 542

Schedule 32, Section 348, of the General Revenue Act of 1935, page 451, fixes the license, or privilege tax to be paid the State, for the privilege of selling tobacco and tobacco products, as follows: In cities of 25,000 inhabitants and over, $15; in cities or towns of 10,000 inhabitants and less than 25,000 inhabitants, $10; in cities or towns of 5,000 inhabitants and less than 10,000, $5; in cities or towns of 2,000 and less than 5,000 inhabitants, $3; in all other places, whether incorporated or not, $2. Under the provisions of said act the above amounts are to be paid for the use of the State. The amounts to be paid for the use of the county are one half of the amounts to be paid for the use of the State. In other words, the effect of said schedule was to fix the total license, or privilege tax, for the privilege of selling tobacco and tobacco products from a rolling store in the rural sections of Geneva County, for both State and county, at the sum of $3, for the reason that the rural section of Geneva County is a place other than an incorporated city or town.

The above schedule of tobacco and tobacco products licenses was in force and effect October 1, 1936, for the license tax year beginning October 1, 1936, and ending September 30, 1937. The defendants, according to the undisputed testimony, paid a tobacco and tobacco products license tax of $3 to the State of Alabama, and County of Geneva, along with an issuing fee of 50 cents to the Judge of Probate of said county, for the privilege of selling tobacco, and tobacco products from their rolling store in Geneva County, Alabama, during said year. It is true that upon the trial of the case, counsel for the State said: "According to the records we have only two licenses for the years 1936-37, one for the rolling store and one for the tobacco products. The next year, however, he was charged for the rolling store and two for tobacco, isn't that correct?" The testimony of Mr. W. E.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 437, 29 Ala. App. 538, 1940 Ala. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-bros-v-state-alactapp-1940.