In re Chester Mercantile Tax

74 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23
CourtDelaware County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedFebruary 25, 1949
StatusPublished

This text of 74 Pa. D. & C. 150 (In re Chester Mercantile Tax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Chester Mercantile Tax, 74 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Toal, J.,

On January 26,1949, certain taxpayers of the City of Chester filed an appeal from an ordinance of the city, viz., ordinance no. 73, enacted December 28, 1948, the appeal being filed in compliance with section 3 of the Act of June 25, 1947, P. L. 1145 — authority to levy, assess and collect taxes. The appeal was made a supersedeas by special order of the court with the result that the provisions of the ordinance attempting to levy, assess and collect a certain mercantile tax have been suspended pending final determination of the appeal by this court. The court fixed a date for a hearing which has now been held, and the case has been argued orally before the court en banc, with submission of written briefs by each side. The case is now ready for disposition by this court.

Ordinance No. 73 of the City of Chester was enacted under authority given by the Act of June 25, 1947, [152]*152P. L. 1145. This statute was held constitutional by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in English v. Robinson Township School District, 358 Pa. 45.

In the instant case the sole testimony offered by appellants was: (1) Production of the following documentary evidence: Mercantile Tax Ordinance No. 73— 1948 of the City of Chester; the proof of publication of the notice of intention of the city council to pass a mercantile tax ordinance on the vendors of goods, wares and merchandise within the City of Chester at a rate of three fifths of a mill on the gross volume of wholesale business and one mill on retail; ordinance no. 78 — 1948, which was the budget ordinance of the City of Chester; (2) oral evidence by the Chester City accountant, who produced a statement of the receipts, expenditures and balances in the 1945 $500,000 postwar improvement ordinance of the City of Chester. This statement indicated that a balance of $154,000 remained in the bond issue fund.

The city on its side produced the following documentary evidence: The 1945 $500,000 bond issue ordinance as certified to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Delaware County and the Secretary of Internal Affairs of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which showed on its face that the funds derived from the bond issue were specifically earmarked for certain capital improvements. W. Alrich Price, director of finance and accounts, testified on behalf of the city that the balance remaining in the post-war fund would be exhausted during the year 1949 by the completion of certain postwar projects which were authorized under the bond issue. He also testified that at the time the mercantile tax ordinance was introduced in city council on November 24, 1948, the city had not completed its budget estimates for the year 1949, and that during the 30-day period when council was advertising the notice of intention to enact the mercantile tax ordinance, city [153]*153council discovered that the rate of three fifths of a mill on wholesale and one mill on retail would not yield the amount necessary to balance the 1949 budget. Mr. Price testified he secured the best available figures on the gross volume of retail and wholesale business within the City of Chester, and ascertained that, based on these estimates, the rate of tax had to be increased to meet the city’s financial requirements for 1949. The city offered in evidence the certification of the amount of the assessment of taxable real estate in the City of Chester for the year 1949. The city further showed that the estimated receipts based on three fifths of a mill on wholesale and one mill on retail gross sales during 1949 would amount only to $90,200, whereas the amount required to balance the 1949 budget was $168,400. The city further showed that immediately after the notice of intention to enact the mercantile tax ordinance was published in the Chester Times, certain owners of businesses, in the City of Chester appeared before city council and on their own behalf and through counsel entered protests against the type of tax proposed to be imposed; and that during the entire time council was giving consideration to the enactment of the ordinance these protestants by themselves, or through legal counsel, conferred with members of the city council and were informed that the tax rates set forth in the original notice of intention to adopt the ordinance were not sufficient to produce the money added to balance the 1949 budget.

Appellants in this case are not questioning the validity of the Act of June 25,1947, supra, authorizing the appellee to impose a mercantile tax on certain classes of taxpayers; nor do they say that such a tax is unconstitutional and void for lack of uniformity. What they contend is that the City of Chester ordinance is invalid and void because (1) of inherent defects in the ordinance itself, apparent on its face; (2) [154]*154that the notice of intention to enact the ordinance was not given in accordance with the mandatory requirements of Act of 1947, supra, because in the original and only notice given, the rates of taxation were fixed at three fifths mill on wholesale and one mill on retail gross sales, whereas the ordinance as finally adopted was amended on third reading to change the rates of taxation to one mill on wholesale and two mills on retail gross sales; and (3) that appellee (city) does not need the money expected to be obtained from the mercantile tax for the year 1949 because appellee has sufficient available funds from other sources to meet its budgetary requirements, and that therefore, the tax is unreasonable and excessive.

We have arranged the points advanced in the above order because this appears to be a logical and practical method of approach. If the ordinance is inherently defective on its face, then of course we need pursue the inquiry no further because it would of necessity fall. However, if no such defects appear in the ordinance itself, we must go outside of it and examine whether the requirements of the enabling act as to notice of intention to adopt the ordinance have been complied with sufficiently to render adoption of the ordinance a lawful exercise of the legislative power of the appellee (city). If both of the two above points can be found for appellee and against appellants, then point three becames important and this court must decide the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the tax.

Appellants say the ordinance is so indefinite, unreasonable and uncertain on its face that it is invalid as a matter of law. They point to section 6(a) as an example of indefiniteness and uncertainty; this section reads as follows:

“Every person subject to the payment of the tax hereby imposed who has commenced his business at least one (1) full year prior to the beginning of any [155]*155license year shall compute his annual gross volume of business upon the actual gross amount of business transacted by him during the preceding license year” (Italics supplied.)

The complaint of appellants is that as there was no license year in existence prior to the adoption of the ordinance, taking effect February 1, 1949, to attempt to compel a taxpayer to compute his tax based upon a period of time which could be said to be nonexistent, rendered the ordinance uncertain and indefinite.

Examining the ordinance further we find section 2 (/) defines “license year” as “the twelve-month period beginning the first day of February in each and every year”.

Section 3 provides:

“. . . for the license year beginning February 1, 1949 . . . the city shall issue mercantile licenses and hereby imposes an annual mercantile license tax. . . .”

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Related

English v. Robinson Township School District
55 A.2d 803 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1947)
Blauner's, Inc. v. Philadelphia
198 A. 889 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)
Federal Drug Co. v. Pittsburgh
57 A.2d 849 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)
Kellerman v. Philadelphia
13 A.2d 84 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
Clouser v. Reading City
113 A. 188 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
74 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chester-mercantile-tax-paqtrsessdelawa-1949.