In Re Robinson

230 P. 175, 68 Cal. App. 744, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 314
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 800.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 P. 175 (In Re Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Robinson, 230 P. 175, 68 Cal. App. 744, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 314 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The petitioner in this cause was arrested for having failed to take out a license, pursuant to the provisions of section 74 of Ordinance 159, 4th series, of the city of Sacramento, and seeks his discharge herein on the ground that the provisions of said ordinance, under and by virtue of which he was arrested, are unconstitutional and void.

Section 74 of said ordinance, among other things, provides as follows: “A solicitor within the meaning of this ordinance is defined to be any person who goes from house to house, or from place to place in the City of Sacramento, selling or taking orders for, or offering to sell or take orders for goods, wares, or merchandise or any article for future delivery, other than newspapers, or for services to be performed in the future, or for the malting, manufacturing or repairing of any article or thing whatsoever for future delivery, provided, however, that this section shall apply only to solicitors who demand, accept or receive payment or deposit of money in advance of final delivery.

“Provided, further, that under no circumstances shall this ordinance or any section thereof be construed to require that a license be obtained where any regularly established business house which has been established more than three months in the city of Sacramento, sends out solicitors to take orders for goods to be delivered from such established place of business or for making delivery of such goods.”

The ordinance then provides that it shall be unlawful for any person to act as a solicitor within the meaning of this section, without having first secured a license from the city controller. A bond in the sum of five hundred dollars is also provided for. The amount of the license is fixed at two hundred dollars per quarter.

*746 On the part of the petitioner, it is contended that the ordinance in question is violative of sections 11 and 21 of article I of the state constitution. Section 11 reads: “All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation,” and section 21 provides that: “No special privileges or immunities shall ever be granted which may not be altered, revoked, or repealed by the legislature, nor shall any citizen, or class of citizens; be granted privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not be granted to all citizens.”

As contended by the petitioner, it will be noticed that the ordinance treats of and relates simply to solicitors, and applies only to solicitors who ask and receive a deposit of money at the time of taking the order and preceding the delivery of the article for which the order is taken, and, in doing this, it is divided into three classes:

“1. Solicitors for newspapers;
“2. Solicitors for orders to be filled from established houses in the city of Sacramento;
“3. Solicitors for orders to be delivered from business houses outside the city of Sacramento.”

Of these classes a license tax is required only of those who come within the third subdivision, and upon this class a tax of two hundred dollars per quarter is imposed. ,The petitioner belongs to the third class.

There is another distinction made in the ordinance, to wit, that applying to business houses in the city of Sacramento which have not been established or had a permanent place of business for a period of at least three months before sending out solicitors. But, as this distinction or classification is not directly involved in this proceeding, we shall not attempt to determine whether this provision in the ordinance affects its validity.

It will be observed that the boundary line of the incorporation known as the city of Sacramento determines the applicability of the provisions of the ordinance relating to the payment of a license fee. It is not the character of the business transacted. It is the place of the location of the storehouse or warehouse or headquarters from which a solicitor draws his supplies that determines whether or not he, the solicitor, is subject to the pains and penalties of the *747 ordinance. If he draws his supplies and fills his orders from a house situated within the exterior limits of the city of Sacramento, then he is free from all the provisions of the ordinance, but if he fills his orders from a house situated outside the city limits, whether it be in or outside of the state of California, then he must necessarily pay the sum of two hundred dollars per quarter, and also give a bond to protect the persons from whom he may have taken orders. There are two restrictive provisions of the ordinance which relate exclusively to solicitors representing outside houses that do not apply to local houses, or houses having their situs inside the corporate limits of the city of Sacramento, to wit: the giving of a bond and the payment of the sum of two hundred dollars per quarter or an annual sum of eight hundred dollars. It will also be noticed that the restrictive provisions of the ordinance apply exclusively to solicitors. They have no application to the houses themselves. It has frequently been held that an ordinance requiring the payment of a license fee may, in its classification, fix a sum to be paid by the solicitors, and also a different or other sum by established business houses, but that classification is not involved herein. It is simply the question whether the solicitor represents an inside or an outside business establishment. In the one case, he is subject to the provisions of the ordinance; in the other, he is exempt therefrom, although "in both eases he may be doing exactly the same kind, character, and volume of business. It will also be noticed that the ordinance applies to solicitors engaged in interstate commerce, as well as those representing houses within the state of California but outside the corporate limits of the city of Sacramento, and so comes within the long line of decisions of the United States supreme court wherein it has been held repeatedly that no municipality has the power, even for purposes of regulation, to place a heavier burden upon interstate commerce than upon domestic trade of the same kind and character.

In support of the ordinance the attention of the court is called to the case of Real Silk Hosiery Mills etc. v. City of Portland, 297 Fed. 897. The ordinance in question, as a part of section 74, is drafted along somewhat similar lines to the ordinance considered in the Portland case, but contains one radical departure therefrom, which take it out of *748 all the reasoning of the court in the Portland ease. In the Portland case, section 1 of the ordinance defined a solicitor just as we find that term explained in the Sacramento ordinance, to wit: “One taking orders for goods, wares and merchandise and receiving a deposit of money in advance of final delivery.” The Portland ordinance also required the giving of a five hundred dollar bond. Were this all of the provisions of the ordinance now under consideration, we might consider the case relied upon by the respondents as authority for the upholding of the provisions of section 74 or Ordinance 159, 4th series, of the city of Sacramento.

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Bluebook (online)
230 P. 175, 68 Cal. App. 744, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-robinson-calctapp-1924.