Lone Star Shows, Inc. v. Commissioner of Sinking Fund

171 S.W.2d 28, 294 Ky. 114, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 30, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 28 (Lone Star Shows, Inc. v. Commissioner of Sinking Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lone Star Shows, Inc. v. Commissioner of Sinking Fund, 171 S.W.2d 28, 294 Ky. 114, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 399 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

In 1939 the legislative department of the city of Louisville enacted “An Ordinance providing for certain licenses, the fees therefor to be paid into the sinking fund of the city of Louisville.” Its section 2 says: “Every company, corporation, firm, individual, or association owning or operating an aggregation of shows, amusements, concessions, operated together on one lot or street or on contiguous lots or streets, whether the same are owned or operated by separate persons or not, shall pay in advance a license of Two Hundred Hollars ($200.00) per day,” and section 5 thereof says: “The provisions of this ordinance shall not apply to a regularly licensed amusement park.” That ordinance is referred to in the record as “No. 50 series 1939” and will hereinafter be referred to as “No. 50.” In 1940 another ordinancé was enacted by the same city department levying a license tax on various businesses and occupations conducted in the city, and which is referred to in the record as “Ordinance No. 187” by which number it will hereinafter be referred to. Section 18 of Ordinance 187 says: “Amusement : Except as otherwise herein provided, every person in the City engaged in the business of operating a theater, amusement park, baseball park, or other place of entertainment or amusement shall pay an annual license for the privilege of engaging in business in the City as prescribed in Rate Schedule ‘B’ of this ordinance. Provided, however, the minimum annual license of any such person shall be Sixty-two Dollars ($62.00).” Its section 60 prescribes that, “This ordinance does not repeal any of the following ordinances nor amendments thereof, towit: * * * The ordinance approved March 1, 1939, providing for the licensing of carmvals, being Ordinance No. 50, Series 1939.” (Our emphasis).

In July, 1942, the appellant was incorporated under the name of Lone Star Shows with the authority to engage in and conduct the business of “an amusement company” with power to lease or otherwise acquire, operate and maintain “Merry-Go-Round, Loop-the-Loop, Gravity and pleasure railways, Aero-coasting swings, Ferris "Wheel, and all other devices of a like nature calculated *116 to offer amusement to the public and profit to the company. Also to manufacture heat, buy, lease or otherwise acquire, sell and deal in scenery, stage appliances, theatre appliances and other articles suitable for use on stage or in amusement enterprises, theatres, moving picture shows or public or private parks, dramatic manuscript or copyright whatsoever which may be used for the basis for the amusement or entertainment of persons in public or private places. To carry on the business of, and to do any and all things that may be ordinarily conducted by dramatic and operatic agents and managers of the amusement enterprises of any kind, including the manufacture of appliances used in theatrical amusement enterprises. Also to conduct amusement enterprises of all kinds.”

The chief stockholder, and president of the corporation, was and is Marshall F. Kaufman, who, together with other members of his family, owned all, or practically all, of the stock. After becoming incorporated Kaufman applied for a license to operate an Amusement Park, as prescribed in Ordinance 187 (1940), for which he paid $62, the minimum amount. His company (appellant), in the meantime, had acquired the contrivances enumerated in appellant’s charter, which, according to the testimony of appellant’s president, consisted of a “Merry-Go-Round, Ferris "Wheel, Auto Speedway, Loop Plane, and a Chairoplane, five riding devices and approximately twenty amusement devices, such as ball games, fish pond and pitch-till-you-win and similar things.” The devices were later- — and after procuring the license — set up on an enclosed lot at Eighteenth and Broadway streets in the city. Gate admission fees of 10 cents were charged and an additional charge was exacted from any one participating in the use of any of the acquired devices forming a part of the entire aggregation. The alleged park was operated at the above location for only a few weeks when the wheels began rolling to another location in the southern part of the city, where the business was operated on another vacant space for something like the same time, when the amusement park — with all of its appurtenances and attractions — was again rolled away to another location in the city which experienced but little if any more longevity than the first two locations — after which some component parts of the show became scattered by being loaned to schools or churches in conduct *117 ing some of their charitable entertainments. Following such vacillating locations and appropriation of devices apjiellant applied for a renewal of its license and tendered and offered to pay the minimum license fee which was first paid, or any upward gradation thereof, in accordance with the terms of Ordinance 187, but the city’s officer authorized to issue such license .declined to do so because he construed the business conducted by appellant as coming within Ordinance 50 (1939) instead of under Ordinance 187 (1940), and that appellant should pay in advance a fee of $200 per day for operating his shows. It declined to pay that amount and then filed this declaratory judgment action in the Jefferson Circuit Court, setting forth the facts substantially as above recited, and in its petition alleged that its business came within the purview of Ordinance 187 instead of within that of Ordinance 50. It was further alleged that section 2 of the latter ordinance levying a fee of $200 per day was invalid, null and void for excessiveness of the required license, and that the city and other of its official defendants, threatened to and would prosecute appellant for operating without a license for which there was demanded of it the tax of $200 per day.

The prayer of the petition sought an injunction against such prosecutions, and for a declaration of appellant’s rights in the premises. The answer denied that plaintiff’s business as above outlined came within the purview of Ordinance 187, but that it was embraced by Ordinance 50, for which a license fee of $200 per day was required, and it set forth its contention, as . was revealed in the petition, and prayed for a judgment in accordance therewith, and that appellant’s petition be dismissed. Following the filing of the answer practice motions were made, followed by final submission, after which,the court adjudged that appellant’s business was embraced — not by Ordinance 187 (1940) — but by Ordinance 50 (1939), and that the latter ordinance was not void for any reason — to reverse which appellant prosecutes this appeal.

At the time appellant last applied for a license it had secured a location on a vacant lot in East Broadway Street, within the city, where it thereafter proposed to operate an amusement park — the lot fronting about 100 feet on Broadway Street and running back perhaps as much as 200 feet. The evidence was heard orally in *118

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 28, 294 Ky. 114, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lone-star-shows-inc-v-commissioner-of-sinking-fund-kyctapphigh-1943.