McCreary v. State Ex Rel. Tyser

165 So. 657, 122 Fla. 494
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 7, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 165 So. 657 (McCreary v. State Ex Rel. Tyser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCreary v. State Ex Rel. Tyser, 165 So. 657, 122 Fla. 494 (Fla. 1936).

Opinion

Buford, J.

The writ of error brings for review discharging petitioner in habeas corpus proceedings.

Petitioner was arrested by the police officers of the City of Miami on a warrant charging him with violation of ordinance No. 1200 passed and adopted by the City Commission of Miami on December 12th, 1934. Section 1 of the ordinance provides as follows:

“Section 1. For the purpose of properly interpreting this ordinance, an Itinerant Retail or Wholesale Merchant or Vendor, as referred to in this ordinance, shall mean and *495 include, and shall be construed to mean and include all persons, firms or corporations, both principal and agents, who have operated or may operate any seasonal, temporary or transient business, display or vehicle for a period of less than one full calendar year in the City of Miami, Florida, or who have not heretofore engaged in any business or profession in the City of Miami for a period less than one full calendar year, immediately preceding application for license by selling or serving goods, edibles, wares, beverages, merchandise or any other commodity or service thereto appertaining, arid who for the purpose of carrying on business, or any part or service thereto appertaining, occupies, leases, hires or makes use of real estate, building, room, space, structure, vehicle or any private or public property for the sale, exhibition or delivery of such goods, edibles, wares, beverages, merchandise, or any other commodity or service thereto appertaining, and the persons, firms and corporations so engaged shall not be relieved from the full provisions of this ordinance, by reason of association with any local citizen, dealer, trader, broker, merchant, utility or auctioneer, or by conducting such seasonal, temporary or transient business exhibition or display for a period of less than one calendar year in connection with or as part of the business, exhibition of, or in the name of any local citizen, dealer, trader, broker, exhibitor, merchant or auctioneer, or by the employment of any other subterfuge to evade the provisions and intent of this itinerant ordinance.”

Section 2 of the ordinance provides, in part, as follows:

“It shall hereafter be unlawful for an Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant, as defined in the preceding section, to exhibit or offer for sale or sell for himself, or for others, at any definite or fixed place of business any goods, wares, merchandise, edibles or beverages in the City of Miami, without first obtaining a license as herein provided:”

*496 Then follows paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e) of Section 2 which are not material to the questions involved here.

Paragraph (f) of Section 2 is as follows: *497 Section 3, is, in part, as follows:

*496 “(f) Each Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant shall, before receiving a license to transact business in the City of Miami, execute a good and sufficient surety bond in the sum of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars, signed by the said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant as principal, and a surety company or corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Florida and authorized to do business in the State of Florida; which bond is to be approved by the City Attorney, and shall be made payable to the City Manager of the City of Miami, Florida, and his successors in office, for the use and benefit of any person, or persons, entitled thereto, and conditioned that the principal and the surety shall pay all personal property taxes that shall be assessed against the Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant and/or against his, its or their stock of merchandise or other personal property used by him in his business during the year immediately following the date of the issuance of a license to him; also on condition that said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant will make and file on or before the tenth (10th) of each month a sworn monthly return for the period of six months to the Director of Finance showing the value of said goods, wares or merchandise of said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant; provided, however, that said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant shall have the right, in lieu of said bond, to make a cash deposit in an amount equal to $25.00 per thousand, or fraction thereof, of the value of the stock and fixtures being licensed under this ordinance for trans-
*497 acting business, which said cash deposit shall be held by the City of Miami as a trust fund to guarantee the payment of all personal property taxes that shall be assessed against said itinerant vendor or itinerant merchant, or against the stock of merchandise and equipment used by said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant in his, or their business during the year immediately following the issuance of the license to such Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant, and also provided that said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant will file on or before the tenth (10th) of each month a sworn monthly return for the period of six months to the Director of Finance showing the value of said goods, wares or merchandise and equipment of said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant. As soon as the personal property taxes assessed against said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant and against his stock of merchandise and the equipment used by him in business shall be paid, the trust fund shall be surrendered to said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant and in the event such Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant shall fail or refuse to pay such personal property tax assessed against him within one year after the issuance of the license to him or it, and within said year’s period, the City Manager shall have the right to apply to much of said trust fund so deposited with the City of Miami, as aforesaid, to the payment of the personal property tax so assessed against said Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant and his or its stock of merchandise and equipment, as aforesaid, and after paying same shall return the balance, if any, of said trust fund to such Itinerant Vendor or Itinerant Merchant.”
“The application for a license permit, as set forth in *498 Section 2 hereof, shall be filed with the Director of Finance, who shall make such investigation as he deems fit and proper to ascertain and determine the moral character of the applicant and the business integrity of said applicant, and the nature and character of the business sought to be carried on and transacted, and said Director of Finance is hereby authorized to issue á conditional permit pending the investigation and examination of said applicant’s application for a license; and should he find the applicant worthy of transacting business in the City of Miami, and the business to be a legal one and not prohibited or restricted by some other ordinance of the City of Miami, the Director of Finance shall thereupon issue to such applicant a license provided that the applicant has complied with all requirements of this ordinance.

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Related

Greenleaf & Crosby Co. v. Coleman
158 So. 421 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
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56 Fla. 545 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1908)
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58 Fla. 255 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1909)
T. Gould & Co. v. Mayor of Atlanta
55 Ga. 678 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1876)
State v. Osborne
171 Iowa 678 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 So. 657, 122 Fla. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccreary-v-state-ex-rel-tyser-fla-1936.