Mobile Light R. Co. v. City of Mobile
This text of 75 So. 889 (Mobile Light R. Co. v. City of Mobile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
We therefore hold the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the part of the defendant’s earnings based upon a deduction for taxes paid either upon property or as a license or privilege tax, whether to the federal, state, county, or city government, but was entitled to recover so much of the earnings as were withheld because of the cost of the paving assessment, and which we estimate at $513.04.
“The percentage herein provided for is to be computed upon gross earnings on the entire system of said railroads both within and without the city of Mobile.” (Italics supplied.)
The Magazine Point line, though out of the city, was an integral part of the system, and was used in connection with lines within the city in transporting passengers into and without the city. The Congress Street line was constructed under a later ordinance, but the grant or franchise was thereby made subject to the duties and obligations of the former franchise, with an exception as to time and the right to collect an additional sum of $50 each year. It therefore appears that the percentage due the city should be computed upon the gross earnings of the entire system, whether within or without the city, and the only deduction to be made therefrom before computing the percentage due the city is the tax assessed and paid and as heretofore defined.
We therefore hold that the city was entitled to recover its percentage on the earnings deducted from the Magazine and Congress Street lines, and which is as follows, $261.56, and which, together with the amount due upon the paving assessment, amounts to $774.-60, and for which a judgment is here rendered. The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly corrected, and, as corrected, is affirmed.
Affirmed. Appellee is taxed with cost of appeal, and appellant is taxed with all costs in the lower court.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 So. 889, 200 Ala. 141, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-light-r-co-v-city-of-mobile-ala-1917.