Pegues v. Ray

23 So. 904, 50 La. Ann. 574, 1898 La. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 13, 1898
DocketNo. 12,809
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 23 So. 904 (Pegues v. Ray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pegues v. Ray, 23 So. 904, 50 La. Ann. 574, 1898 La. LEXIS 511 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

The Wrought Iron Range Company, a corporation domiciled in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, is engaged in the business of the manufacture and sale of cooking stoves and ranges.

It sent agents to Shreveport, Louisiana, engaged a warehouse or place of'business there, and shipped hither in carload lots its wares.

The ranges thus consigned to the Shreveport house were shipped in original packages, remained in such packages, and as sales were effected or orders received for goods they were delivered in the original packages to the purchasers.

A State license for the occupation of retail dealer in stoves and ranges was taken out at Shreveport.

The company sold goods at retail in the house at Shreveport and put drummers in the field to canvass the parishes of that section of the State.

[575]*575Defendant herein, O. P. Ray, was sent to De Soto parish and under him were several canvassers, who were dispatched through the parish to solicit orders. As orders were taken they were sent in to Ray at Mansfield, the county seat of the parish, who forwarded the same to R. F. Dixon, the general manager of the company 'at Shreveport, and he would fill the orders by shipping the goods in the original packages to Ray at Mansfield, and on their receipt Ray would load the stoves, without breaking the packages, on his delivery wagons and deliver the same to the parties giving the orders.

Ray and the drummers under him were in the parish temporarily only.

The drummers, or soliciting agents, each used a wiagon with a stove and its attachments therein as an exhibit or sample of the kind and quality of goods they were drumming for. No stoves were sold from the wagons of the canvassers.

They took orders only for subsequent delivery by other parties in the employ of the company.

No large stock of the ranges was kept in the warehouse at Shreveport, but new supplies were ordered by Dixon from the manufactory at St. Louis as needed.

The business was started at Shreveport in 1897. Ray and the canvassers under him began soliciting orders in De Soto parish in February, 1898, and by the twentieth of the month thirty-four orders had been taken.

The tax collector of De Soto parish demanded of Ray the payment of a license tax and took the present proceeding to enforce its payment.

The proceeding is summary in character under the provisions of Sec. 18 of Act No. 150 of 1890, which authorizes action by rule to show cause within five days why the license claimed should not be paid, etc.

The petition of the tax collector, mover in rule, sets forth that the defendant is a traveling vendor of stoves and ranges, selling and delivering his wares throughout the parish as agent for the Wrought Iron Range Company of St. Louis, Missouri, and that as such he owes a license of two hundred dollars to the State and parish, which has been demanded and refused. He asks judgment making the [576]*576rule absolute and condemning defendant to pay the license, with penalties, etc.

The statute under which the tax collector proceeds is Sec. 13 of Act No. 150 of 1890, and is as follows:

“ That all traveling vendors of stoves, lightning rods and clocks shall pay a license annually of two hundred dollars in each parish of the State.”

Defendant resists the.payment of this license on the ground (1) that he is the agent and representative of the Wrought Iron Range Company, which is authorized to conduct a mercantile business at the city of Shreveport; and, if this defence be not good, (2) that the attempt to impose this tax upon him is an interference with interstate commerce and repugnant to the third paragraph of the eighth Section of Art. 1 of the Constitution of the United States.

The trial judge held that defendant and the canvassers under him are peddlers, and not merchants in the ordinary sense of the word; that they are “ traveling vendors,” within the meaning of the statute, notwithstanding the warehouse, or place of business, or depot of supplies at Shreveport; and that having such establishment in the State, their goods, when shipped here, become liable to the tax laws of the Stated

Prom a judgment against him defendant prosecutes this appeal.

A commercial drummer, or canvasser, who goes out on the road soliciting orders for his house, whether it be located in or out of the the State, and who takes with him samples of the goods or wares his house deals in, is not a “ traveling vendor ” within the meaning of the statute quoted.

“ Traveling vendor ” is synonymous with “peddler.” A traveling vendor is a peddler on an enlarged scale. The term seems to convey that idea. Nevertheless he is a peddler because he carries wares which he sells and delivers at the same time, going from place to place for the purpose.

Webster’s dictionary defines a peddler as “a traveling trader; one who carries about small commodities on his back or in a cart or wagon and sells them.”

Bouvier’s Law Dictionary says :

“A peddler is a person who travels about the country with merchandise for the purpose of selling-it.”

And Anderson’s Dictionary of Law declares him to be “a person [577]*577wlio travels from place to place and carries about with him on horseback or in a vehicle articles of merchandise for sale.”

A traveling vendor, then, is one who carries about with him the articles of merchandise which he sells. That is to say, the identical merchandise he sells he has with him- and delivers at the time of sale.

His vocation is quite different from that of the drummer, who carries only samples of his wares as exhibits, and takes orders for the future delivery of merchandise of their kind and quality, or of similar kind and quality.

The statute under consideration imposes no license on the drummer with his samples taking orders, w'hile it does on the traveling vendor of certain kinds of goods.

Tax laws are to be construed strictly. Defendant) and the canvassers under his orders were all employees of the Wrought Iron Range Company. This company was the vendor, the parties referred to its salesmen. They took the orders and transmitted the same to the company, who shipped the goods to fill the orders. In soliciting orders they did not carry about with the.m the goods actually sold. The evidence is the reverse. It is true, in two instances orders were taken for ranges where delivery was made on the same day. But this is explained by defendant’s statement, that his men had previously taken several orders for ranges, which he (defendant) had ordered from the Shreveport house to fill, but two of the parties were, on inquiry, found to be irresponsible, and, in consequence, delivery to them was refused, and having the two ranges on hand at Mansfield, they were delivered immediately to two other parties, whose orders were substituted for those declined. Besides, even in these instances, the drummers who took the orders did not have the ranges with them, and the delivery was made by other parties.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 904, 50 La. Ann. 574, 1898 La. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pegues-v-ray-la-1898.