Ponder v. City of Greenville

12 S.E.2d 851, 196 S.C. 79, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 8, 1941
Docket15196
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 S.E.2d 851 (Ponder v. City of Greenville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ponder v. City of Greenville, 12 S.E.2d 851, 196 S.C. 79, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 113 (S.C. 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Acting Associate Justice L. D. Eids.

This appeal involves certain questions as to the construction and constitutionality of an amendment enacted in 1939 to Section 7433, Code 1932, Acts 1939, page 137, relating to business licenses issued by cities and towns. This amendment is in the nature and form of a proviso as follows:

*81 “Provided, However, That wholesalers delivering goods to retailers in any municipality shall not be charged a business license therein by such municipality, unless ■ such wholesaler maintains, within such municipality, a warehouse or mercantile establishment for distribution of the wholesalers’ goods.”

The following excerpt from the statement contained in the Transcript of Record gives the pertinent facts of the case, all of which are undisputed:

“The City of Greenville demanded and sought to collect a wholesalers’ license tax from each of the plaintiffs for the year 1940 under the provisions of the State statutes, and the city ordinances passed by the Greenville city council, including the 1940 Supply Bill, wherein wholesalers doing business within the corporate limits of the City of Green-ville are required to pay a license' for the privilege of carrying on business within the corporate limits of said city from the 1st of January, 1940, to the 31st day of December, 1940, inclusive, based upon the amount of business done by the wholesalers. The plaintiffs contend that they are exempt from such license under the terms of Act No. 96 of the Statutes at Large of South Carolina, 1939', Volume XRI, page 137.
“Plaintiff’s manufacturing and distributing plants are all located at Greer, S. C., and they make sales and deliveries from motor trucks in the City of Greenville. The goods and merchandise placed on these trucks at Greer, S. C., for sale and delivery in the City of Greenville, S. C., are not all previously sold on order or otherwise, and the drivers of the trucks in some instances solicit, sell, deliver, and collect, take up crates, unsold goods and merchandise, making the sales and deliveries from the truck, loading goods and merchandise taken up on the truck, which is on the streets within the city going from one retail establishment to another in handling'the goods and merchandise of plaintiffs. In other instances trucks call upon regular customers according to previous arrangements and deliver whatever these customers need for the day.
*82 “The plaintiff, Ponder Ice Cream Company, has from 40 to 50 customers in the city, and in most of the places owns and maintains refrigerating units in which it places its goods and merchandise for sale and distribution by the retail stores. It usually makes daily trips, the truck remaining in the city most of each day. The Greer Bakery has about 75 customers within the City of Greenville, makes daily trips with one truck which remains most of the day in the city, and it has racks in some of the retail stores on which it places its goods for display and sale, and has arrangements at other stores with other bakeries to place its products on their display racks for sale and distribution by the retail store.
“The Greer Bottling Company has from 15 to 20 customers within the city and maintains a truck which makes trips to the City of Greenville four days a week, where it remains for several hours each day. And in addition to soliciting, selling, delivering and collecting-, it takes up unsold merchandise and crates on which it has previously required deposits.
“These wholesalers do not know how much will be sold, delivered and collected for when the truck is loaded up in Greer for its trips to the City of Greenville. The truck is loaded'with such g-oods and quantities as the wholesalers hope to sell within the City of Greenville during the day.”

The City of Greenville by its pleadings contended that the 1939 amendment is unconstitutional as being in violation of the equal protection of the laws clauses of the Four■teenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, and also of Article I, Section 5, of the State Constitution. And it was further contended in behalf of the city that the plaintiffs are engaged in business within the corporate limits thereof because of the use of motor trucks by which they transport large quantities of their merchandise to the city and spend many hours each day in soliciting- and making sales to their customers, without previous orders, as well as making collections, taking up unsold merchandise, and maintaining *83 equipment for the sale and distribution of their products in retail establishments within the city. And the defendants in substance maintain. that if the amendment be declared constitutional it should be construed to relate only to the delivery of goods in the city on previous orders, and not to such transactions as those of plaintiffs, who should therefore be held subject to the wholesale license tax ordinances of the city.

The cause in due course came on to be heard before Hon. J. Strom Thurmond, presiding Judge, who after mature consideration filed an elaborate decree dated June 8, 1940, sustaining the contention of the plaintiffs and holding that they were not subject to the license tax and that the city should be enjoined from collecting the same. The case comes to this Court upon appeal from the decree of Judge Thurmond, and the exceptions question the constitutionality of the 1939 amendment, and also question the correctness of its construction by the Circuit Court, if the same be constitutional.

It occurs to us that perhaps it would be more logical to ascertain the true intent and meaning of the amendment before considering its constitutionality. As an aid to this we might take a glance at the apparent background of the legislative Act adopting the amendment.

After the motor truck method of delivery had developed and come into general use, so that goods might be delivered from such trucks in the cities and towns of the State, even from distant points outside of the State, municipal authorities generally began to consider the feasibility of imposing a license tax on such • transactions, doubtless being urged to do so by the local merchants who felt the pressure of the growing competition. On the other hand, the consuming public were perhaps more or less favorable to the motor truck invasion, because of the increased competition, and also because certain fruits and other merchandise thereby became more available.

*84 Some of these license tax ordinances from time to time came before this Court. In the case of Pee Dee Chair Company v. City of Camden, 165 S. C., 86, 162 S. E., 771, it was held that an outside manufacturer which delivered by truck a single load of goods to a local buyer was not liable to the license tax imposed for carrying on the business of hauling merchandise by truck within the municipality, because the term “business” implies custom or continuity. And then a case came to the Court from Bishopville, to wit, Crosswell & Co., Inc., v. Town of Bishopville, 172 S. C., 26, 172 S.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Beaufort v. Holcombe
632 S.E.2d 894 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2006)
Colonial Life & Accident Insurance v. South Carolina Tax Commission
103 S.E.2d 908 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1958)
Johnson v. Pratt
20 S.E.2d 865 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.E.2d 851, 196 S.C. 79, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ponder-v-city-of-greenville-sc-1941.