Rosenbaum v. City of Newbern

118 N.C. 83
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 118 N.C. 83 (Rosenbaum v. City of Newbern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenbaum v. City of Newbern, 118 N.C. 83 (N.C. 1896).

Opinions

Avery, J.:

Where a municipality is clothed with the power to impose a tax upon persons engaged in mercantile business, the authority is subject to the fundamental restriction that it shall not be so exercised as to discriminate between persons of the same class. State railroad tax cases, 92 U. S., 575. “It is unquestionably however in the discretion of the taxing power to graduate the tax, according to the extent of the business so taxed, or to impose a single tax upon the occupation without regard to its extent. ” ' State v. Powell, 100 N. C., 525.

But the law of uniformity does not prohibit the classification by the municipality of dealers in a particular kind ■of merchandise separately from those whose business it is to sell oilier articles falling within the same generic term. The term merchant embraces all who buy and sell an3r species of moveable goods for gain or profit, but courts 'everywhere lend their sanction to legislative acts putting dealers in dry goods and dealers in spirituous liquors, ■drugs or fresh meats into different classes and imposing a license tax upon the one and a tax in proportion to capital ■employed or sales made on the others, or a tax or license [93]*93fee of the same kind not differing in amount upon each of the sub-classes created. In State v. Worth, 116 N. C., 1007, it was held that the business of manufacturing ice was comprehended under the general term trade and that where a municipality was acting under the grant of authority to impose a privilege tax upon trades and professions, a levy of $66 per annum for storage, manufacture or sale of ice at wholesale with the privilege of retailing” was reasonable and constitutional and provided for no discrimination between persons engaged in storing, manufacturing or selling at wholesale or retail the particular kind of merchandise upon which the burden was imposed, but fixed the levy upon a class of traders distinctly defined in the ordinance. It was expressly held there that dealers in or manufacturers of different articles of merchandise might in the discretion of the municipal authorities be subjected, in separate classes, to license taxes varying in amount as to each of the classes. Of course it follows that the overlooking of manufacturers of shoes would not render invalid a tax upon another company whose product was ice, tobacco or cotton goods. It is therefore settled that the only uniformity contemplated in the constitutional restriction (Const., Art. Y., Sec. 3) is that between those belonging to the same class (State railroad tax cases, supra) and it would seem almost needless to cite authorities othei than State v. Worth, supra, in support of the proposition that the Legislature had the authority to delegate to the defendant the power to make such levies. Const., Art. YIIL, Sec. 4.

The levy complained of was not imposed upon property but upon the business of selling second-hand clothing. ■Had the tax been imposed upon the clothing sold as a property tax, it must have been levied in conformity to the requirements of the Constitution both as to uniformity and [94]*94value. But it was within the sound discretion of the municipal legislators, if they were empowered to tax the occupation or business at all, to determine what amount should be paid by every person belonging to a well-defined class pointed out in an ordinance. State v. Powell, supra. It is clear that the city had authority to “levy and collect -a license tax for the privilege of carrying on any trade, profession or business ” within the limits of the city not •only under the charter but under the general law. State v. Worth, supra; Code, Sec. 3800. Whatever power the Legislature possesses under the Constitution has been delegated to the municipality, and the question for consideration here is, not whether the Court in the exercise of a ■sound discretion will hold the ordinance to be just, reasonable or wise, but whether resolving all doubts as to the ■exercise of legislative authority by its agent as would be done in favor of a statute enacted by the Legislature itself, •it clearly appears that the ordinance is unconstitutional. The authority “to levy and collect a license tax for the privilege of carrying on any trade, profession or business,” subject to a prescribed limit as to amount, necessarily carried with it by implication the power to classify the varions kinds of business, just as the Legislature might have done. If therefore it be conceded that the Court can revise the classification adopted by the city, when it does not appear upon its face that there was a purpose to discriminate in restraint of trade, there is no reason why any one of the taxes imposed in schedule B. and 0. of Chapter 116, laws 1895, of the revenue act, should not be brought before the •courts for review on the ground that it is unreasonble to levy it on that particular class of subjects, though it be admitted that it sometimes constitutes a distinct kind of business, because some dealer may have chosen to make his business more general in its character. Intheabsence [95]*95of any evidence of a purpose to break down the sale of this species of goods, courts are powerless. It is the peculiar province of the Legislature to reform the laws so as to make the benefits extend to and the burdens bear equally upon all classes of people.

The plaintiff complains that in addition to the tax of four dollars per month levied upon her as a dealer in second-hand clothing, she is liable under another ordinance to a license tax of one dollar per month for the privilege of selling other general merchandise. If the city of'Wilmington would have been authorized to levy the tax imposed in Worth's case, upon a general merchant, notwithstanding the fact that he added to his general business that of wholesale dealer in ice, it is clear that the plaintiff could not evade a tax on one distinct business by combin. ing with it another. Because clothing may be comprehended under general merchandise, the courts cannot question the honesty or the soundness of the discretion of the city authorities in sub-dividing a larger class of dealers into two or more, distinguished by the lines of goods sold by each. Indeed, it is the duty of the courts to impute to all who exercise legislative authority proper motives and, as between two constructions of their legislation, to adopt, if possible, that which brings it within the purview of their powers. State v. Moore, 104 N. C , 714. It does not seem to be contended that the municipality is attempting to exact from the plaintiff license taxes greater in the aggregate yearly amount than the limit fixed by the charter, though another ordinance provides that a tax of one dollar per month shall be imposed on general merchants and four dollars on any dealer whose business in part or in whole, is selling second-hand clothing, since the limit applies only to the amount of any single license tax, not to the aggregate amount of two when they [96]*96are lawfully imposed. The rule laid down in State v. Powell precludes us from reviewing the exercise of the discretion in classifying those subjected to such burdens or in determining what amount shall be imposed upon each-. But the Constitution of North Carolina authorizes the Legislature not only to impose a license tax upon the occupation of selling but a property tax upon the goods sold, provided the statute upon its face allows no discrimination, and subject to the same restrictions the Legislature may delegate this power to municipalities. State v. Stevenson, 109 N.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.C. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenbaum-v-city-of-newbern-nc-1896.