State v. . Moore

18 S.E. 342, 113 N.C. 698
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 342 (State v. . Moore) 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
State v. . Moore, 18 S.E. 342, 113 N.C. 698 (N.C. 1893).

Opinion

The State appealed. This is an indictment for the violation of chapter 75, Laws 1891, and it is found in the special verdict that the defendant, "without having first procured a license therefor from the Treasurer of the State of North Carolina, did hire six laborers in the county of New Hanover, in the State aforesaid, to be employed beyond the limits of the said State, and did solicit other laborers in said county to hire themselves to be so employed; and that the said defendant, on the (699) day aforesaid and in the county aforesaid, was engaged in the business of hiring in the said county laborers to be employed beyond the limits of said State; and that the said county of New Hanover is east of the line as at present established, and as so established on 6 February, 1891, for the receiving of patients by the North Carolina Insane Asylum."

The act referred to excludes, in express terms, from its operation any of the counties in the State which are west of the said line, except a few which are therein specifically named; and thus it appears that the same occupation may be lawfully and freely pursued in many of the counties of North Carolina, while in others a license fee of $1,000 is required to be paid into the State treasury; and its pursuit, without such a license, is denounced as a criminal offense and punishable by a fine of "not less than $500 and not more than $5,000," or by imprisonment in the county jail "not less than four months, or confinement in the State prison at hard labor not exceeding two years, for each and every offense, within the discretion of the court."

It must be manifest from these provisions that the principle of uniformity is entirely disregarded, and that, if the act is to be considered as an exercise of the taxing power of the Legislature, it must, under the repeated decisions of this Court, be declared unconstitutional and void.

The Constitution, Article V, section 3, authorizes the Legislature to tax "trades, professions, franchises," etc., and, although it is not expressly provided that such taxes shall be uniform, "Yet," says Rodman,J., *Page 512 speaking for the Court in Gatlin v. Tarboro, 78 N.C. 119, "a tax not uniform, as properly understood, would be so inconsistent with natural justice and with the intent which is apparent in the section of the Constitution above cited, that it would be restricted as unconstitutional."

In Worth v. R. R., 89 N.C. 291, the principle just stated was (700) distinctly recognized and declared to be within the spirit and meaning of the fundamental law. Smith, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the Court said: "We should be reluctant to hold, if there were no questions of constitutional right involved, that this method of levying taxes was sanctioned by our Constitution and consistent with the equality and uniformity which it contemplates. The `uniform rule' to be observed in the exercise of the taxing power seems so far applicable to the taxes imposed on trades, professions, etc., as to require that no discriminating tax be imposed upon persons pursuing the same vocation, while varying amounts may be assessed upon vocations or employments of different kinds." Again in Puett v. Commissioners, 94 N.C. 709, it was said: "The principle of uniformity pervades the fundamental law, and, while not in the Constitution applied in express terms to the tax on trades, professions, etc., necessarily underlies the power of imposing such a tax." In this last case the Court adopted the words ofMiller, J., in the Railroad Tax Cases, 92 U.S. 575: "That, while one tax may be imposed upon innkeepers, another upon ferries, and a still different tax on railroads, the taxation must be the same on each class — that is, the same tax upon all innkeepers, upon all ferries and upon all railroads, in their respective classes as taxable subjects." And again, inS. v. Powell, 100 N.C. 525, the same language was accepted as a correct definition of "uniformity," and it was repeated "that uniformity, in its legal and proper sense, is inseparably incident to the power of taxation."

The act under consideration, if intended to impose a tax in the legal significance of the term, very plainly falls within the inhibition of the organic law as interpreted so often by this Court, for it cannot, with the least show of reason, be contended that the principle of uniformity is not violated when the same occupation is heavily taxed in one county, while in an adjoining county it is entirely free and untrammeled. (701) It is too plain for argument that, if the Legislature had passed an act imposing a tax upon merchants doing business in the counties of New Hanover, Pender and Bladen, while like merchants in the counties of Brunswick, Robeson and Richmond were not required to pay such tax, the act would be void. And yet such a discrimination in taxation would be no greater than that which is attempted to be made under the statute in question.

It is not very unusual in this country for the State, either directly or through its various municipal corporations, to require the payment of a *Page 513 certain amount for the privilege of prosecuting one's profession or calling, and this is required indiscriminately of all kinds of occupations, whatever be their character, whether harmful or innocent, whether the license is necessary to the protection of the public or not. "While the courts are not uniform in the presentation of the grounds upon which the general requirement of a license for all kinds of employments may be justified, on one ground or another, the right to impose the license has been very generally recognized. Whatever refinements of reasoning may be indulged in, there are but two substantial phases to the imposition of a license tax on professions and occupations. It is either a license, strictly so called, imposed in the exercise of the ordinary police power of the State, or it is a tax laid in the exercise of the power of taxation." Tiedeman Lim. of Po., p. 101; Cooley Taxation, 403. We have seen that under the latter view the law under consideration cannot be sustained for the want of the uniformity required by the Constitution, and this brings us to the other branch of the inquiry, whether it can be upheld as a regulation under the police power of the State.

2. "The police of a State, in a comprehensive sense, embraces its whole system of internal regulation, by which the State seeks not only to preserve the public order and to prevent offenses against the State, but also to establish for the intercourse of citizens with citizens those rules of good manners and good neighborhood which are (702) calculated to prevent a conflict of rights, and to insure to each the uninterrupted enjoyment of his own, so far as is reasonably consistent with a like enjoyment of rights by others." Cooley Const. Lim., 704. "The power is very broad and comprehensive, and is exercised to promote the health, comfort, safety and welfare of society. Its exercise in extreme cases is frequently justified by the maxim, salus populi supremalex est. It is used to regulate the use of property by enforcing the maxim, sic utere tuo ut alienum non loedas, and under it the conduct of an individual and the use of property may be regulated so as to interfere to some extent with the freedom of the one and the enjoyment of the other." In re Jacobs, 98 N.Y. 198; Tiedeman, supra, 1.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 342, 113 N.C. 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moore-nc-1893.