Wagner v. City of Covington

197 S.W. 806, 177 Ky. 385, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 806 (Wagner v. City of Covington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. City of Covington, 197 S.W. 806, 177 Ky. 385, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 588 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

[386]*386Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

— Affirming.

The three foregoing styled canses were instituted in the Kenton circuit court to recover of the 'City of Covington certain sums paid as license tax to the city by the complainants, and seeking an injunction restraining the city and its officials from interfering with the complainants in the conduct of the business or arresting their drivers and agents while engaged in the city of Covington.

An agreed state of facts is filed and made a part of the record in each case. Prom this we learn that the. appellants each have and conduct a bottling works in Cincinnati, state of Ohio, in and where they manufacture, bottle and pack various soft drinks which they market by wholesale; that some of their goods are sold in the city of Covington, state of Kentucky, but that appellants have no warehouse or other place of business in Covington, and that all sales were by wholesale and delivered in original packages. As Cincinnati and Covington are divided only by the Ohio river and the imaginary state line, the goods intended for sale in Covington are loaded on board vehicles in Cincinnati and carried across the river to Covington for delivery. Some of the goods are sold on orders received in Cincinnati from customers in Covington. These orders are sometimes transmitted by mail, and sometimes by telephone, and other times by agent. The appellants have been engaged in the wholesale bottling business for several years past, and have built up a business in the city of Covington, and have established a trade there among regular customers. Occasionally, however, a new customer is added, or a package of goods is sold to a prospective customer, or to some one applying for such package to the driver of the wagon after the goods have been carried into Kentucky. Most of the goods, however, are carried into Kentucky without an order from a customer.

The city of Covington, through its legislative body, passed an ordinance entitled “An ordinance fixing and imposing licenses upon certain occupations, professions, and trades, prescribing the manner of the issuing of said licenses, and apportioning the revenue realized therefrom,” by which ordinance it is provided that manufacturers and wholesale dealers in soft drinks shall pay a license tax of one hundred fifty ($150.00) dollars for the privilege of carrying on their business in the city of Cov[387]*387ington. Under this ordinance appellants have for several years hack, under protest, paid said license tax of one hundred fifty ($150.00) dollars per year, and these actions were instituted to recover the sums thus paid and to restrain the city and its officials from requiring future payments, or interfering with appellants’ agents, it being the contention that appellants are engaged in interstate commerce, and the transactions recited in the agreed state of facts constitute commerce between citizens of different states, and that the ordinance in question is a restraint Upon and interference with such commerce, and, therefore, violative of article 1, chapter 8, paragraph 3, of the Federal Constitution. If the transactions referred to constitute interstate commerce, then it would follow that appellants were not subject to such licenses, and are entitled to the relief sought.

It is insisted that the goods which appellants sell in Kentucky have never up to the time of sale become identified with, part of, or commingled with the general mass of property in the state; but, being shipped, sold and delivered in original packages, must be regarded as being a part of interstate commerce until sold and delivered, and up to that time are not subject to state regulation or control. It is further asserted that the goods of appellant, being in interstate commerce, and having never acquired a situs, or come to rest in Kentucky, are not subject to a tax by the city of Covington either by way of an ad valorem or occupation license tax; and plaintiffs themselves being engaged in interstate commerce and being non-residents who have no office, warehouse or other place of business in said city, cannot bo subject to cither of said taxes.

By the agreed state of facts, it is shown that appellants, through their agents, load vehicles in Cincinnati, with the goods in question, and these goods are carried by such vehicles across the river into Kentucky without orders from such prospective purchasers first having been transmitted to appellants in Cincinnati. The drivers of the vehicles are solicitors and take and fill orders from these wagons. They drive up to the place of a customer and ascertain, by inquiry or otherwise, whether he desires to purchase goods; if he does, then a package, or packages, are delivered, according to his wishes and direction, at an agreed price. The wdiole negotiations are then and there conducted and concluded. It is wholly made in the city of Covington, and state of Kentucky. [388]*388In substance, this is wbat takes place: Tbe driver asks tbe customer, “Do you want to buy my goods?” And the customer answers, “What is your price?” And the driver responds, giving the figures. The customer says, “I will take the goods; you may deliver the packages.” Thereupon the driver unloads the goods and places them in the house of the customer. All these words may not be spoken, but the words and acts together amount to as much.

The ordinances are not assailed, but appellants contend that they being engaged in interstate commerce do not come within the purview thereof. In the case of the City of Newport v. Wagner, 168 Ky. 641, where the facts are almost identical with those under consideration in these cases, this court held:

“Contracts for the sale of goods made by a citizen of one state with a citizen of another, through the medium of the mails or by telephone, and which are delivered by the seller to the purchaser in “original packages” by means of vehicles, it seems would be protected from taxation by the authorities of the state to which they are transported, while in the “original packages,” and in the hands of the seller. Goods delivered to a common carrier at a point without the state, consigned to a purchaser at his residence within the state, are exempt from state regulations, during the course of transportation. . . A state has no power over goods shipped from one state to another for sale in interstate commerce, until the one receiving the goods has so acted upon them, that they have become incorporated and mixed with the mass of property in the state, which happens when the original package is no longer such in his hands. . . . In the case at bar some of the transactions were, without doubt, such transactions in interstate commerce as would not render the appellees liable for the license tax, which was imposed upon a wholesale dealer in Newport by the ordinance, but the transactions, when appellees, without having received any order for the shipment of goods from their place of business in Cincinnati, and without any contract for their delivery, brought the goods into Kentucky and into Newport, and there exposed them for sale, and sold and delivered them, these were transactions in Kentucky, the contract, sale and delivery. The mere fact that appellees contemplated that some 'one, who had previously purchased goods, would purchase the goods when they should be exposed for sale, in Newport, [389]

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 806, 177 Ky. 385, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-city-of-covington-kyctapp-1917.