Wilby v. State

47 So. 465, 93 Miss. 767
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 47 So. 465 (Wilby v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilby v. State, 47 So. 465, 93 Miss. 767 (Mich. 1908).

Opinion

Mayes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Code 1906, § 3854, in the chapter on “Privilege Taxes,” following a preceding section levying a privilege tax on occupations, callings, etc., provides that: “On each individual, firm or corporation doing a plumbing business in cities or towns o£ ten thousand or more inhabitants, where they have waterworks and sewerage, $50. Same, in cities and towns of less than ten thousand and more than five thousand, $25. In all cities and towns where they have waterworks, $10.” . Alfred Wilby, the appellant, is a practical plumber, living in the city of Hattiesburg, and working at his trade for a livelihood. One Hanna was engaged in the barber business’ at Hattiesburg, and, desiring to have certain plumbing work done in his shop, employed Wilby to do the work, agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $240. Wilby did the work for Hanna, procuring the material, getting one Batson and Hanna to secure the purchase price, used in the work. It also appears that Wilby did some work for Batson. It does not appear from this record that Wilby was engaged in the business of making plumbing contracts and employing others to do or assist him in doing the work. He had no established place of business in which he kept plumbing supplies for the purpose of furnishing the material to carry out contracts. He was merely a practical plumber, doing such work as he obtained to do himself, performing his own labor, maintaining no-bureau for the purpose of obtaining contracts and employing others to do the work or to assist him in doing it, but was simply engaged in making a living by working at his trade from day to day, taking such contracts and doing such work in this line as he found to do. This constitutes the substantial facts of this case.

While so engaged, the sheriff of the county demanded of him a privilege tax under the section of the Code above referred [770]*770to. The city of Hattiesburg has twenty thousand inhabitants; the tax, under these circumstances, being $50. Wilby declined to pay same and on the 1st day of November, 1907, an indictment was returned by the grand jury, charging him with unlawfully conducting a plumbing business in the city of Hattiesburg, without first paying the privilege tax, étc. At the conclusion of the testimony the defendant asked a peremptory charge acquitting him; but the court declined to give this instruction, whereupon he was convicted, and has appealed. Since the case is to be decided upon the refusal of this instruction, it is not necessary to enter into any discussion of the other instructions in the case.

We have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion, from the facts presented here, that Code 1906, § 3851, has no application to this case. It applies only to an individual, firm, or corporation mailing contracts and completing them by the employment of other plumbers to do the work. It has no application to any individual plumber working by the day or taking contracts for himself alone. A plumber cannot be said to be “doing a plumbing business,” within the meaning of the act, when he merely works at his trade himself and is not engaged In making plumbing contracts to be farmed out to others or completed by the employment of other plumbers. We cannot assent to the proposition that it was the intention of the legislature to impose so large an occupation tax upon labor, on the Tight which a man has by his brawn and muscle, without any other capital being invested, ‘to earn his daily bread by the sweat of his own brow; but the tax was intended by the legislature to be imposed upon those engaged in the business of taking contracts and making profit by the employment of the labor of others to complete their contracts. Any other construction of this statute would tend to build up a monopoly in this line of business, which is hateful to the law and the public, and force journeymen to become mere employees of such as are able to pay the tax. Such was never the intention of the legislature. [771]*771Such a law would be unjust and oppressive in its operation on the journeymen, and pernicious in its effect on the general public, as it would force out of competition all but the employers of such labor.

Let it be noted to the credit of this state that legislation of the character under discussion, which cannot be too strongly condemned, made its first appearance in the laws of 1904. See Laws 1904, p. 72, c. 76. We find the predicate for section 3854 in that act for the first time, and in the same act we find a companion act, being section 20, and providing that a privilege tax of $60 shall be paid by “each individual, firm, or corporation doing a contracting business in cities of oyer ten thousand inhabitants, when the cost of any one house or building erected by such individual, firm, or corporation exceeds three thousand dollars.” This section in relation to contractors was brought forward in the Code of 1906, becoming section 3793. But in re-enacting it another section was also added, providing that where the building contracted for was less than $3,000, but more than $750, a privilege of $20 should be paid. Not content with forcing a builder only contracting to build a house costing $750 to pay a privilege of $20,-the inspirers of this law procured another amendment by the legislature of 1908, which ’is Laws 1908, p. 57, c. 73, § 4, whereby the amount of the privilege tax to be paid is not determined by the cost of construction of the building contracted for, but by the number of men employed at any one time. Thus, by section 4, the firm or corporation must pay a privilege of $60 when the number of men employed at any one time shall be ten or more,, if it be in a city of ten thousand inhabitants or more; and by a succeeding section, if the number of men employed be one or more, and not moré than ten, a privilege of $20 should be paid. Thus the evil has grown, and this species’ of legislation has progressed from 1904 to 1908, until it is now the law, if one makes a contract to build a coal house or a chicken coop, and employ another to help him, he must first pay a privilege of $20. We cite [772]*772this act in relation to contractors merely to emphasize the tendency of this legislation. The end and aim of the promoters is not for the genuine purpose of creating a revenue for the state, but to drive out of business the competition of small contractors who are unable to pay the tax. If this were not the purpose of the legislation, the legislature would long ago have received strong protest.

The business of plumbing is an. honorable and necessary one. So is that of a contractor. The law looks on both of these occupations with favor, not with disfavor. This being the case,, why should a tax of $50 be levied on the plumber for - the right to labor, and a tax of $10 on the lawyer, the dentist, or other-professional man ? The answer is easy. It was done to make it possible to monopolize the business. In our research we have found no state with a law similar to this. Some states have-laws- regulating the plumbing business, but no such law as the section under discussion. These things have crept into the law under the guise of privilege taxes, but in reality their purpose is very different. While this evil is yet in its infancy the attention of the legislature should be sharply directed to it and such legislation checked. Laws of this nature approximate an abridgment of the liberty of the citizen guaranteed to him by the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, and should receive the strictest construction. Liberty, in its broad sense, must consist in the right to follow any of the ordinary callings of life without being trammelled.

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

Related

Pruett v. State
574 So. 2d 1342 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1990)
Moore v. Grillis
39 So. 2d 505 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Brown Plumbing & Heating Co. v. McDowell
200 So. 104 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1941)
Stone v. Rogers
189 So. 810 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
Texas Co. v. Wheeless
187 So. 880 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
C. v. Floyd Fruit Co. v. Florida Citrus Commission
175 So. 248 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
Hudson v. Stuart
145 So. 611 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1933)
Pan-American Petroleum Corp. v. Miller
122 So. 393 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1929)
Warburton-Beacham Supply Co. v. City of Jackson
118 So. 606 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1928)
Riley v. Ayer & Lord Tie. Co.
113 So. 214 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1927)
Planters' Lumber Co. v. Wells
112 So. 9 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1927)
Aaroe v. Crosby
292 P. 97 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
Middleton v. Lincoln County
84 So. 907 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1920)
Thompson v. McLeod
73 So. 193 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1916)
Mayor of Vicksburg v. Mullane
63 So. 412 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 So. 465, 93 Miss. 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilby-v-state-miss-1908.