It is here contended that where the owner of a retail grocery store in Gerlach, Washoe County, Nevada, purchases goods wholesale in Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, to be used as a part of his stock in trade and to be sold retail from said store, and transports said goods direct from Reno to Gerlach for that purpose, in his privately owned truck of an unladened weight of less than five thousand pounds, he is exempt from the provisions of chapter 165, Statutes of Nevada 1933, p. 217. This claim of exemption is based upon the proposition that such an operation is "in personal services" as distinguished from the use of the highway "in a gainful occupation." "In personal services" as used in this statute must mean in services personal to the owner of the truck, and from which he derives no gain along the highway over which he transports such goods.
Although the wording of the acts and ordinances construed were not the same as the Nevada statute, in the following cases somewhat similar provisions were held not to include trucks making an occasional use of the highways as an incident to the owners' business: Leif v. Graham (N.D.), 247 N.W. 612; Denver Ry. Co. v. Linck, 56 F.2d 957; Kroger Grocery Baking Co. v. City of Cynthiana, 240 Ky. 701, 42 S.W.2d 904; City of Sioux Falls v. Collins, 43 S.D. 311, 178 N.W. 950. *Page 306 Our contention is that petitioner, in the operation of his truck in the manner and for the purpose set forth in the complaint comes squarely within the licensing provisions of the motor truck licensing act of 1933, and that, in transporting the goods, wares and merchandise, purchased by him at wholesale in Reno, to Gerlach, over the public highway, to be there by him sold at retail in his store, petitioner had then and there used the highway in a gainful occupation, and, by reason thereof, does not come within the statutory exemption claimed by counsel to exempt him. The matter of transportation in the instant case is essential to the conduct of the gainful occupation in a commercial enterprise. It is very analogous to the proposition that transportation is essential to commerce. Hannibal S.J.R. Co. v. Husen, 95 U.S. 95, as cited in Conecuh County v. Simmons, 95 So. 489.
Section 2 defines different terms of the act. Section 3 deals with certain exemptions from its licensing requirements. It provides: "None of the provisions of this act shall apply to any motor vehicle operated wholly within the corporate limits of any city or town in the State of Nevada; nor to city licensed taxicabs operating within a ten-mile radius of the limits of a city or town; nor to the city or town draymen and private motor carriers of property operating within a two-mile radius of the limits of a city or town, nor to the transportation of live stock and/or farm products to market *Page 308 by the producer thereof, or such producer's employee, or merchandise and/or supplies for his own use in his own motor vehicle; nor to the transportation of children to and from school; nor to the transportation of highway contractor's own equipment in his own motor vehicle from job to job wholly within the confines of this state; nor to the transportation of ore or minerals in the producer's own vehicle; provided, however, only one vehicle with an unladened weight not exceeding 10,000 pounds, or two vehicles whose combined unladen weight does not exceed 10,000 pounds, shall be exempted for the transportation of ore or minerals or mining supplies; nor to the operation of a privately owned truck in personal services as distinguished from those using the highways in a gainful occupation shall be exempted; provided, however, this exemption shall be limited to one such vehicle not exceeding an unladened weight of five thousand pounds."
A violation of the act is punishable as a misdemeanor.
Petitioner contends that the facts stated in the complaint show that in operating the truck as charged therein he was engaged "in personal services" as distinguished from the use of the highway "in a gainful occupation," within the meaning of the last exemption declared in said section 3. We think that is the proper construction of the provision.
The act was recently before this court in Ex Parte Iratacable,55 Nev. 263, 30 P.2d 284, 290, and was held to be constitutional. The various exemptions declared in said section 3 were held not discriminatory, principally upon the ground that the occasional use of the public highways by motor vehicles in these classes furnished a reasonable basis for the exemptions. With reference to the exemption claimed here, we said: "The next class which it is claimed is arbitrarily and unreasonably exempted are privately owned trucks in personal services, limited to an unladened weight of 5,000 pounds. This class of vehicles is not used on the public highways as a place of business, and are operated *Page 309 thereon but little, as compared to those who use the public highways in a gainful operation."
It is clear that petitioner, who, as appears from the complaint, uses his truck to transport groceries purchased wholesale in Reno, to his grocery store in Gerlach, to resell in retail grocery trade, makes but an occasional use of the public highways. So the legislature, in pursuance of its policy in exempting from the operation of the act such classes of motor vehicle operators who caused the least damage to the highways, could well have intended to include the class to which petitioner belongs.
Force is given to the conclusion that such actually was the intention of the legislature when attention is given to the precise wording of the exemption. Respondent contends that the words "in personal services" must be construed as meaning such services as are entirely disassociated with any commercial enterprise, instancing the carrying of provisions or other property for one's household uses and the like. If this were the meaning intended, the words "in personal services" would have been sufficient to convey it. But these words do not stand unrelated in the provision. They are put in contrast with the clause "from those using the highways in a gainful occupation." On the whole the provision indicates a meaning more comprehensive than services of a personal nature entirely disassociated from any gainful feature. The exemption is broad enough to include the class of motor vehicle operators in which the complaint places petitioner. His occasional use of the public highways is not pursuant to some business carried on by him along the route. The operation of his truck, as alleged in the complaint, is in services personal to himself and is merely incidental to the business which he carries on at a fixed point in the state, namely, the town of Gerlach. This is not using the highways in a gainful occupation.
The petitioner should be discharged.
It is so ordered. *Page 310