— The act to incorporate the port of Mobile, approved February Llth, 1879 (Pamph. Acts, 392, 409), confers authority on the city government to levy and collect a license-tax “from all persons or corporations trading, or carrying on any business, trade, or profession, by an agent or otherwise, within the limits of said corporation.” The Mobile police board, by an ordinance, ordained “ that the license-tax for the year from the 13th of March, 1883, to the 15th of March, 1884, be, and the same is hereby, fixed as follows: . . On telegraph companies, $225.” The Western Union Telegraph Company, a corporation chartered without the State, had an office in the port of Mobile, of which appellee was the chief manager. At that office, the company received and transmitted messages from and to points, both without and within the State of Alabama. It had complied with the requirements of the act of Congress, — Bevised Statutes, §§ 5263, et seq.
The telegraph company, through its agent, the appellee, refused to take out or pay for the license aforesaid, and continued to do business without such license. A penalty was assessed against the agent, for a violation of the ordinance, and this suit was-brought for its recovery. The defense was, that the ordinance is an attempt to regulate commerce, and violative of the clause of the Constitution of the United States which confers on Congress the “ power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several States.” The Circuit Court held the defense good, and gave judgment against the port of Mobile.
Is the ordinance a violation of the Constitution of the United *403States? We will not gainsay that this license-tax was imposed as a revenue measure — as a means of taxing the business, and thus compelling it to aid in supporting the city government. That no revenue for State or municipal purposes can be derived from the agencies or instrumentalities of commerce, no one will contend. The question generally mooted is, how shall this end be attained. In the light of the many adjudications on the subject, the ablest jurists will admit that the line which separates the power from its abuse is sometimes very difficult to trace. No possible good could come of any attempt to collate, explain, and harmonize them. We will not attempt it. We confess ourselves unable to draw a distinction between this case and the principle involved in Osborne v. Mobile, 16 Wall. 479. In that case, the license levy was upheld, and we think it should be in this. — Joseph v. Randolph, 71 Ala. 499.
The rulings of the Circuit Court were not in harmony with these views.
Reversed and remanded.