Mayor of Tuscaloosa v. Holczstein

McCLELLAN, C. J.

The mayor and aldermen of Tuscaloosa are authorized by the charter of that city “to levy and collect annually a tax on and to regulate and license the persons, businesses, vocations and privileges” therein mentioned, to-wit “* * * millinery establishments; * * * each person or firm engaged in merchandising or carrying on any business of a mercantile character,” etc., etc. The mayor and aldermen of the city in attempting to exercise the power thus conferred passed an ordinance levying license taxes upon a great number of persons, businesses, occupations and privileges, and, among the rest, the following:

*638“Art, 87. ■ Millinery establishments not paying 'merchants tax..........................$10.00
Art, 88. Merchants selling millinery, in addition to merchants licenses..................$7.50
Art. 89. Merchants, each person, or persons, or firm engaged in merchandising or carrying on any business of a, mercantile character whose gross receipts of sales are less than ten thousand dollars per annum ..................$10.00
Art, 90. Merchants whose gross amount of sales exceed ten thousand dollars and less than twenty thousand dollars per annum........$15.00
Art. 91. Merchants whose gross sales exceed twenty thousand dollars per annum........$20.00.”

The appellee Holczstein during the year 1901 engaged in a mercantile business, selling dry-goods, clothing, and also as a part of his stock kept and sold a cheaper grade of ladies’ hats, also sold laces, ribbons and artificial flowers, hut he did not trim or make any hats. A license was paid for and issued to him for the year 1901 for engaging in the business of merchandising, or being a merchant, but lie did not taken out or pay for the milliner’s license prescribed by Art. 87 of the ordinance quoted above, nor the license required by Airt, 88 of said ordinance. lie. was proceeded against by the city authorities for sidling millinery .without having taken out and paid for the license required by Art. 88 of the ordinance, and tried before» the mayor and convicted. From that conviction he appealed to the circuit court, where upon a trial before the circuit judge Avithout a jury lie Avas discharged, the trial judge holding that Art, 88 of said ordinance is invalid. And that, is the question presented for our consideration on this appeal prosecuted by the mayor and aldermen from the judgment of the. circuit court.

It seems to us that the .legislature, itself in conferring the. poAver of license taxation on the municipality of Tuscaloosa took and made a clear distinction between the “millinery establishments” and the business of merchandising or carrying on “a business of a mercantile char*639acter,” ft® the purposes of the licensing and taxation authorized: It is, it seems to us, as if the lawmakers had said in terms “a millinery establishment is one tiling and merchandising is another and different tiling Avithin the pniwiew and meaning of this act.” As an abstract proposition, it AArould not be inapt to say that a milliner is a¡ merchant or a person engaged in carrying on a business of a mercantile character. But there is in point of fact a difference between an ordinary mercantile business and the business of a milliner. The merchant only deals in commodities, buying and selling. The things lie. buys, those things he sells in the sanie condition in AA’hich lie bought. The milliner doubtless also buys and sells article's AA'ithout changing their form, uses or identity while in lier hands; hut she (avp say “she” because they mostly are feminine, and when not they are usually called man-milliners) also buys goods which she combines, and fabricates and fashions info articles of AA'omon’s apparel. She is thus not only a dealer but, in a sense, a: manufacturer. And this is the. distinct! at- feature of her business, the feature which differentiates it from the business of the ordinary merchant and on account of AA'hich she is called a milliner and is not referred to as a merchant. The' Century Dictionary defines a milliner thus: “in common usage, a woman aa’Iio makes and sells h-onnets and other headgear for AA'omen; also in England, one who furnishes bonnets and dresses, or complete outfits;” and this idea of fabrication is prominent, in other standard definitions. A merchant, may sell articles of millinery, such as hats, ribbons, artificial flowers, plumes, etc., etc., in the forms in AA’hich he has purchased them and not he; a milliner. On the other hand, if as a part of his general mercantile business, he should engage in buying the articles or materials, necessary to and used in themaking of furnished— “ready to AArear” — millinery “creations,” and in combining, fabricating and fashioning these materials into the perfected article of AA’omen’s gear and selling the completed commodity, he would he a milliner in the strict sense, the sense of this, statute; and he would he liable both for the merchants’ tax and for the tax imposed on “millin*640ery establishments.” This distinction between the merchant and the milliner, a mercantile: business simp ly and a millinery establishment, is the distinction recognized in the statute itself. Its clear intent and purpose was to authorize the imposition of one tax on the buying' and selling merchant, and another tax on the buying, fabricating and selling milliner. The merchant is none the less clearly a, merchant only, for the fact that he buys and sells articles of millinery, and the milliner is none tire less clearly engaged in carrying on a “millinery establishment” for that, while she makes or trims hats and the like, she also sells, articles' of millinery in their original forms. To hold that a merchant could be taxed a.s a milliner, merely because: he keeps: and sells articles of millinery would be to extend the authorization of this statute well beyond its. fair and reasonable construction, and this in the teeth of the thoroughly established doctrine, that such authorizations to municipalities are to be strictly construed so that no tax, except suich as are with reasonable certainty within the terms employed, shall be deemed to be authorized. The act of assembly did not, in our opinion, authorize the ordinance of Art. 88, under which the appellee is prosecuted, and that article is void.

Reliance for appellant is had on the cases of City of Mobile v. Craft, 94 Ala. 156, and City of Mobile v. Richards & Sons, 98 Ala. 594. Those decisions are perfectly sound, and the views we have expressed and conclusions we have reached in this case are in no degree opposed to them. The question in those cases is wholly different from the question we have here passed on, as a careful reading and consideration of those opinions will suffice to demonstrate. There would be similitude if the legislature had only authorized the city of Mobile to impose taxes on cigar makers and distillers of whiskey, and also upon merchants, and the ordinance had undertaken to impose on a general merchant a tax as a merchant and an additional tax for selling whiskey or cigars as. a part of his mercantile business; but if that had been the state of law and fact presented to this court in those cases, the imposition of the tax would surely have been held unauthorizeld and illegal.

The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.