delivered the opinion of the court.
1. For the purpose of this investigation the demurrer filed by the city admits that all the affirmative averments appearing in the answer are true; hence, if the answer states a situation which would be sufficient to defeat the ordinance, then the judgment appealed from must be affirmed. If the ordinance occupies a position which is impregnable against the assaults of the- answer, then the city is entitled to prevail. Condensing the answer, it is alleged: (1) That the ordinance imposes a tax which is not equal to the charge made upon the business of the Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company. (2) That the municipal legislation is unreasonable, and makes it impossible to furnish electricity to consumers at prices already contracted for, and therefore (a) the defendant is denied the equal protection of the law; (b) the company is deprived of its property without due process of law; and (c) the obligations of the contracts are impaired. (3) That subdivision 21 of Section 73 contains the only power which the city can exercise with reference to taxes and licenses; that the plaintiff cannot tax corporations or businesses, and can only grant licenses; and, further, that the enforcement of the gross earnings tax would amount to double taxation, because the' company has paid the license exacted by the prior Ordinance No. 11,784. (4) That by the payment of the taxes which were assessed and levied pursuant to the act of 1909, the company paid a tax on its occupation, business, and right to do business, and that consequently a charge of 3 per cent on the gross earnings *283would be equivalent to duplicate taxation of tbe occupation, business and right to do business. Tbe contentions made by tbe defendant will be considered in tbe order in wbicb they have been stated.
2, 3. In March, 1911, tbe city granted a franchise wbicb permits tbe Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company, a private corporation, to erect and maintain poles and wires in tbe streets for tbe distribution and sale of electricity for light, beat and power. That franchise contains a provision wbicb requires tbe Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company to pay tbe city 2% per centum of the gross receipts from business done within tbe city, and “no license or tax or charge on tbe business or occupation of tbe said Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company shall be imposed upon, exacted or required of tbe said company, other than tbe said 2% per cent of its gross receipts.” Tbe Mt. Hood Company is a corporation like tbe defendant, is engaged in tbe same kind of business, and possesses tbe same character of franchises. If by paying 2% per centum on tbe gross receipts one company is exempted from paying any other “license or tax or charge on the business or occupation,” while tbe other company is compelled to pay 3 per cent of the gross receipts derived from tbe same kind of business in tbe same territory, then tbe taxes would not be equal and uniform. Payment of tbe 2% per centum of tbe gross receipts, as required by tbe franchise issued to tbe Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company, is tbe payment of a rental for tbe use of tbe streets, rather than a tax: Nebraska Telephone Co. v. City of Lincoln, 82 Neb. 59 (117 N. W. 281, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221).
Tbe city has no inherent power to exempt property from taxation; tbe charter does not authorize tbe plaintiff to exempt property from taxation, nor to exempt *284the Mt. Hood Railway & Power Company from the payment of any other “license Or tax or charge on the business or occupation”: McQuillin, Mun. Corp., § 2399; Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, § 1331; City of Tampa v. Kaunitz, 39 Fla. 683 (23 South. 416, 63 Am. St. Rep. 202); Thomas v. Snead, 99 Va. 613 (39 S. E. 586). Moreover, when a municipality is clothed with the police power, or given the right to tax, it possesses attributes of sovereignty which cannot be bartered away; and therefore the city could not lawfully agree to exempt any person or corporation from the payment of any other “license or tax or charge on the business or corporation.” As was appropriately said in State v. Hannibal & St. Joseph R. R. Co., 75 Mo. 208:
“For though municipal corporations may make such contracts as their respective charters authorize, they cannot so contract as to surrender or embarrass their legislative or governmental powers, or prevent the full and complete performance of their public duties—duties which result from such powers, which are conferred upon municipal corporations for public purposes and for the public good. Such powers, being in the nature of public trusts, are incapable of alienation or surrender. # * Among the most valuable and important of those public trusts and powers is that of taxation, without the exercise of which municipal government would cease to exist. No argument would seem necessary to show that the same principle, which forbids the absolute cession by a municipal corporation of the power of taxation over any given subject matter, likewise forbids that which approximates thereto. For if, for instance, it were allowable .for a municipal corporation to abdicate its taxing power pro tanto, this would differ only in degree and not in kind from such abdication in tota. The exercise of either method of surrender of its legislative and governmental powers by a municipal corporation would, *285if pushed to its natural and logical conclusion, destroy the municipal government.”
The attempted exemption being ineffective, it follows that in contemplation of law there is no exemption in favor of the Mt. Hood Bailway & Power Company; consequently there is no inequality in the burden of taxation.
4. The defendant is not denied the equal protection of the law merely because it has made contracts to furnish electricity at prescribed rates and the tax will diminish the profits on those contracts. Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution is not violated. Contracts must always be entered into with full knowledge that the government may at any time draw upon its extensive powers of taxation; and when the company made contracts to furnish light it did so subject to the right of the municipality to exercise its taxing power in all its fullness: 8 Cyc. 997.
5. Nor are the obligations of contracts impaired, and Article I of Section 10 of the national Constitution is not violated, by the collection of taxes which are imposed by a law passed subsequent to the making of a contract. The ordinance does not strike at the terms of the contracts; the agreements are preserved, and are enforceable now the same as before by both parties; the obligation of the contracts still binds to the same extent as before the passage of the ordinance, and there is no impairment of any obligations.
6,7. In its brief the city argues that:
“The amount of the tax.exacted is of no concern to the courts, and is not sufficient to prove the invalidity of the ordinance.”
We shall assume for the moment that the ordinance provides for what is commonly termed an “occupa*286tion tax,” because tbe city claims that the ordinance in dispute imposes an occupation or business tax; and, moreover, the attempted exaction cannot be sustained on any other theory. If an ad valorem tax is levied on property, then, in the absence of statutory, charter or constitutional restrictions, the only limits to the exercise of .the power to tax are the necessities of the public treasury; but where a municipality is authorized to license occupations and businesses, either for the purpose of regulation or for revenue, the power cannot be used unreasonably, nor can the tax be fixed so high that it will practically prohibit the pursuit of ordinarily lawful businesses: Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, § 1438; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Fremont, 39 Neb. 692 (58 N. W. 415, 26 L. R. A. 698, 700); Ogden City v. Crossman, 17 Utah, 66, 78 (53 Pac. 985). While it is true that the amount of the tax must be determined by the legislative discretion of the municipal authorities, nevertheless:
“Occupation or business taxes, particularly when imposed by municipal ordinance, must stop short of confiscation, and must not be so oppressive as to prohibit the individual from following the ordinary and usual useful occupations: 4 Dillon, Mun. Corp., § 1408.
The power of the city to tax occupations and businesses must not be confused with the right of the state to license a corporation to exist or to do business as a corporation. The two classes of cases are fundamentally different. When it is made plainly to appear that the amount of the occupation tax imposed upon an ordinarily and usual useful business is so great as to be confiscatory or prohibitory, the courts will declare the tax unreasonable and restrain its collection. If the enforcement of the ordinance will result in prohibition of the. occupation or business, or *287will be confiscatory, tbe defendant can plead tbe effects of the ordinance as a good defense. Other phases of the answer make the pleading invulnerable to the demurrer, and therefore it will not be necessary to decide, and we do not determine, whether the company has pleaded sufficient facts, as distinguished from conclusions, to support the claim that the ordinance is unreasonable. We only announce that if the tax is in fact so unreasonable as to be prohibitory and confiscatory, and if that fact is brought to the attention of the court by proper pleading and proof, then the court will annul the attempted tax.
8. Before entering upon a discussion of the effect of the ordinance: (1) When viewed with relation to the legislative act of 1909 and the payment of taxes provided for by that statute; and (2) when considered in connection with the charter of the city and the payment of the license tax of $75, which is required by a prior ordinance numbered 11,784—it becomes necessary to take some notice of tax laws in general, and especially of the act of 1909 and also of the city charter.
’ Chapter 218 of the Laws of 1909 is reproduced in L. O. L., in Sections 3614 to 3660, inclusive. Section 3614 creates a board of state tax commissioners, composed of two persons, known as tax commissioners, together with the Governor, Secretary of State, and State Treasurer. Section 3617 makes it the duty of the board, by subdivision 1, to exercise general supervision of the system of taxation and collection of public taxes throughout the state; by subdivision 6, to issue instructions to certain officers as to the methods best calculated to secure uniformity in the assessment of taxes, to the end that a full cash valuation of all property, real and personal, tangible and intangible, *288including franchises and special franchises, shall be obtained; and by subdivision 15, to make an annual assessment, upon an assessment-roll prepared by the board, “of the property having a situs in this state” of certain companies, and “of such heat, light, power, water, gas and electric companies as may be doing business as one system, partly within this state and partly without, or so doing business in more than one county of the state.” Section 3618 defines the term “property” so as to include all property, real and personal, subject to assessment for taxation under the act, belonging to the corporation, including rights of way, roadbed, cars, rolling stock, tracks, wagons, horses, office furniture, transmission poles, wires, conduits, switchboards, machinery, appliances, appurtenances and all other property of a like or different kind, used in carrying on the business, “and all other real and personal property, and all franchises and special franchises.” Section 3619 states that “property having a situs in this state” includes all property, real and personal, of the corporation.
Section 3620 compels the corporations named in the act to file annual reports, showing among other numerous details the number and value of the shares of capital stock, the bonds and corporate obligations owing by the company, a complete statement of the real and personal property owned, the length of the company’s line, “a statement in detail of the entire gross receipts and net earnings of the company from all sources,” and such other facts or information as the board may require. After the reports are filed, Section 3622 makes it the duty of the board to prepare an assessment-roll upon which they shall assess the true cash value “of all the property of the companies herein enumerated subject to taxation. * * For the *289purpose of arriving at the amount and character and true cash value of the property belonging to said companies as appearing upon the assessment-roll for the. purpose of assessment for taxation under this act, the said board may personally inspect the property belonging to said companies, and may take into consideration the statements filed under this act, the reports, statements or returns of said companies * * the earning power of said companies, the franchises and special franchises owned or used by said companies (said franchises and special franchises not to be directly assessed, but to be taken into consideration in determining the value of the other property), ’ ’ and such other evidence as may be obtainable. Other sections make ample provisions for reviewing and correcting the roll. "When the roll has been reviewed and made complete, the board certifies to the county clerks of the counties in which the company does business, the values apportioned to each of such counties. The several county clerks then apportion the amount certified to their respective counties among the cities, towns, school districts, road districts, ports and other municipal taxing agencies, and make appropriate entries in the assessment-roll which has been prepared by the county assessor: and then in the language of Section 3635:
“Taxes shall be levied and collected upon the assessments so made in the same manner as other taxes are levied and collected, and at the same time and by the same officers.”
Section 3660 declares that the terms “persons,” “company,” “corporation,” or “association,” whenever used, shall apply “to any person, firm, joint-stock company, association, syndicate, copartnership, or cor*290poration engaged in or carrying on any business, the property of which is subject to taxation under this act.” Section 3670, L. O. L. (Section 15 of Chapter 267 of Laws of 1907), prescribes that:
“All taxes hereinafter levied by any incorporated city or town, school district, road district, port, or municipal taxing agency, or district, shall be levied on the property therein respectively assessable upon the valuation of such property as shown by the assessment-roll last compiled by the assessor, corrected, and equalized by the county board of equalization, and including entries therein of assessments as certified by the state board of tax commissioners and apportioned to such municipalities by the county clerk.”
Section 3671, L. O. L., commands that all taxes levied by any incorporated city or town, “now or hereafter authorized by law to levy taxes, shall be collected by the same officer and in the same manner and at the same time as taxes for county purposes are collected.”
In 1907 the legislature passed an act to provide a more efficient and equitable system for the assessment of property for taxation, defining property subject to taxation, defining the duties of the county assessor and prescribing the manner of making the assessment of property: Chapter 268, Laws 1907. That statute directs that all real property within this state, and all personal property situated or owned within this state, unless exempted by law, shall be subject to assessment and taxation in equal and ratable proportion. Section 2 of the act, reproduced in Section 3552, L. O. L., reads thus:
“The terms ‘land,’ ‘real estate,’ and ‘real property,’ as used in this act, shall be construed to include the land itself, whether laid out in town lots, or otherwise, above and under water, all buildings, structures, substructures, superstructures, and improvements erected upon, under, or above, or affixed to the same, and all *291rights and privileges thereto belonging or in anywise appertaining; and all franchises and privileges granted by or pursuant to any law of this state, or municipal ordinance or resolution, owned or used by any person or corporation, other than the right to be a corporation. * * ”
Section 18 of the act of 1907, being Section 3586, L. O. L., makes it the duty of the county assessor to prepare an assessment-roll with a full and complete statement of all taxable property, which shall be valued at its true cash value; and:
“True cash value of all property shall be held and taken to mean the amount such property would sell for at a voluntary sale made in the ordinary course of business, taking into consideration its earning power.”
Section 3 of the charter (Special Laws of 1903) invests the city “within its limits with authority to perform all public services and with all governmental powers, except such as are expressly conferred by law upon other public corporations and subject to the limitations prescribed by the Constitution and laws of the state, except as hereinafter provided.” Section 114 gives the city “power and authority * * to assess, levy, and collect taxes upon all property, both real and personal, not exempt from taxation. On or before the first Monday in February in each year, or, if the assessment upon which such levy is founded be not certified to the city officers prior to said day, then forthwith upon the execution of such certificate, the council shall levy the amount of taxes necessary,” but such levy is limited to a fixed amount.
Section 285 commands the city to make an estimate of the necessary amount of money to be raised by the general taxes, and to levy the necessary tax, which shall be certified by the city auditor to the county clerk, *292who shall then extend the tax in an appropriate column upon the county tax-roll. The tax is collected by the officer collecting the county tax and by him turned over to the city treasurer.
By subdivision 21 of Section 73, which appears under the heading “Finance and Revenue Powers,” the city is impowered:
“To grant licenses, with the object of raising revenue or of regulation, or both, for any and all lawful acts, things, or purposes, and to fix, by ordinance, the amount to be paid therefor, and to provide for the revoking of the same. No license shall be granted to continue for a longer period than one year from the date thereof.”
And finally, Section 74 enacts that:
“Enumeration of particular powers granted to the council in this charter shall not be construed to impair any general grant of power herein contained, nor to limit any such general grant to powers of the same class or classes as those so enumerated.”
Having recited such parts of the legislation governing assessments and taxation throughout the state as are deemed applicable, and having directed attention to such provisions of the city charter as must be noticed, we now proceed to consider the scope and effect of the state-wide laws for the purpose of aiding a correct interpretation of the charter itself and in order to determine the extent to which the city can go in imposing taxes.
Since the defendant is one of the companies mentioned in the act of 1909 and transacts its business as one system “in more than one county of the state,” its property is assessed by the board of tax commissioners. County assessors list and value the property of all owners who are not embraced by Chapter 218 of the Laws of 1909. Although the act of 1909 uses the *293terms “company” and “corporation,” still it must be remembered that those words are only employed for convenience, because the act applies to all owners, whether persons, firms or corporations, who are conducting any business, named in the statute, as one system in more than one county. When the statute of 1909 applies, the board of tax commissioners makes the assessment; but when the business does not come within the act of 1909, the assessment is made by the county assessor. The statute of 1907 directs that all real and personal property shall be assessed, and declares that real property not only includes the land itself, but also all rights and privileges belonging or appertaining to it as well as all franchises and privileges granted by or pursuant to any law or ordinance, owned or used by any person or corporation, “other than the right to be a corporation.” The act of 1909 states that the term “property” shall include “all property, real and personal, subject to assessment for taxation under this act,” and includes all franchises and special franchises (Section 3618, L. O. L.), although the franchises and special franchises are not directly assessed, but are taken into consideration in determining the value of the other property. When the assessment is made by the county assessor he must ascertain the “true cash value of all property, # * taking into consideration its earning power”: Section 3586, L. O. L. If the board of tax commissioners makes the assessment, the amount is governed by the “true cash value,” and for the purpose of determining that value the board may take into consideration “the entire gross receipts and net earnings of the company from all sources”: Sections 3620 and 3622, L. O. L.
When the county assessor takes into consideration the earning power of property and when the board of *294tax commissioners considers the gross receipts and net earnings, and then assesses specified property, the as- . sessment is made on property named as such and is not an assessment made on receipts. It is true that the receipts and earning power affect and influence the valuation placed on the property, and yet the net result is an assessment of designated property, and when a tax is levied and paid on that assessment, it is a tax paid on property, and is not a tax on a business or occupation, nor is it a tax on income. It is common knowledge that in the practical administration of the act of 1909, receipts showing a loss wield as much influence in reducing the assessed valuation below what it would cost to reproduce the plant as receipts showing profits exercise in raising the assessment above what the cost of reproduction would be. The record does not pretend to indicate whether the defendant operated at a loss or a profit, and consequently we have no means of knowing whether the income from the business tended to lessen or enhance the valuation of the property which was actually assessed and taxed.
When the county assessor assesses real property, he includes franchises granted to corporations, except the right to be a corporation; and when the board of tax commissioners assessed the property of the defendant, the franchises and special franchises owned or used by the company were considered in determining the value of the other property, although the franchises were not directly assessed. When the assessor assesses franchises, he places a value on them as property having value, and a tax paid on that assessment is a tax paid on property. When the board of tax commissioners takes into consideration a franchise ■ owned or used by a corporation, and if that franchise has enhanced the value of other property *295which is assessed then, if it can be said that the franchise is assessed at all, a tax on that other property is at most only an indirect tax on the franchise considered as property having a value,.and in the final analysis is a property tax.
The legislation enacted in 1907 and in 1909 prescribes a carefully devised and comprehensive system for the assessment and taxation of property, in obedience to the commands of Section 32 of Article I of the state Constitution, requiring that “all taxation shall be equal and uniform,” and in full compliance with Section 1 of Article IX of the organic law, which declares that “the legislative assembly shall provide by law for uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation, and shall prescribe such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property, both real and personal,” except such as may be especially exempted by law. The statutes of 1907 and 1909 specify what property shall be assessed and taxed. The plaintiff is permitted to levy the taxes for its municipal needs, but it has no independent power to say upon what property those taxes may be levied, because the legislature has specified what property shall be assessed and has also designated the officers who alone can and must perform the duty of listing and assessing property. The city must make its levy on the assessment-roll prepared for the county, and all taxes levied on property are confined to that assessment-roll: State of Oregon v. Wells Fargo & Co., 64 Or. 421, 432 (126 Pac. 611, 130 Pac. 983).
The power conferred upon the city by Section 114 of the charter “to assess, levy and collect taxes upon all property, both real and personal,” does not give the city the -right to assess property for the purpose of taxation. By the very terms of that section of the *296charter the taxes are levied on the assessment certified “to the city officers,” and by Section 285 the tax levied shall be certified to the county clerk, “who shall extend the said tax in an appropriate column upon the county tax-roll.” The word “assess,” appearing in Section 114, when applied to the instant case, does not mean to value property for taxation; but, as was said in South Covington & Cincinnati Street R. Co. v. Bellevue, 105 Ky. 283 (49 S. W. 23, 57 L. R. A. 50).
“In the place used it means to levy a tax, and does not mean the valuation of property for taxation.”
Nor does the omnibus character of Section 3 of the charter, even when supplemented and fortified by Section 74, empower the city to assess any property it may choose to designate and then impose a tax on that property. The legislature has exercised its constitutional right and has performed its constitutional duty by prescribing’ “such regulations as shall secure a just valuation for taxation of all property.” Those regulations specify the items of property which are to be assessed, and the city cannot enlarge or lessen the specifications, because all property taxes levied by any incorporated city shall be levied on the property therein assessed upon the valuation shown by the assessment-roll compiled by the assessor: Section 3670, L. O. L. The ordinance is therefore void if it imposes a tax on a franchise as property; and the ordinance is likewise void if the tax is levied on the earnings as property. Property taxes, when levied by the city, must be on the property listed and valued in the county assessment-roll.
9-13. The charter expressly permits the city to grant licenses, with the object of raising revenue, or of regulation, or both, for any and all lawful acts, things, or purposes; but when any part of this speci*297tied power is exercised it nxust be subject to any limitations that may be imposed by the language which specifically confers the right to use the power, because neither the broad reach of Section 3 nor the asseverations of Section 74 of the charter can abrogate the limitations, restrictions or bounds placed upon the exercise of a specifically enumerated power. The omnibus sections do not alter or even enlarge the special section, which authorizes the licensing of acts, things or purposes. The power to license occupations and businesses is found in subdivision 21 of Section 73, and, having been embraced by that section, it is not set at larg’e by any general grant or power: The Laundry License Case (D. C.), 22 Fed. 701, 703; 2 Dillon, Mun. Corp., §§ 585, 586; 1 McQuillin, Mun. Corp., p. 762; State v. Butler, 178 Mo. 272 (77 S. W. 560); Gray v. City of Omaha, 80 Neb. 526 (114 N. W. 600, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1033); Southwestern Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Dallas, 104 Tex. 114 (134 S. W. 321). The rule is especially applicable to the power to tax (4 Dillon, Mun. Corp. (5 ed.), §1378), because a city possesses no inherent power to tax and “the grant relied upon must be evident and unmistakable, and all doubts will be resolved against its exercise, and in favor of the .taxpayer”: Corbett v. City of Portland, 31 Or. 407, 415 (48 Pac. 428); Stevens v. Taylor, 79 Or. 424 (154 Pac. 896). In Southwestern Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Dallas, 104 Tex. 114 (134 S. W. 321), the Supreme Court of Texas, when construing a charter containing an omnibus section quite like the Portland charter, held that:
“A municipal corporation possesses no power not derived from its charter; therefore the general terms ‘full powers of self-government,’ and ‘all powers of municipal government not prohibited by this charter, ’ add nothing to the terms of the charter.”
*298The statute which serves as the organic law for the city plainly contemplates that if a tax, whether for regulation or for revenue, is imposed upon a business or occupati on, it is to be done pursuant to the authority of subdivision 21 of Section 73; and there is not even plausibility in the argument that a business can be taxed for revenue or for regulation under the special grant and again taxed under the general grant of power. The ordinance imposes either a direct tax on the gross earnings as property, or else a tax on the business or occupation. Power to tax the earnings as such is wanting, and authority to tax the business must be referable to subdivision 21 of Section 73, and to no other provision of the charter. It will become necessary to determine the character of the litigated tax; but, before analyzing the ordinance to ascertain what it was intended to tax, the wide range taken by the arguments found in 14 printed briefs filed in this and in a companion case renders it necessary to make some survey of the field covered by the power to tax.
An ad valorem tax may be imposed on property, and in addition the owner of that property may be charged for the privilege of carrying on a business, even though the property upon which he has paid a tax is used in the business; and duplicate taxation does not result from the simultaneous payment of a property tax and an occupation or business tax. There is a wide difference between the payment of one tax upon property and another upon the business: 1 Cooley, Tax. (3 ed.), 395; Cray, Lim. of Tax. Powers, p. 679. Or as is concisely stated in 37 Cyc. 754:
“There is no constitutional objection to the levy of a license tax for the privilege of carrying on a particular business and at the same time a tax on the property employed in the business.”
*299A corporation may be compelled to pay an annual fee for the right to transact business as a corporation, and at the same time be charged with a business or occupation tax, and also be obliged to pay an ad valorem tax on property owned by it, without violating the constitutional inhibition against double taxation: Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, p. 682; Cobb v. Commissioners of Durham County, 122 N. C. 307 (30 S. E. 338).
The state may for a prescribed annual fee sell to corporations the right to transact business as corporations, and when obtained the rights become franchises; a municipality may sell to an individual or to a corporation the privilege of using the public streets for some particular purpose, for example, to erect poles and wires for the distribution of electricity, or the laying of pipes to convey gas, and that privilege, when secured, becomes a special franchise; and yet the legislature may treat those franchises as things having value and subject them to the payment of a property tax: Nebraska Tel. Co. v. City of Lincoln, 82 Neb. 59 (117 N. W. 284, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221); Cumberland T. & T. Co. v. Hopkins, 121 Ky. 850 (90 S. W. 594); Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, §§ 37a, 60; 1 Cooley, Tax. (3 ed.), p. 686.
The imposition of a property or ad valorem tax on franchises considered as property at the behest of the state does not preclude a municipality from charging the owner of the franchises for the privilege of actually carrying on business; or, in other words, the payment of a property tax does not preclude the collection of an occupation or business tax. A tax on the right to do business as a corporation, or on the right to exercise a special privilege, may be levied as a tax on property, and is distinct from a license or privilege *300tax on the actual doing of the business: Nebraska Tel. Co. v. City of Lincoln, 82 Neb. 59 (117 N. W. 284, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221); Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, § 1367; Brooklyn City R. R. Co. v. New York, 199 U. S. 48 (50 L. Ed. 79, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 713). A property tax must be on an ad valorem basis, because it is a direct tax on property; but there is no constitutional requirement that a business or occupation táx shall be so measured: Ellis v. Frazier, 38 Or. 462 (63 Pac. 642, 53 L. R. A. 454). Judicial precedents have firmly established the rule that a definite per centum of the gross receipts of the business may be taken as the measure of the amount to be paid for the privilege of actually transacting a business, and, moreover, this method of ascertaining the amount of a license tax, whether on a business or for the privilege of doing business in a corporate capacity, is not necessarily a tax on the earnings; Cobb v. Commissioners of Durham County, 122 N. C. 307 (30 S. E. 338); Nebraska Tel. Co. v. City of Lincoln, 82 Neb. 59 (111 N. W. 284, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221); 4 Dillon, Mun. Corp. (5 ed.), p. 2473; Southwestern Oil Co. v. Texas, 217 U. S. 114 (54 L. Ed. 688, 30 Sup. Ct. Rep. 496); Society for Savings v. Coite, 6 Wall. 594 (18 L. Ed. 897); Provident Inst. v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611 (18 L. Ed. 907); Hamilton Co. v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 632 (18 L. Ed. 904); Commonwealth v. New York L. E. & W. R. Co., 150 Pa. 234 (24 Atl. 609); In re Railroad Taxation, 102 Me. 527 (66 Atl. 726); 25 Cyc. 608, 627.
It must therefore be conceded to be authoritatively established that taxes, charges and fees may be simultaneously exacted of a corporation, so as to compel it to pay: (1) An ad valorem or property tax on all property owned by it, including franchises when they are considered as property; (2) a license or privilege *301tax on business; and (3) a fee to the state for its franchise or right to do business as a corporation.
The right to exact different kinds of taxes sometimes makes it difficult to know the character of tax intended to be imposed. It has been argued with much insistence that since the defendant has already paid a property tax on its property, which was valued and assessed by taking into consideration the franchises used and owned by the company, the enforcement of the ordinance will result in duplicate taxation, on the theory that the ordinance is a tax on corporate franchises. In order to reach the conclusion urged upon us, an attempt is made to establish a parallelism between the ordinance and an act which was passed in 1906 by the legal voters of the state levying’ a license on the gross earnings of certain companies: See Laws 1907, p. 7. The argument is that the state law and the ordinance are substantially the same; that this court decided that the state law imposed a tax on corporate franchises; and that therefore the same construction must necessarily be placed upon the ordinance. Some notice must first be taken of the statute and the ordinance. The statute, since repealed, required express, telegraph and telephone companies to pay 3 per cent upon the gross receipts in this state. Any person or persons, joint-stock company, or corporation engaged in the business “shall be deemed to be an express company”; and the statement which must be filed, showing the gross receipts, must contain the name of the company, “the nature of the company, whether a person or persons, company or corporation.” It will therefore be seen that the word 1 ‘ company, ’ ’ is used in the act as a term of convenience, and that the legislation applied to a person as well as to a corporation, so that if “a person” is engaged in the express business, *302he was liable to pay the tax imposed by the statute. A person eng-aged in the express business does not possess or exercise any corporate franchise because he can do business as an individual, and no special franchise of any kind was granted, or needed, or used; and consequently if a person conducted an express business, and paid a 3 per cent tax on his gross receipts, he did not pay a tax on a franchise, because he had no franchise to be taxed. Notwithstanding the language employed in Oregon v. Pacific States Tel. & Tel. Co., 53 Or. 162 (99 Pac. 427), the tax provided for by the state law was not necessarily laid on franchises: Southwestern Oil Co. v. Texas, 217 U. S. 114 (54 L. Ed. 688, 30 Sup. Ct. Rep. 496).
The ordinance requires “every person or corporation, engaged in the business of selling electricity, or electric current, for lighting, heating, power or other commercial purposes within” Portland, to pay the exaction, and by the express terms of the ordinance the word “person” includes an individual or copartnership. If an individual owns and operates the business, then there is no corporate franchise to tax. It is true that the individual could not maintain poles and wires in the streets without a special franchise from the city. The ordinance does not make the right to collect the tax depend upon the existence of a franchise of any kind, but it is designed to lay hold of every corporation and person who is engaged in the business of selling electricity; and if the owner carries on the business as an individual, then there is no corporate franchise to tax, and there would not even be a special franchise to tax, if the owner did not have one.' There is no merit in the contention that the ordinance imposes a tax on franchises.
*303The theory that the ordinance imposes a tax on-franchises is predicated upon cases like Society for Savings v. Coite, 6 Wall. 594 (18 L. Ed. 897); Provident Inst. v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611 (18 L. Ed. 907); Hamilton Co. v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 632 (18 L. Ed. 904); Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594 (33 L. Ed. 1025, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 593); People v. Knight, 174 N. Y. 475 (67 N. E. 65, 63 L. R. A. 87); Commonwealth v. Railroad, 150 Pa. 234 (24 Atl. 609); In re Railroad Taxation, 102 Me. 527 (66 Atl. 726). An examination of the cases cited will demonstrate that, without a single exception, the legislation construed by the courts applied only to corporations or associations doing business under charters and did not include individuals. The method adopted for ascertaining the amount of the tax did not serve as the test by which to determine the character of the tax, but the object of the legislation was, like our corporation license act of 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 39), to impose and collect a charge for the privilege “of doing business in a corporate capacity”: Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594, 599 (33 L. Ed. 1025, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 593).
14-20. The term “franchise” is not always used with discrimination. The granting of a privilege to maintain poles and wires in the street for the distribution of electricity is a special franchise, or a franchise “to do,” and may be owned by an individual or corporation. When associated with corporations, the word “franchise” has various significations. The franchise “to be” may refer to the grant of corporate life, or it may relate to the privilege of continuing to exist as a corporation. The franchise “to do” may refer to the right to do business generally as a corporation, or it may signify the corporate power to transact the particular business and do the things *304specifically enumerated in the articles of incorporation: Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, §§ 47a, 51, 54. The state may impose license or privilege taxes on corporate franchises “to be” and on corporate franchises “to do,” as is done by the corporation license act of 1903: Laws 1903, p. 39. A percentage of the gross income, as well as other methods, have been employed for ascertaining the amount of the license or privilege tax to be charged for corporate franchises “to be” or “to do,” just as different methods may be adopted for license taxes on occupations or businesses: Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, § 58; 37 Cyc. 820, 863; Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U. S. 594, 603 (33 L. Ed. 1025, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 593). But the method of ascertaining the amount does not of itself define the character of the tax.
The city argues that the tax is only imposed on the business, and that therefore it is valid because within the purview of the power to license acts, things or purposes with the object of raising revenue, or of regulation, or both; while insisting that the ordinance is void because of failure to observe the limitations prescribed by the charter, the company also contends that the city has already exercised its power to license by enacting Ordinance No. 11,784, and since the plaintiff enforced that ordinance, and the defendant paid the license charges, for the year 1911, the second ordinance is void because amounting to double taxation; and the city replies to the argument of the company by insisting Ihat the second ordinance repeals the first by implication. When examining municipal legislation to ascertain what was intended when ordinances were enacted, and when seeking to learn whether the second impliedly repeals the first ordinance, we must keep in mind certain rules which are designed to aid *305in arriving at a correct understanding of the assailed ordinance. The presumption is against legislative intention to impose double taxation: 37 Cyc. 755; 1 Cooley, Tax., p. 398. “Where a statute is open to two constructions, one of which will render it unreasonable and unconstitutional, while the other will harmonize with reason, justice and constitutional prescriptions, the latter construction will be adopted”: Coach v. Gage, 70 Or. 182, 189 (138 Pac. 847). But, on the other hand, repeals by implication are not favored: State ex rel. v. Malheur County Court, 54 Or. 255 (101 Pac. 907, 103 Pac. 446). And, moreover, while not absolutely controlling, the legislative designation is an important factor in- determining the character of the tax imposed: Gray, Lim. of Tax. Power, p. 42.
We have determined that this ordinance is void if considered as a tax on property; that it can only be sustained on the theory that it is a license or privilege tax on the occupation or business; and that if it is an occupation or business tax, it must be referable to subdivision 21 of Section 73 of the charter for its authority to stand. We must therefore analyze the language which cpnfers the power. “To grant licenses” serves as the keynote to subdivision 21 of Section 73 of the charter; and it must also be noted that this section of the charter provides “for the revoking” of licenses, and, furthermore, “no license shall be granted.to continue for a longer period than one year from the date thereof. ’ ’ Licenses may be granted for regulation or for revenue: Kellaher v. Portland, 57 Or. 575, 579 (110 Pac. 492, 112 Pac. 1076); Abraham v. Roseburg, 55 Or. 359, 362 (105 Pac. 401, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 597). When the tax is paid it amounts to the payment of a license tax on the occupation or business. Assuming, without deciding, that it is not necessary *306to issue a paper commonly called a license, nevertheless, the exercise of the power to license involves the granting of permission to do something which could not lawfully he done without such permission: The Laundry Case (D. C.), 22 Fed. 701, 703; Reser v. Umatilla County, 48 Or. 326, 329 (86 Pac. 595, 120 Am. St. Rep. 815); Home Ins. Co. v. Augusta, 50 Ga. 530.
If the ordinance was intended to come within the purview of the power “to grant licenses” we would naturally expect to find at least some of the earmarks of a license. No phase of the ordinance presents any semblance of a license; not even a pretense is made of granting a license; nothing is prohibited; failure to pay the tax only creates a debt, and continuance of the business is not inhibited; the very terms of the title of the ordinance indicate that the design is “to levy a license on the gross receipts of persons and corporations” who are engaged in selling electricity. The absence of words of repeal, while not conclusive, is at least significant, especially when taken in connection with the fact that Ordinance No. 11,784 has been enforced and the license fees for the year 1911 have been paid. If the second ordinance was intended as an exercise of the power to license, on account of the character of the two ordinances, one would expect to find words of repeal in the second ordinance because the first embraces “businesses, callings, trades and employments,” while the second is confined to corporations and persons who sell electricity. The second ordinance is not an exercise of the power “to grant licenses.” It does not repeal, nor was it intended to repeal, the first ordinance; but, in the language of Mr. Justice Holmes, the second ordinance “is merely an effort to reach the gross receipts, not even disguised by the name of an occupation tax”: Galveston *307etc. Ry. Co. v. Texas, 210 U. S. 217 (52 L. Ed. 1031, 28 Sup. Ct. Rep. 638).
The ordinance is void if considered as a property tax; it was not enacted as an exercise of the power granted by subdivision 21 of Section 73, and is therefore void, because without charter authority: Robertson v. Portland, 77 Or. 121 (149 Pac. 545). The answer states a good defense, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Affirmed.
Me. Justice Eakin absent.