delivered the opinion of the court.
Section 181 of the Constitution is as follows: . . . The General Assembly may, by general laws only, . . . delegate the power to . . . municipal corporations, to impose and collect license fees on stock used. for breeding purposes, on franchises, trades, occupations and professions. Section 3058, Kentucky Statutes, (being part of the act for the government of cities of the second class), which was enacted pursuant to section 181 of the Constitution, provides that “the general council [of cities of that class] shall have power, by ordinance, . . . to license, tax and regulate . . . livery, board, feed and sale stables, hansoms, cabs, hackney coaches, carriages, barouches, buggies, wagons, omnibuses, carts, drays, job wagons, and all other vehicles, used or let for hire.....
The general council of the city of Lexington, by virtue of the authority conferred by the above section, passed ordinances, one of which reads as follows:
‘•'Each person conducting a livery, feed, sale or keep *767stable, shall pay an annual license of ten (10) dollars, and shall in addition thereto pay the following yearly license for all vehicles kept in said stable for hire: Each hack or two horse wagon.................... $10 Each buggy, rockaway, cart, drag, or one horse wagon 5
“Each vehicle kept for hire by the keepers of livery stables upon which the license has been paid shall be designated by a small tag or mark showing the year for which said license has been paid. Said tag or mark shall be furnished by the city clerk with the license, and he shall collect and turn into the city treasury twenty-five cents for each tag so furnished. Any livery stable keeper using or hiring for use any vehicle upon which the license has been paid without the aforesaid tag or mark attached to the same, shall be fined five (5) dollars for each such offense.”
This court, in City of Covington v. Woods, 98 Ky., 344, [33 S. W., 84], had under consideration an ordinance of the same general import as the one under consideration here. Under the ordinance of the general council of the city of Covington, the charge of ten dollars for an annual license to livery stable keepers was not provided for. The court held the ordinance was valid, and said: “Where the ordinance provides that a given sum shall be paid as a license fee on a vehicle, it simply employs a method of fixing the amount of the license fee one shall pay by the number and character of his vehicles used or let for hire. It is in fact a tax on the occupation of the party owning or plying the vehicles in the city, though technically it may appear to be a tax on the vehicles. In the light of the constitutional provision, we must hold that the General Assembly so intended it to be, and that it is a tax on the occupation of the owner.”
*768While the owner of a livery stable is required to pay so much as a license on each vehicle kept for hire, in addition to the ■annual license of ten dollars, still the sum total is the amount of the license fee which he is required to pay on his occupation. It is but one license fee charged, and this is to be ascertained by multiplying the number of two-horse vehicles by ten, and the one-horse vehicles by five, and this product added to the original sum will give the amount of the license fee which he is required to pay on his occupation.
As the general council is authorized to regulate livery stables, we see no valid objections to the method prescribed by the ordinance for supplying tags or marks for the vehicles at the sum of twenty-five cents for each so furnished. Whether the stable is owned by one individual, or a firm composed of several individuals, only one -annual license of ten dollars, as designated in the ordinance, is required to be paid.
It would be unprofitable to go into a discussion of the power to exact license fees with the view of raising revenue. It is sufficient to say that the organic and statutory law of the State authorizes license fees to be collected for that purpose. The judgment is affirmed.