Honold v. City of New Orleans

Ludeling, C. J.

The city of New Orleans having imposed a license tax on the plaintiff as a manufacturer of soap the latter enjoined the city from enforcing the collection of that tax, on the ground that he is exempt from such taxation hy virtue of the act of twenty-fifth April, 1853, re-enacted in 1855 and again in 1870. It declares that “it shall not be lawlul, hereafter, for any municipal corporation within the-State to lay any taxon persons engaged'in selling articles of their own manufacture, manufactured within the State.” Acts of 1853, 135, No. 168; acts of 1855, 326, and section 3344, 648, Revised Statutes of 1870.

The counsel for the city of New Orleans contends that this law is repealed hy the charter of the city enacted in 1870, because the •exemption under that law is contrary to, or irreconcilable with, the provisions of the said charter.

And lie further contends that the exemption law reliea upon is unconstitutional, because in opposition to article 118 of the Coi stitution, which gives the General Assembly power to exempt from taxation only property “ actually used for church, school or charitable purposes.”

Loth these questions have been decided by this court. In City of New Orleans v. Mascaro, 11 An. 733, it was contended that this protection to domestic manufactures had been removed hy the provisions of the charter of 1856, section 102 of which is as follows: “That the •city of Now Orleans shall have power to levy taxes, commonly known •as licenses, upon trades, professions, callings and other business •carried on,” etc.

The court held, in that case, that there was no repeal of the former •statute by the charter; that there was nothing in the two acts which •could not he made to harmonize. The same opinion was expressed in Lusse v. Rhulman, reported in 21 An. 1.

The counsel for the city does not question the correctness of those decisions, hut he insists that section 12 of the charter adopted in 1870 •conferred upon the city greater powers than the section 102 of the charter of 1856. Section 12 of the charter of 1870 bestows upon tbe Council the power “ to levy, impose and collect a license tax upon all *727persons pursuing any trade, profession or calling, and to provide for its •collection.” Section 102 of the charter of 1856 authorized the Council ‘‘to levy taxes, commonly known as licenses, upon trades, professions, ■callings and other business carried on,” etc.

We think the powers granted under these sections substantially the same. Section 12 of the charter of 1870 can, and therefore it must, be made to harmonize with the statute exempting manufacturers from a license tax. The repeal of laws by implication is not favored. 5 An. 122.

It is difficult to believe that the General Assembly- intended to repeal section 3344 of the Revised Statutes of 1870 by the charter of the city, which was enacted by it only two days after the re-enactment •of said law. C. C. arts. 17, 18, 22. Article 118 of the Constitution does not command that all occupations, trades and callings shall be taxed; but that all persons pursuing a profession, trade or calling which is taxed must be taxed equally. There is no conflict between the opinions in the cases of Lusse & Rhulman, 21 An. 1, and the insurance company cases recently decided, 23 An. 449, and we reaffirm the opinion expressed in the case of City of New Orleans v. Lusse & Rhulman.

It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs of appeal.