The opinion of the court was delivered by
Brewer, J.:Two questions are presented in this case. The first turns on the validity of 'an ordinance of the city of Troy, a city of the third class, imposing a license-tax on auctions. This ordinance was passed on the 3d of February 1875, and required that for all sales at public auction a license should be obtained, and that for this license five dollars a day should be paid. It is said that this ordinance is void because “in contravention of common right, unreasonable, arid in restraint of trade,” and because the council “had no authority to tax by the day, only by the year.” Neither of these objections, we think, is good. Express authority is given by the statute to levy and collect a “license-tax” upon various exhibitions, professions, and avocations, including therein “merchants of all kinds;” and to make more clear *274that it is not regulation, but revenue, which is authorized, the section closes with a proviso as follows: “ provided however, that all scientific and literary lectures, * * * shall be exempt from such taxation,” etc. (Laws 1871, p. 130, §48.) That in the absence of constitutional restrictions, and we have none thereon, the legislature may authorize municipalities to tax employments as well as property, must we think be conceded. Judge Dillon thus sums up the authorities: “These cases show some diversity of opinion as to the right to tax particular employments, as distinguished. from property; but the correct view, it is submitted, is this: unless specially restrained by the constitution, the legislature may provide for the taxing of any occupation. or trade, and may confer this power upon municipal corporations. But such taxes are apt to be inequitable, and the principle not free, from danger of great abuse. Hence, ordinances of this character ought not to be sustained, unless the authority be expressly, or otherwise unequivocally, conferred.” Dillon on Munic. Corp., §291, note. See also City of Leavenworth v. Booth, 15 Kas. 635; Cooley on Const. Lim. 201, 495; Duraile’s Appeal, 62 Penn. St. 491; Hodgson v. New Orleans, 21 La. An. 301; St. Louis v. Boatmen’s Ins. Co., 47 Mo. 150; St. Louis v. Marine Ins. Co., 47 Mo. 163; St. Louis v. Laughlin, 49 Mo. 559; St. Charles v. Noble, 51 Mo. 122; Osborne v. Mobile, 44 Ala. 493; Bates v. Mobile, 46 Ala. 158; Goldthwaite v. Montgomery, 50 Mo. 486; Mason v. Trustees Lancaster, 4 Bush. (Ky.) 406; Kinper v. Louisville, 7 Bush. 599; Walcott v. The People, 17 Mich. 63; Kitson v. Ann Arbor, 26 Mich. 325; Darling v. St. Paul, 19 Minn. 389; Comm’rs Edenton v. Caplehart, 71 North Car. 156; Wiggins v. Chicago, 68 Ill. 372; Collinsville v. Cole, 78 Ill. 114; Wright v. Mayor, 54 Ga. 645; State v. Gagley, 5 Ohio 14. Begarded as a tax, therefore, it comes within the general proposition concerning taxation, that it knows no limit other than the necessities of the public treasury, and the discretion of the taxing power. Or perhaps more correctly, it may be said in respect to this, as a municipal tax, that the *275mere amount of the tax.does not prove its invalidity. The amount of the city indebtedness, the necessary expenditures of the municipality, may require an equally high rate of taxation upon all employments, and all property, so that however large this might seem to be, being in harmony with all other taxation, and necessary to meet the legitimate demands on the treasury, it could not be said to be unreasonable. This seems to avoid the argument of the learned counsel, that such a license, amounting in a single year to over $1,500, is oppressive, unreasonable, and in restraint of trade. For while it may not be true, that a city having authority to collect revenue by license may impose any sum, however large, as license, and thus in effect destroy certain kinds of business, yet before in such a case an ordinance imposing a license is declared void on account of the amount therefor, it should appear that' the necessities of the city do not require so large a revenue, or that there has been an unjustifiable attempt to discriminate against certain kinds of business by casting the whole burden of taxation upon them.
But is the amount charged for license in this case so enormous as to be unreasonable and oppressive? To pay over $1,500 a year for carrying on a permanent auction business, would seem excessive. But we must notice that this provision is for cities of the third class, cities not containing more than 2,000 inhabitants, and that in places of such small size a permanent auction-store is a thing almost unheard of. The only auctions there held, are, when some citizen closes out his household or other goods by an auction of one or two days’ duration; or when some wandering merchant comes with a flourish of handbills, posters, and other advertisements, to work off a stock of goods by a week or two’s rapid sales at auction. The latter really interferes with the business of the regular merchant; and for neither, is a license-tax of five dollars a day apparently exorbitant. A license of fifty dollars a day is no uncommon demand upon circuses, and other traveling shows, and may be fair and reasonable, while a similar demand upon permanent exhibitions would *276work a practical destruction of the business. Nor does the provision that license-taxes “shall be at such rate per year as shall be just and reasonable,” prevent a charge of so much per day. The purpose of that section was to prescribe the method of computing the amount of taxes, and that was by the time and not by the amount of business. It did not compel the council to exact a year’s license in every case, or prevent them from graduating the amount of the license by the actual time employed in the business licensed. We are forced therefore to the conclusion that, with no other evidence than that now before us, the ordinance must be held valid. With the wisdom or policy of such municipal legislation, this court has nothing to do. That is a matter for the separate determination of each municipality.
The other question involves the relation of the terms “auction,” and “auctioneer.” The ordinance purports to require licenses for both auctions, and auctioneers. The first section reads: “Before any person shall proceed to sell at public auction, * * * merchandise of any class whatever, he shall first obtain a license for an auction,” etc. — while the second is as follows: “Any person desiring to exercise the office or calling of an auctioneer, * * * shall first obtain a license therefor,” etc. Do these two sections reach to the same matter, so that obtaining a license under one, is equivalent to a license under both, and a bar to any prosecution under either? We think not. There is a clear distinction between the two. The one applies to the party who has goods which he desires to dispose of by auction, and the other to the party who makes the out-cry.. The same party may occupy both positions. He may have goods to sell at auction, and he may be his own auctioneer; but this is neither necessarily nor generally so. The rule is, for one to act as the salesman, the auctioneer, for others who have goods to sell. One, breaking up housekeeping, advertises his furniture for sale at auction. Another, desiring to close out a stock of goods, does the same, and each names a third party as auctioneer. The latter is simply the crier, one who makes it *277a business to act as the agent of others in this particular manner of selling goods. His business is that of an auctioneer; and for carrying on that business he is required by the second section to have a license. The party who has goods to sell, and desires to sell them at auction, and obtains the services of the auctioneer therefor, is the party who must take out the license required by the first section. These considerations dispose of the case, and compel an affirmance of the judgment.
It is understood that case No. 679, between the same parties, is controlled by the same questions; and the same judgment will be entered in that case.
All the Justices concurring.