Judges: AlleN
Filed Date: 10/3/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The defendant was convicted in the Superior Court of Nash (224) upon appeal from a justice of the peace, upon a warrant charging that he had carried on the business of hauling logs, etc., without obtaining a license therefor, in violation of the provisions of chapter 451, Laws 1911.
The defendant moved in arrest of judgment, for that the indictment and judgment in this action are based upon a statute which violates the Constitution of North Carolina and the Constitution of the United States, and is invalid. Constitution of North Carolina, Art. V, sec. 3; Art. I, sec. 7; Art. I, sec. 17. Constitution of United States, fourteenth amendment.
The motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted and appealed. The statute under which the defendant was convicted (chapter 451 of Public-Local Laws of 1911) reads as follows:
"That it shall be unlawful for any person or corporation to carry on the business of hauling logs, timber, or lumber over the roads of any one of the road districts above laid out and created, without first having obtained a license therefor; and any person or corporation carrying on the business of hauling logs, timber, or lumber as aforesaid, without having first obtained license, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined not more than $50. Said license shall be issued by the road commissioners of the road district or township over the roads of which the wagon or wagons are driven, and will be signed by the chairman and countersigned by the clerk of said road commission. The license tax which said road commission in each township is to collect is as follows, to wit: for each one-horse wagon, $5 for each year or part of a year; for each two-horse wagon, $10 for each year or part of a year; for each three-horse wagon and four-horse wagon, $15 for each year or part of a year; for each wagon drawn by more than four horses or mules, $20 for each year or part of a year. The money thus collected from license taxes as aforesaid shall be paid over to the treasurer of the county of Nash by the road commissioner collecting the same, to be held (225) to the credit of the township or road district so collecting. Any district or township in which wagons are operated shall be entitled to collect the license tax without respect to its having been collected by any other township."
If this statute is compared with the one under consideration in S. v.Holloman,
In Dalton v. Brown, supra, the following statute was approved: "That any lumber company, corporation, person or persons engaged in the lumber business and desiring to use any of the public roads of any of the townships of Macon County for the purpose of carrying on its or their business of hauling, either by itself or themselves, or by hiring or contracting with other persons, mill logs, lumber, or other heavy material with log wagons, log carts, or other heavy vehicles, (226) shall pay a license or other privilege tax of two (2) cents per mile on each 1,000 feet of mill logs, lumber, or other heavy material so hauled."
Two of the justices dissented from the opinion of the Court in the last case, upon the ground that the statute did not apply to all who hauled logs, heavy material, etc., but only to those who were engaged in the lumber business, and that this was a discrimination not permitted by law. The statute before us is not subject to this objection, as it includes any person, corporation, etc., engaged in the business of hauling logs, etc.
We, therefore, hold that the two cases cited are decisive of this, and that there is
No error. *Page 184
(227)