Judges: Adams, Clarkson, Vaeser
Filed Date: 6/3/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
CLARKSON and VARSER, JJ., concur in result only. The object of this action is to restrain the collection of a tax levied by the city of Asheville for the privilege of advertising by *Page 738 the use of billboards. At the hearing the judge found certain facts, among which are these: (1) The plaintiff in the exercise of its corporate powers conducts a business known as "Outdoor Advertising," and for this purpose maintains a large number of billboards and posterboards situated on private property; (2) when the suit was instituted the plaintiff owned, leased and used about 150 boards, erected at a cost of more than $10,000, the total posting surface of which was more than 3,825 lineal feet; (3) the plaintiff has made numerous contracts with its customers for the display of advertising matter upon these boards and derives its sole income from payments made by its customers; (4) the gross income received by the plaintiff from its business in the city of Asheville for the fiscal year 1923-24 was approximately $12,000 and the net income $873.07; (5) under an ordinance of the city, the defendants are attempting to impose and collect an annual license tax of one dollar on each lineal foot of the plaintiff's total lineal footage in the city, which is 3,825 feet, the tax amounting to $3,825; (6) for several years prior to the passage of this ordinance the city levied and imposed on the plaintiff a license tax of $300, which the plaintiff has tendered to the defendant in payment of the tax for the current year.
Upon the facts found and set out in the judgment, the order restraining the collection of any tax in excess of the $300 tendered by the plaintiff was continued to the final hearing.
The plaintiff contends that the defendants, while purporting to exercise the power of taxation for municipal purposes, have levied and are attempting to collect from the plaintiff a license and privilege tax which is oppressive, prohibitive, confiscatory, and, therefore, invalid, while the defendants contend that injunction is not available to restrain the enforcement of an invalid municipal ordinance, and, moreover, if it is, that the evidence is not sufficient to warrant such remedy.
In a number of our decisions it has been held that, as a general rule, an injunction will not be granted to prevent the enforcement of an invalid or unlawful municipal ordinance. Cohen v. Comrs.,
In the instant case it is incumbent upon the plaintiff, who seeks relief by injunction, to bring itself within the exception to the general rule. Whether it has done so does not definitely or sufficiently appear. The trial judge, it is true, finds the plaintiff's gross income for the fiscal year to be approximately $12,000 and its net income $873.07; but in a suit of this character the appellate court may examine the evidence and reach its own conclusion as to the facts. Sanders v. Ins. Co.,
Reversed and remanded.
CLARKSON and VARSER, J. J., concurring in result only.
Boise Artesian Hot & Cold Water Co. v. Boise City ( 1909 )
Thompson v. Town of Lumberton ( 1921 )
Cohen v. . Commissioners ( 1877 )
Walla Walla City v. Walla Walla Water Co. ( 1898 )
Sanders v. Rocky Mount Insurance & Realty Co. ( 1922 )
Wardens St. Peter's Episcopal Church v. Town of Washington ( 1891 )
SS Kresge Company v. Davis ( 1971 )
Orange Speedway, Inc. v. Clayton ( 1958 )
Loose-Wiles Biscuit Co. v. Town of Sanford ( 1931 )
Flemming v. City of Asheville ( 1934 )
Little Pep Delmonico Restaurant, Inc. v. City of Charlotte ( 1960 )
D. & H. Truck Line v. Hopson ( 1928 )
Clinard v. City of Winston-Salem ( 1940 )