DocketNumber: 12499
Citation Numbers: 144 S.E. 846, 147 S.C. 116
Judges: Stabler, Watts, Messrs, Blease, Carter, Cothran
Filed Date: 9/25/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 118 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 119 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 120 September 25, 1928. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The petitioners in both of the above-entitled proceedings instituted in the original jurisdiction of the Court, seek to have declared null and void Act No. 574 of the Legislature, passed at its 1928 session and approved by the Governor *Page 121 March 10, 1928. The two actions are similar, and cover in part the same points; they were heard together on argument here, counsel for petitioners filing one brief covering the several questions raised in the two cases. In our consideration of these questions, we shall follow, in the main, the plan outlined by the petitioners in their printed argument, and the conclusions arrived at by the Court will dispose of all questions raised in both cases.
The constitutionality of the statute is attacked upon three general grounds: (1) The origin and method of passage of the Act; (2) its operation and effect; and (3) its vagueness and uncertainty. Under their first general objection, and in amplification of same, the petitioners state the following specific grounds: (a) That the Act, one for the raising of revenue, did not originate in the House of Representatives; (b) that it was not read three times in either House; and (c) that the subject of the Act is not expressed in the title. In amplification of their second general objection, and as specific grounds of same, the petitioners contend, as to retailers of soft drinks, that the provisions of the Act (d) deprive such retailers of their right to carry on their occupation and of their liberty to contract, and (e) impose unequal operation and discrimination against them; that as to theater owners affected by admissions tax, (f) they are deprived of liberty to contract by requirements as to the use of tickets, and that (g) such operators using their own tickets are required by the Act to pay a double tax. Under the third general objection it is contended that the uncertainty and vagueness of the Act is evident from its prohibition of "practices" making inspection "difficult" and from alternative provisions. These enumerated objections are pleaded in detail, and the petitions set out various particulars in which the Act is alleged to be unreasonable, unjust, discriminatory, and in violation of the Constitution.
With respect to Subdivision (c), for the sake of clarity, we may say that the petitioners do not contend that the subject of the Act is not expressed in the title of the enrolled *Page 122 Act; their objection is that the title was changed after the Bill was introduced in the Legislature, and that the title as it appears in the enrolled Act was never passed by either House of the Legislature. The respondents, as constituting the South Carolina Tax Commission, by their answers allege that the statute is a valid and constitutional enactment; that the record shows that the Bill originated in the House of Representatives, was read three times on three separate days in each House, and that the subject of the Act is properly expressed in the title; that the law is now of force and cannot be impeached by the journals of the two Houses, nor by any other extrinsic evidence; that the tax imposed is not a property tax, but a license tax; and that "Sec. 1 of Art. 10 of the Constitution specifically provides 'that the General Assembly may provide for a graduated tax on incomes, and for a graduated license on occupations and business'; that the tax herein imposed is a license tax operating equally on all persons within the respective classes, is a valid and proper enactment of the General Assembly in accordance with both the State and Federal Constitutions, and does not deprive any person of property without due process of law, nor deny to any person the equal protection of the laws." They also allege that the petitioners have an adequate remedy at law, by paying the tax under protest and suing to recover the same.
We approach the consideration of the questions raised by the petitioners with due appreciation of their importance and seriousness. We are also mindful of the fact that it is a grave matter to declare a solemn enactment of the Legislature, a co-ordinate branch of the government, invalid, and that the Court in its deliberation and conclusions should be guided by the well-settled principle that the unconstitutionality of an Act must be shown beyond a reasonable doubt. McKiever et al. v. City of Sumter et al.,
"To justify a Court in pronouncng a legislative Act unconstitutional, or a provision of a State Constitution to be in contravention of the Constitution of the United States, the case must be so clear as to be free from doubt, and the conflict of the statute with the Constitution must be irreconcilable, because it is but a decent respect to the wisdom, the integrity, and the patrotism of the legislative body by which any law is passed to presume in favor of its validity until the contrary is shown beyond reasonable doubt. Therefore, in no doubtful case will the judiciary pronounce a legislative Act to be contrary to the Constitution. To doubt the constitutionality of a law is to resolve the doubt in favor of its validity."
The Act in question is a revenue measure, the title being as follows:
"An Act to amend an Act entitled 'An Act to raise revenue for the support of the State government,' approved twenty-second day April, 1927, so as to repeal the license tax on sporting goods, cut glass, etched glass, art glass, and 22 calibre cartridges and to provide for a license tax on soft drinks, admissions, contractors, ammunition, candy, playing cards, manufactured tobacco products and chain stores and to levy a tax on documents, for the support of the State government."
I. The provisions of the state Constitution, alleged by the petitioners, under their first general ground of objection, to have been violated in the origin and passage of the Act, are the following sections of Article 3:
"15. Bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives, but may be altered, amended or rejected by the Senate; all other Bills may originate by either House, and may be amended, altered or rejected by the other." *Page 124
"17. Every Act or resolution having the force of law shall relate to but one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title."
"18. No Bill or Joint Resolution shall have the force of law until it shall have been read three times and on three several days in each House, has had the great seal of the State affixed to it, and has been signed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives;Provided, That either branch of the General Assembly may provide by rule for a first and third reading of any Bill or Joint Resolution by its title only."
The petitioners point to the journals of the two Houses to substantiate their contention as to the irregularities alleged. The respondents, however, without admitting that the journals show any of the irregularities complained of, contend that they are not competent evidence, and that —
"It is a well-settled rule in this state that the Act itself is the best evidence of its passage, and when it is duly certified by the President of the Senate and Speaker of the House of Representatives, approved by the Governor and filed in the archives of the Secretary of State, it cannot be impeached by the journals or any other evidence outside of the Act itself."
The question whether resort may be had to the journals of the Legislature for the purpose of impeaching an Act regular on its face is one about which the decisions in the various jurisdictions are not in harmony. The conflicting views are well stated in 25 R.C.L., at page 894:
"It is held by one line of cases that a duly authenticated approved, and enrolled statute imports absolute verity, and is conclusive that the Act was passed in every respect as designated by the Constitution; and, by another, that while such authentication, approval, and enrollment are strongprima facie evidence that it was regularly passed, still this presumption may be overcome by resorting to the legislative journals. These rules have sometimes been respectively *Page 125 called the 'enrolled Bill rule' and the 'journal entry rule."'
Prior to 1893, the journal entry rule prevailed in this State. State v. Platt,
"The true rule, in my judgment, is that when an Act has been enrolled, has had the great seal of the State affixed to it, has been signed by the President of the Senate and and Speaker of the House of Representatives and has been approved by the Governor, it imports absolute verity; that its terms can only be finally ascertained by an inspection of the enrolled Act, and that it is not competent to go behind it, and alter its terms either by entries in the journals of the two Houses or any other evidence."
In the case of State ex rel. Hoover v. Chester,
"We announce that the true rule is, that when an Act has been duly signed by the presiding officers of the General Assembly, in open session in the Senate-House, approved by the Governor of the State, and duly deposited in the office of the secretary of State, it is sufficient evidence, nothing to the contrary, appearing upon its face, that it passed the General Assembly, and that it is not competent either by the journals of the two houses, or either of them, or by any other evidence, to impeach such an Act. And this being so, it follows that the Court is not at liberty to inquire into what the journals of the two houses may show as to the successive steps which may have been taken in the passage of the original Bill."
Reasons for the adoption of the rule become apparent upon consideration. Public policy, certainty as to what the law *Page 126
is, convenience, and that respect due by the Courts to the wisdom and integrity of the Legislature, a co-ordinate branch of the government, all require that the enrolled Bill, when fair upon its face, should be accepted without question by the Courts. 26 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 557. Stateof Washington, ex rel. Thomas M. Reed, Jr., v. W.C.Jones, Attorney General,
"It has been declared that the rule against going behind the enrolled Bill is required by the respect due to a coequal and independent department of the government, and it would be an inquisition into the conduct of the members of the Legislature, a very delicate power, the frequent exercise of which must lead to endless confusion in the administration of the law. The rule is also one of convenience, because Courts could not rely on the published Session Laws, but would be required to look beyond these to the journals of the House and Senate and often to any printed Bills or amendments which might be found after the adjournment of the General Assembly. Otherwise, after relying on theprima facie evidence of the enrolled Bills, authenticated as exacted by the Constitution, for years, it might be ascertained from the journals that an Act theretofore enforced had never become a law."
And in Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, supra:
"The reason for this view seems to be that by most Constitutions it is provided that a journal must be kept, but the particular method of keeping it and of its authentication is not generally specified; while, on the other hand, the method of authenticating and filing the enrolled Bill is either so specifically prescribed or so well established that it may be persumed that the framers of the Constitutions intended that the authenticated bill and not the journals should constitute *Page 127 the solemn record, and that the constitutional requirement that journals shall be kept is rather to insure publicity to legislative proceedings than to make the journals the best or the conclusive evidence on the question whether a Bill was in fact passed."
And in the Reed case, supra:
"For a number of years after the passage of an Act it may be given force by the Courts by reason of the primafacie presumption flowing from the finding of the Act regularly enrolled and signed in the office of the Secretary of State. Then after said Act to all intents and purposes has been treated as in force during all of these years, upon the suggestion of some person that there was a fatal omission in the journal entries regarding the passage thereof, the Court must take judicial notice of such fact, if shown by the journal, and from that time on it must be held, not only that such bill was not then a law, but that it never had been such. The confusion as to rights and duties growing out of such a state of uncertainty as to what the statute law of the State is may well appall one who even superficially contemplates the same. * * * If from the enrolled Bill on file it can be conclusively presumed that it has been regularly enacted by the Legislature, none of these evil consequences will follow, and the duty of the Courts will be confined exclusively to ascertaining the effect of such law. It follows that, as a matter of public policy, as well as of convenience and certainty, the Court should adopt the rule which makes such enrolled Bills conclusive evidence of their regular enactment, if it can do so without violating some fundamental constitutional provision or well-settled rule of construction."
The Chester case, supra, is conclusive of the questions raised by the petitioners in the present case under their first general objection. The enrolled bill appears regular upon its face: It was duly signed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, approved by the Governor, and filed in the office of the Secretary of *Page 128 State with the great seal of the State affixed. Having been properly authenticated as required by the Constitution, it becomes the "sole expository of its own contents and the conclusive evidence of its existence and valid enactment," and this Court cannot look to the journals of either house, or to other extrinsic evidence, in order to ascertain its history or its provisions, or to inquire into the manner of its enactment. The Court in the Chester case, in announcing "the true rule," added:
"It will be observed that this conclusion by no means negatives the power of the Court to inquire into those prerequisites fixed by the Constitution, and of which prerequisites the journals of the two houses are required to furnish the evidence. Such, for instance, as the organization of the two houses, the presence of a quorum, the votes of two-thirds of the members by ayes and noes to be entered on the journals in certain cases."
In the present case the alleged conflict between the legislative journals and the authenticated Act consists entirely of matters not expressly required by the Constitution to be entered upon the journals. The Constitution does not specifically require that the journals shall show the contents of a bill or its title, nor the number of times and days that it has been read in either or both houses, nor the house in which it originates. Therefore these are not prerequisites fixed by the Constitution to be entered upon the journals, to be resorted to as evidence in determining the validity of an Act as to its origin and passage.
It is contended, however, that the irregularities complained of as being evidenced by the legislative journals likewise appear upon the face of the enrolled Bill. Counsel for the petitioners in his argument also refers to the "original Bill" and the "original manuscript" as showing the alleged irregularities. It is only necessary to say that we have made a careful examination of the enrolled Bill filed in the office of the Secretary of State, and that we find on its face no evidence *Page 129 of such irregularities. If by the "original Bill" or the "original manuscript" is meant some document or paper other than the enrolled Bill, then, under the rule adopted and of force in this State, the Court may not look to such extrinsic evidence for the purpose of impeaching the enrolled Act.
II. The taxes under consideration are not property taxes, but are license taxes on occupation or business. "The phrase ``license tax' implies a burden on that which is not property, but results from its enjoyment or the conduct of the business or calling, or on a civil right and privilege." 17 R.C.L., 474. The petitioners do not deny that, generally speaking, the State has authority to impose license taxes, if, in their imposition, the constitutional rights of the citizen are not violated or contravened. In 37 C.J., 173, we find:
"Subject to the limitations or restrictions imposed by the Constitution of the United States, or by the State Constitution, and to the limitation that no federal right be interfered with, a State Legislature may, either in the exercise of the police power or for the purposes of revenue, require licenses or impose license taxes on occupations or privileges within the limits of the State, when it deems them to be warranted by considerations of public interest and for the general welfare."
At page 186 of the same volume it is said:
"A statute or ordinance licensing or taxing an occupation or privilege must be reasonable in its terms and conditions; if it imposes a license or tax in such a manner or upon such terms as to be unreasonable, oppressive, or in restraint of trade, it is void."
In this State the imposition of a license tax is permissible under Article 10, Section 1, of the Constitution, which specifically provides: *Page 130
"That the General Assembly may provide for a graduated tax on incomes, and for a graduated license on occupations and business."
The objection of the petitioners is to particular provisions of the Act as depriving them of their property and rights without due process of law and of the equal protection of the laws, in violation of Section 5 of Article 1 of the State Constitution and the
As to retailers of soft drinks, the petitioners say, in the first place, subdivision (d), that the Act so operates in effect as to deprive the retailers of soft drinks of their constitutional right to carry on their occupation and of their liberty to contract. In support of their contention, they point to the provisions of the Act which — (1) Require retailers to mail within five days duplicate invoices to the Tax Commission; (2) require stamping and cancellation of stamps; (3) require keeping records of all purchases and sales; and (4) authorize the Tax Commission to prescribe kinds and forms of containers to be used by retailers.
The Court's attention is especially directed to the provisions of the Act requiring dealers to keep permanent records of all purchases and sales as being unlawful regulation of the business of the petitioners, and also to the requirement that dealers shall use only the kinds and forms of containers to be prescribed by the Tax Commission as a violation of the rights of the petitioners to purchase and use such containers as they wish and as may be adapted to their needs. The right to impose a tax carries with it the right to make reasonable regulations for its collection. 37 Cyc., 1190:
"The sovereign power to lay and assess taxes necessarily implies authority to provide means for enforcing their collection, and it belongs to the Legislature of a State to prescribe the remedies by means of which this shall be accomplished, and from time to time to change the same, in its discretion, there being no such thing as a vested right in *Page 131 the continuance of a mere remedy, subject only to the limitation that the taxpayer shall not be deprived of his property without due process of law, and that, whatever methods of collecting the taxes are ordained, they shall apply uniformly to all persons or property of the same class or kind."
The question before us is: Are the regulations provided for the collection of the tax so unreasonable and oppressive as to deprive the petitioners of their constitutional rights as alleged?
"In the absence of positive evidence to the contrary, however, such Acts or ordinances are presumed to be reasonable, and the Courts will not interfere unless their unreasonableness and oppressiveness is clearly apparent, the burden of proving their unreasonableness or invalidity being on the one who asserts it, usually the licensee." 37 C.J., 186.
The provision of the Act referred to in clause (1), requiring the mailing of duplicate invoices to the Tax Commission, is in the same general class with the provision referred to in clause (3), requiring the keeping of records, and both are of a general character or nature peculiarly appropriate to the collection of license and other excise taxes. Where property is sought to be taxed, it is comparatively an easy matter to locate and list same and assess the tax; but, where a graduated license tax is laid upon a business or occupation, it is of the essence of administration that the tax-collecting body shall have complete and accurate information as to the amount of business done by the taxpayer. We can conceive of no better source from which such information can be obtained than the records of the licensee or taxpayer himself, and if the provisions requiring him to keep such records and make reports are not unreasonable and oppressive — and the reasonableness of such regulations, in the first instance, will be presumed — then such provisions are not in violation of any constitutional right of the taxpayer or licensee and will be sustained. *Page 132
As to the provision of the Act referred to in clause (2), requiring affixing and cancellation of stamps, it is hardly necessary to do more than to say that this method of collecting taxes is in very general use, being particularly familiar through the Federal Revenue Acts, and has proved to be practicable and comparatively simple in operation. Various features of this plan of taxation have been passed upon by the Courts, and we know of no case in which such a provision as the one under consideration has been declared invalid. Nor do we think that, from the standpoint of reason, such method could be held unreasonable or oppressive.
With respect to the provision of the Act referred to in clause (4), authorizing the Tax Commission to prescribe the kinds and forms of containers to be used by dealers, the wisdom of fitting the regulations to the business to which they are intended to apply should be kept in mind. The syrups handled by retailers of soft drinks are bought and kept in bulk, the tax being laid upon them in mass per gallon. To the containers of such syrups stamps are required to be affixed as evidence of payment of the tax. If every dealer should be allowed to choose his own containers, complete lack of uniformity as to kind and size and uncertainty as to gallon contents of containers would unquestionably follow, the determination of the amount of the tax, in the form of stamps to be affixed to the various containers, would be greatly complicated, and the collection of the tax interfered with and made difficult. In addition, the trouble and expense of ascertaining the gallon contents of individual containers used by the various dealers would bear more heavily upon the taxpayer and upon the state; it is conceivable that the hardship to the taxpayer in such case would be greater than that, if any, devolving upon him through the use of containers prescribed by the Tax Commission. The provision under consideration is appropriate to the nature of the business, facilitates and makes simple the collection of the tax, *Page 133 and accords to every dealer of the class named exactly the same treatment.
On the whole, a careful examination of the provisions of the Act here objected to discloses no reasonable ground for complaint. If, in the collection of the tax imposed, loose and inefficient regulations were provided, it is evident that the law, as a tax measure, would be rendered practically ineffective, the doors thrown wide to dishonest practices by those seeking to evade the tax, and an unfair burden imposed upon honest dealers. The provisions here attacked seem to us to make the law effective and to make certain a general and fair enforcement of the collection of the tax. Some burden, of necessity, is imposed upon the taxpayer in the collection of any tax whatever; but we do not think that the provisions under consideration impose any undue or oppressive burden upon dealers in soft drinks, nor that they are unreasonable or unfair, nor that they in any manner contravene any constitutional right, State or Federal, of the petitioners.
As to subdivision (e), the petitioners submit that the Act operates unequally upon and discriminates against the retail dealers in soft drinks in numerous ways, and especially in favor of the bottlers, in that: (1) Discounts of from 5 to 10 per cent. are allowed larger purchasers and bottlers using crowns; (2) retailers are required to pay a straight tax of 76 cents per gallon, while bottlers pay only 1 cent for each 5 cents of retail selling price; (3) retailers are required to affix stamps within 24 hours after syrups are received, while bottlers pay only after syrups are manufactured and ready for sale; (4) retailers are required to affix stamps and mail invoices, but bottlers are not so required; (5) retailers are required to affix stamps either to containers or bottles, while bottlers are allowed to use crowns; and (6) retailers are not allowed to receive the tax stamps on consignment, upon execution of bond, etc., *Page 134 while manufacturers, wholesalers, and jobbers are allowed to do so.
As to clause (1): There is no discrimination whatever; any one who buys stamps or crowns in certain specified amounts is entitled to certain specified discounts.
As to clauses (2), (3), (4), and (5), the contention is that, while there is no proper basis for discrimination as between bottlers and retailers of soft drinks, such discrimination is made by the Act, in that the bottlers, who use the same syrups as the retailers of soft drinks, pay a less or different tax from that paid by the soda fountain operators, who manufacture drinks from their syrups and sell them in glasses; and that the classification attempted to be made is not valid, because unreasonable and arbitrary. In Lillardv. Melton,
"A decided majority of the cases hold that the constitutional provision which imposes equality and uniformity of taxation has no application to an occupation or license tax, but is limited to a direct property tax, which is assessed and collected in the usual way, although the license fee may be regulated by the amount of business done, with a provision for the privilege of paying a maximum fixed amount instead."
See State v. Applegarth,
Regardless of whether constitutional provisions as to equality and uniformity are applicable to license taxes, it is too well settled to admit of argument that occupations and forms of business may be classified for the purpose of such taxation. 1 Cooley on Taxation (4th Ed.), 746. However, such classification must be reasonable, and not arbitrary, and the tax imposed must fall alike on all persons of the same class. The classification may go even further, and subdivisions or subclassifications may be made where a reasonable basis of distinction exists. It has been held that legislative classification for taxation may be founded, not only the nature of the article sold, but upon the manner of conducting the business. In 37 C.J., 201, we find:
"In accordance with the principles heretofore stated, a license or occupation tax is valid, under the various constitutional provisions relating to equality and uniformity, if it applies equally and without discrimination to all persons engaged in the same particular business or avocation, or exercising the same privileges, or if the occupations or privileges and the persons engaged therein are classified for taxation according to reasonable and well-recognized lines of distinction, it does not matter how few the persons are who may be included in a class, so long as all who are or may come into the like situation or circumstances are embraced in the class. Within this latter rule persons engaged in the same business or avocation may be subclassified, for the purpose of exempting or imposing different rates of occupation taxes, as: Wholesaler and retailer; peddlers or itinerant dealers, and merchants having a permanent place of business; or money lenders, excepting banks or similar institutions. So, also, businesses may be classified, and different rates of taxation imposed, according to the different articles sold, and vehicles may be classified according to type, size, use, horse power, etc., such as motor vehicles and horse-drawn *Page 136 vehicles, or vehicles used by owner or his family for private use and those used for commercial purposes."
In 17 R.C.L., at page 518, we find:
"Under the rule that classification of occupations or forms of business may be made wherever the difference or distinction on which it is founded is not wholly without reason, it is an established rule that those who follow a commonly designated business or vocation may, where a basis for reasonable distinction exists, be reclassified or subdivided into new and separate classes. In this connection it has been declared that the legislative classification may be founded on the nature of the articles sold, as well as on the manner of conducting the business. Accordingly, it has been held that discrimination between merchants having fixed places of business in the municipality and also persons ``selling to the trade' on the one hand, and retail dealers who have no regular place of business on the other hand, is not unlawful for the purpose of license taxes. Other examples of the application of the rule involve the subclassification of keepers of restaurants, peddlers, money lenders, commission merchants, farmers, railroads, and owners of vehicles. While a subclassification may be proper, it will be apparent that the taxing power cannot unjustly discriminate between the subdivisions so made."
In 1 Cooley on Taxation (4th Ed.), 748, it is said:
"So persons of the same class may be subdivided according to certain differences, provided the subclassification is reasonable, and the tax graduated accordingly or one or more subclasses may be exempted."
See, also, the following cases: Hill v. Abbeville,
The question, then, here presented, is whether the classification — or subclassification, if it be so considered — made by the Act as to bottlers and retailers of soft drinks is founded upon a reasonable difference or distinction.
In our discussion of the questions raised in subdivision (d), we pointed to the nature of the business of retailers of soft drinks. It was seen that the syrups handled by such retailers are bought and kept in bulk, the tax being laid upon them in mass per gallon. The syrups are required to be kept in certain containers prescribed by the Tax Commission, the tax to be paid upon the contents, and the payment to be evidenced by stamps affixed to the containers. It was concluded that such a method of collecting the tax in such a business, where operators of soda fountains manufacture the syrups into drinks and sell them in glasses, is a reasonable one, and is a regulation peculiarly fitted to the manner of conduct of the business. It is evident that to impose a tax upon each drink manufactured and sold over the counter, leaving it to the dealer to collect the same and pay it to the Tax Commission, would result in great measure in failure to collect the tax, and would operate in favor of the dishonest dealer by rendering easy evasion of payment.
The case of bottlers is clearly different. Their products, manufactured from syrups, are placed in sealed bottles and in this form sold and distributed, the tax being laid upon each bottled drink. Before placing these drinks upon the *Page 138 market, the bottles are required, under the provisions of the Act, to affix to each bottle a license tax stamp, or to place upon it a license tax crown purchased under regulations promulgated by the Tax Commission, the stamp or crown being evidence of the payment of the tax. It is seen at a glance that this method of collecting the tax is properly employed in the case of bottlers, being peculiarly adapted to the manner of conduct of that business, while it would be impracticable and unsuitable in the case of retailers of soft drinks. Hence it is clear that there is such a distinction or difference between the conduct of the business of bottlers and that of retailers of soft drinks as furnishes a reasonable basis for classification, and we think that the classification made is based upon a reasonable ground of difference bearing a natural relation to the business or occupation, and is in no sense arbitrary. It follows that the provisions of the Act under consideration, instead of being discriminatory as against the retailers of soft drinks, as contended by the petitioners, prescribe natural and appropriate regulations for the businesses to which they respectively apply.
With respect to the objection made by clause (6), much that we have said relative to classification applies. The distinction complained of is so obviously based upon reasonable grounds of difference inherent in or naturally connected with the respective occupations as to require no comment.
As to theater owners affected by admissions tax, the contention is made, under subdivision (f), that such owners are deprived of their property and of their liberty to contract by the requirements imposed as to the use of tickets. In support of this contention, the following provisions of the Act are pointed out: (1) The requirement that all exhibitors use tickets, either those furnished by the commission, or others not so furnished, which must be stamped, tickets in all cases being now required; and (2) the requirement that tickets be torn and one-half given to the patron. *Page 139
It is argued that some theater owners may desire to use tickets only at certain times, while others may not wish to use them at all, and that to deny such owners the power to contract, specially or orally, with their patrons, is to deprive them of a constitutional right. The requirement that the admission price be printed on the ticket, and that no ticket be sold at other than the printed price, is objected to upon the ground that theater owners have a right to sell tickets to their patrons at any price they see fit. It is further argued that the requirement for tearing the ticket and giving one-half to the patron is an unauthorized interference with the rights of exhibitors, as an unconstitutional attempt to regulate their business. It is also urged that the patron himself may not wish to have his ticket torn, and that this requirement makes it necessary for the operator to incur additional expense through the employment of a ticket taker to handle the tickets in the manner prescribed by the Act.
Much of what we have said in our discussion of subdivisions (d) and (e) applies in this connection. The question here presented is again whether the regulations prescribed for the collection of the tax are reasonable. We do not think that they can be seriously challenged. The Act requires the Tax Commission to furnish, without cost to theater owners tickets which they may, but are not compelled to, use, as they are allowed to use tickets of their own choosing. Stamps are not required to be affixed to tickets furnished by the Commission, but only to tickets otherwise procured by exhibitors.
We do not regard the requirement that the admission price be printed on the ticket, and that the ticket shall be sold at no other price, or the requirement that the ticket be torn and part of it given to the patron, or the requirement that, when the owner or exhibitor uses tickets other than those furnished by the Tax Commission, which shall be stamped, the stamp shall be torn when the ticket is torn, as being either oppressive or unreasonable. It seems to us that the *Page 140 burdens of the regulations are greatly exaggerated in the minds of the petitioners. We think that the regulations are reasonable and peculiarly fitted to the business to which they are intended to apply, and that they are calculated to protect the State and honest exhibitors against fraudulent evasion of the tax. Unless the exhibitor or theater owner takes the position that he should not be taxed at all, he can hardly object, in the light of reason, to the regulations imposed. The provisions of the Act here complained of are clearly not violation of any constitutional right of the petitioners.
Under subdivision (g), it is contended that the Act requires operators or owners of theaters using tickets other than those furnished by the Tax Commission to pay a double tax, and is, therefore, discriminatory and oppressive. In support of this contention it is pointed out that the Act first requires that such tickets be stamped with stamps "purchased from the South Carolina Tax Commission," and that in a subsequent provision it provides that the license tax shall be "due and payable monthly between the 1st and 10th day of each month," and requires the person liable for the tax to make the Tax Commission, at such time, a true and correct return, "showing the number and prices of admissions during the previous month, and remit the tax therewith." These provisions of the Act, it is contended, require the payment of the tax, first when the stamps are purchased, and again when the return is made between the 1st and 10th of each month.
It is sometimes said that the double taxation held to be invalid is generally confined to property tax; but, regardless of the Legislature's authority to impose a double tax, the presumption is always against its intention to do so, and the Courts will not construe a statute as imposing a double tax, unless such intention is clear from its terms or by necessary implication. In Cooley on Taxation (4th Ed.), at page 485, it is said: *Page 141
"A statute will not be construed as imposing double taxation, if any other reasonable construction can be placed on it. Such a construction is not warranted, unless it is required by the express words of the statute or by necessary implication. Where it is once decided that any kind or class of property is liable to be taxed under one provision of the statute, it has been held to follow, as a legal conclusion, that the Legislature could not have intended that the same property should be subject to another tax, though there may be general words in the law which would seem to imply that it may be taxed a second time. This is a sound and very just rule of construction, and it has been applied in many cases where, at first reading of the law, a double taxation might seem to have been intended."
In 27 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, at page 608, we find:
"The Courts always frown upon double taxation, and even in those jurisdictions where the Legislature is held to have power to impose it, such a construction will be given to the statutes as to avoid double taxes if possible. A purpose to impose double taxes will not be presumed, and to produce such effect the legislative intent must be clear and unmistakable."
In Newport v. Fitzer,
"And even where double taxation may not be violative of the Constitution, the Courts will never presume that double taxation was intended, nor will they so construe a legislative enactment as to enforce double taxation, unless its language is such as to leave no doubt that it was intended."
In Bell v. Watson, 3 Lea (Tenn.), 328, it is stated:
"Whatever power the Legislature may have to levy double taxes, the presumption always is against such an intent. A statute will not be construed so as to impose duplicate taxation, unless the construction is required by its express words or necessary implication. * * * The safe and sound rule of construction of revenue laws is to hold, in the absence *Page 142 of express words plainly disclosing a different intent, that they were not intended to subject the same property to be twice charged for the same tax, nor the same business to be twice taxed for the exercise of the same privilege."
In East Livermore v. Livermore Falls Trust BankingCo.,
"It is elementary that no tax can be imposed without express statutory authority, that such authority is to be construed strictly against the State, and particularly that no double tax burden shall be imposed on any person or property, unless the statutes so clearly require it that no other construction is possible in reason. ``The intent to impose taxation which is double, even from an economic point of view is not to be ascribed to the Legislature, in the absence of clear and unambiguous expression.' * * * ``Tax laws should be so construed as to avoid double taxation, unless a contrary construction is compelled by express provision or necessary implication of the statute.'"
"Double taxation is * * * never to be presumed. Justice requires that the burdens of government, shall as far as is practicable, be laid equally on all, and, if property is taxed once in one way, it would ordinarily be wrong to tax it again in another way, when the burden of both taxes falls on the same person. Sometimes tax laws have that effect; but, if they do, it is because the Legislature has unmistakably so enacted. All presumptions are against such an imposition."Tennessee v. Witworth,
See, also, Georgia Railway Co. v. Wright,
That part of the Act in question which relates to admissions tax imposes at the outset upon all paid admissions to places of amusement within the State a license tax of 1 cent for each 10 cents or fractional part thereof, and no other additional tax is specifically laid. The general scheme for collection of the tax, as we see it, was that tickets should be furnished to exhibitors, without cost, by the Tax Commission, under regulations prescribed as to the manner of their use, a true and correct return to be made by operators to the commission between the 1st and 10th of each month, showing the number and prices of admissions for the previous month, with payment of the tax at such time. With this main plan in mind, the Legislature, however, inserted in the Act a proviso giving to operators the option to use tickets other than those furnished by the tax commission, but in such case the operator was required to affix to each ticket a license tax stamp purchased from the Tax Commission, as evidence of payment of the tax. *Page 144
As that part of the Act relating to the making of returns and payment of the tax between the 1st and 10th of each month follows that part relating to the purchase and affixing of stamps to tickets other than those furnished by the Tax Commission, it might appear, from a reading of these two provisions only, that those operators using tickets other than those furnished by the Commission would be required to pay the tax twice, first by purchase of stamps, and second at the time of making the return. But, reverting to the provision fixing the amount of the tax at 1 cent for each admission of 10 cents or fractional part thereof, we are brought fact to face with this situation: That if the tax is paid twice, the total amount paid will be 2 cents on each admission of 10 cents or fractional part thereof, which latter amount unquestionably has not been levied and would not be authorized under the law. It is highly improbable that the Legislature, in a provision of the Act relating to collection of the tax, would attempt to levy on certain individuals of a named class an additional tax equal in amount to that which it had previously laid in direct and certain terms on all members of the same class, thus subjecting these certain individuals to a duplicate tax. It is much more consonant with reason that, in determining the tax to be collected, the parts of the Act regulating the collection of the tax should be subordinate to that part which in unmistakable terms levies and fixes the amount of the tax. Taking the provision levying the tax, the provisions relative to tickets, and the provision relative to returns and payment of the tax together, and construing them in the light of the main scheme for collecting the tax, and in the light of the presumption against legislative intention to levy double taxation, we are of the opinion, and so hold, that it was not the intention of the Legislature to impose a double tax upon operators using tickets other than those furnished by the Tax Commission, and that no operator who has paid the *Page 145 tax once, in compliance with the provisions of the Act, can be required to pay the same tax again.
III. Under the last general proposition, the petitioners argue that the Act is unconstitutional, because it is vague, indefinite, and uncertain in its terms. In support of this contention, they refer to certain specific provisions of the Act, to which we shall presently advert. In 25 R.C.L., at page 810, we find:
"Where an Act of the Legislature is so vague, indefinite, and uncertain that the Courts are unable to determine, with any reasonable degree of certainty, what the Legislature intended, or is so incomplete, or is so conflicting and inconsistent in its provisions, that it cannot be executed, it will be declared to be inoperative and void. But legislation should not be held invalid on the ground of uncertainty, if susceptible of any reasonable construction that will support and give it effect. An Act will not be declared inoperative and ineffectual on the ground that it furnishes no adequate means to secure the purpose for which it is passed, if men of common sense and reason can devise and provide the means, and all the instrumentalities necessary for its execution are within the reach of those intrusted therewith. The fact, alone, that an Act is open to the criticism that it is vague, uncertain, and indefinite in some of its provisions does not render it void, so long as it does not infringe some constitutional provision and is capable of execution in its more essential provisions."
In 26 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 656. it is said:
"When the language of an Act appears on its face to have a meaning, but it is impossible to give it any precise of intelligible application in the circumstances under which it was intended to operate, it is simply void; for, if no judicial certainty can be settled upon as to its meaning, Courts are not at liberty to supply the deficiency, or make the statute certain. But legislation cannot be nullified on the ground of uncertainty, if susceptible of any reasonable construction that will support it." *Page 146
See Detroit v. Rush,
Certain provisions of Section 14 of the Act, which petitioners point to as being conclusive of their contention, are as follows:
"It shall be provided by regulations of the Tax Commission, the methods of breaking packages, forms and kinds of containers, and methods of affixing stamps, that shall be employed by individuals, firms or corporations subject to the tax imposed by this Act, which will make possible enforcement of payment by inspection; and any individual, firm or corporation subject to this tax, engaging in or permitting such practices as are prohibited by regulations of the Tax Commission, or in any other practice which make it difficult to enforce the provisions of this Act by inspection, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. * * *"
It is suggested that these provisions render the Act invalid for uncertainty, for the reason that it is impossible to tell what "regulations" may be prescribed by the Tax Commission. We do not think this contention can be seriously maintained. In the case of Santee Mills v. Query,
"The State Tax Commission has no power delegated to make any rules or regulations inconsistent with the law enacted or for any other purpose than to carry out the legislative will expressed in statutory form. It is elementary that, while the Legislature may not delegate its power to make laws, it may vest in administrative officers and bodies a large measure of discretionary authority, especially to make rules and regulations relating to the enforcement of the law. 12 C.J., 844-853. Port Royal Min. Co. v. Hagood,
It will be noted that the petitioners are not objecting to any regulations already promulgated by the Tax Commission, *Page 147 but only to regulations that may be prescribed in the future, or, in other words, to the authority here bestowed on the Commission to prescribe such regulations. The Commission may lawfully promulgate only such regulations as are consistent with the terms of the Act and as will carry out the legislative will and intent; the presumption is that the Commission will not attempt to go beyond its authority and that only such regulations will be prescribed. This presumption remains until the contrary is shown.
Some difficulty, however, is presented by the provision that:
"Any individual, firm or corporation subject to this tax, engaging * * * in any other practice which make it difficult to enforce the provisions of this Act by inspection, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor."
The petitioners urge that this provision necessarily renders the Act invalid, as it is impossible to know what "practice" might make it "difficult" to enforce the Act by inspection. The provision is penal in its nature. The general rule, as to the required definiteness of a penal statute, is thus stated by Mr. Justice Brewer in Chicago N.W.R.Co. v. Dey (C.C.), 35 F., 866; 1 L.R.A., 744:
"No penal law can be sustained unless its mandates are so clearly expressed that any ordinary person can determine in advance what he may and what he may not do under it."
It would be highly desirable if every penal statute should contain, in totidem verbis, a detailed description of the Act or Acts penalized; but such ideal condition is hardly possible of attainment, for the reason that it is not practicable to define in every statute all controlling words. To attempt to do so would frequently result in statutes of unwarranted length, and confusion in the administration of the law. We think that the rule should be reasonably applied, in the light of the object sought to be attained and the nature of the subject-matter of the statute. *Page 148
The purpose of the Act is, as indicated, to raise revenue for the support of the State government. The tax imposed is an excise tax, and provision is properly made, as we have already shown, for the promulgation by the Tax Commission of regulations for the enforcement of its payment by inspection. As means of enforcing the authorized regulations, the Act makes it a misdemeanor for any one subject to the tax to engage in or permit practices prohibited by the regulations, or to engage in "any other practice" which will make it "difficult" to enforce the Act by "inspection."
To "inspect" means to investigate, to examine, to look into. "Inspection," as used in the statute, could mean nothing other than investigation or examination, for the purpose of determining whether the statute is being violated or obeyed by those subject to the tax. "Practice" in this connection means action, something done or performed. The question, as we see it, is principally with reference to the application of the word "difficult," which has a well-accepted meaning, to a "practice" affecting "inspection" — whether that word in this connection clearly fixes a standard or measure of the offense created by the statute. Taking into consideration the purpose and subject-matter of the Act, and the other provisions of the paragraph in which the present misdemeanor is created, we think that the offense is measured, by the language used, with sufficient accuracy to enable it to be understood by any person of ordinary intelligence engaged in an occupation or a business to which the provision under consideration is applicable. We may add that the word "difficult," in the present connection, seems to us much more definite and fixed in meaning as a measure of conduct than many pivotal words in penal statutes commonly enforced. We do not think that the Act, or this portion of it, should be declared invalid for uncertainty.
While we have found no case in which the Court has construed the exact language under consideration, there are numerous cases in which somewhat similar provisions have *Page 149 been passed upon and held not to invalidate, for uncertainty, the Acts of which they formed part. It may be enlightening to refer to a few of these cases.
In the case of Richardson v. Simpson,
In Alcorn Cotton Oil Co. v. State,
"A statute imposing a penalty for selling adulterated cotton seed meal without noting the adulteration on the package is not unconstitutional, in failing to inform an accused of the nature and cause of the accusation against him, because it does not fix any standard of adulteration."
In Ex parte Daniels,
In Katzman v. Commonwealth of Kentucky,
"A statute forbidding druggists to sell poisons at retail, except under certain conditions, one of which is that they shall satisfy themselves that they are to be used for legitimate purposes, is not invalid for not defining the meaning of the words ``retail' and ``legitimate purposes.'"
In the case of Sears, Roebuck Co. v. Federal TradeCommission (C.C.A.), 258 F., 307; 6 A.L.R., 358, a *Page 150 statute forbidding "unfair methods of competition" was held to be constitutional. The Court said:
"But the phrase is no more indefinite than ``due process of law.' The general idea of that phrase, as it appears in Constitutions and statutes, is quite well known; but we have never encountered what purported to be an all-embracing schedule, or found a specific definition that would bar the continuing processes of judicial inclusion and exclusion based upon accumulating experience. If the expression, ``unfair methods of competition,' is too uncertain for use, then under the same condemnation would fall the innumerable statutes which predicate rights and prohibitions upon ``unsound mind,' ``undue influence,' ``unfaithfulness,' ``unfair use,' ``unfit for cultivation,' ``unreasonable rate,' ``unjust discrimination,' and the like. This statute is remedial and orders to desist are civil; but even in criminal law convictions are upheld on statutory prohibitions of ``rebates or concessions,' or of ``schemes to defraud,' without any schedule of acts or specific definition of forbidden conduct, thus leaving the Courts free to condemn new and ingenious ways that were unknown when the statutes were enacted Why? Because the general ideas of ``dishonesty' and ``fraud' are so well, widely, and uniformly understood that the general terms, ``rebates or concessions,' and ``schemes to defraud,' are sufficiently accurate measures of conduct."
We shall next notice the contention of the petitioners as to the alternative provisions of the Act. Section 21 provides:
"That if any clause, sentence, paragraph or part of the foregoing sections of this Act relating to the license tax for the privilege of selling soft drinks shall, for any reason, be adjudged by any Court of competent jurisdiction, to be invalid and thereby stay the collection of tax on soft drinks as heretofore provided, then and in such event, the following sections shall apply; otherwise they shall be ineffective." *Page 151
The alternative provisions (Section 22) which follow the foregoing Section (21) correspond to the provisions of the Act of 1927 imposing a soft drink tax. The present Act also provides by Section 36 that:
"Should this Act or any part of the same be declared unconstitutional or void for any reason by any Court of competent jurisdiction, then the appropriate provisions of Act No. 73, approved 22d day of April, 1927, applicable to the same subject-matter, shall be of full force and effect and unrepealed and unaffected by the terms of this Act."
It is argued that by these provisions, especially that one intended to give alternative force to "appropriate" provisions of the 1927 Act (35 St. at Large, p. 121), the present Act is made uncertain, and for that reason is unconstitutional. We think this contention is without merit. In Barringerv. City Council of Florence,
"The Dispensary Act of 1812 [21 St. at Large, p. 62] having been adjudged unconstitutional, except in so far as it prohibits the granting of licenses, its repealing clause failed to repeal prior Acts providing a punishment for unlicensed sales; and hence one selling liquor may be indicted under such prior laws of the State, and may also be punished under an ordinance of the city, where sold, prohibiting such sale."
In 25 R.C.L., at page 913, it is said:
"Where a repeal of a prior law is inserted in an Act in order to secure the unobstructed operation of the Act, and the repealing law is itself held to be void, the provisions for the repealing of the prior law will fall with it, and will not be operative in the repeal of the prior law, unless the language of the repealing clause is such as to leave no doubt as to its intention to repeal a former law, in any event."
See, also, 36 Cyc., p. 1098.
The present Act is declared by its title to be amendatory to the Act of 1927, both Acts relating to the same subject-matter. If the present Act is unconstitutional, then it did *Page 152 not repeal the Act of 1927, in whole or in part. Such result is clearly consistent with the intent of the Legislature, as evidenced by Section 36 of the 1928 Act. If that Act is held to be unconstitutional and invalid, then, and only then, the "appropriate" provisions, if any, of the Act of 1927, applicable to the same subject-matter, including the alternative provisions of the 1927 Act found in Section 22 of the 1928 Act, would be of full force and effect and unrepealed. The scheme of the alternative provisions is clear, the language used is intelligible, and we find no uncertainty or vagueness as complained of.
We have gone fully into all the questions raised by the pleadings. We have also carefully considered the argument of counsel for the petitioners, and, while we admire the laudable zeal with which he has prosecuted the action, we find ourselves unable to agree with his contentions.
The Court appreciates the earnest plea that ever person is entitled to the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property, and to the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Federal and State Constitutions, and will protect and safeguard these fundamental rights to the extent, if necessary, of declaring invalid any legislative enactment clearly shown to be in violation of them. But we have been unable to discover, after most careful consideration, that the Act in question deprives the petitioners of any such rights.
It is, therefore, the judgment of the Court that, in each of the cases, the injunction prayed for be denied and the petition dismissed. And it is so ordered.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WATTS, and MESSRS. JUSTICES BLEASE and CARTER concur.
MR. JUSTICE COTHRAN dissents.
Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Wright , 125 Ga. 589 ( 1906 )
Commonwealth v. Fall Brook Coal Co. , 156 Pa. 488 ( 1893 )
Commonwealth v. Clark , 195 Pa. 634 ( 1900 )
Commonwealth v. Delaware Div. Canal Co. , 123 Pa. 594 ( 1889 )
State ex rel. Reed v. Jones , 23 L.R.A. 340 ( 1893 )
Leser v. Lowenstein , 129 Md. 244 ( 1916 )
Lewiston Water & Power Co. v. County of Asotin , 24 Wash. 371 ( 1901 )
Stull v. De Mattos , 51 L.R.A. 892 ( 1900 )
Fleetwood v. Read , 47 L.R.A. 205 ( 1899 )
Michigan Central Railroad v. Powers , 26 S. Ct. 459 ( 1906 )
Clark v. Titusville , 22 S. Ct. 382 ( 1902 )