City of Mobile v. Kierman
City of Mobile v. Kierman
Opinion of the Court
The reporter will state the facts. The plaintiff has nothing upon which to stand in a court of law. The unofficial action of a majority of the general council of the city of Mobile, by which they promised to vote to grant the petition of the Jones M. Withers Camp asking that the “street fair” be relieved of all city licenses, was of no legal consequence. The legislative authority of the municipality was vested in its council as an organized body, and its will could be expressed only in the manner prescribed by the law of its creation. The members of the general council, acting separately and severally, could do nothing. — McQuil-lan, Mun. Ord. § 91.
The subsequent adoption by the council of a motion that the petitioner be exempted from the payment of a license tax and the money refunded was of no more effect than the previous promise. It was void for lack of authority. “The power to exempt from taxation, like the power to tax, is an incident of sovereignty, and cannot be exercised by a municipal corporation, unless such power has been granted by the state.”—Thomas v. Snead, 99 Va. 613, 39 S. E. 586. Judge Cooley, in his work on Taxation (3d Ed.) p. 344), discussing the question of equality and uniformity in taxation, says: “Pertaining as it does to the sovereign power to tax, the municipalities of a state have not the exempting power, except as they are expressly authorized by the state. And obviously it is not competent to confer a general power to make exemptions, since that would be nothing short of a general power to establish inequality.” He cites a number of cases.
Judgment should have been rendered for the defendant.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
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