Desky v. King
Desky v. King
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an application by the owner and proprietor of the Orpheum Theater in the city of Honolulu for a writ of mandamus to compel the Minister of the Interior to issue to him licenses to give theatrical performances at certain times at the said theater. The Circuit Judge allowed an alternative writ and after a hearing upon that and the return dismissed the petition and discharged the writ. The petitioner now comes here on appeal.
In view of the petition, writ and return and the arguments thereon, there seems to be one question to be decided, namely, whether the provision of the statute prescribing a fee of five dollars for each performance (the refusal to pay which fee is given
The contention on behalf of the petitioner is that the portion of the general license act which relates to public shows (Sections. 90-93, Act 64, Laws of 1896; Sections 779-782, Penal Laws) was intended to'impose merely a license fee as distinguished from a tax, that is, a fee for the purposes of regulation and not for the purposes of revenue, and that therefore the fee must be reasonable in amount as determined by the extent of regulation necessary, and that the fee in question is excessive and therefore unconstitutional.
There is a marked distinction between a license fee proper and a tax upon an occupation. The former is imposed in the exercise of the police power and in general must be limited by the extent to which regulation is reasonably required. The latter is imposed in the exercise of the power to tax and is subject to no such restriction. The question whether a fee has been imposed for purposes of regulation or of revenue has generally arisen under ordinances passed by municipal governments acting under powers delegated by legislative bodies. In such cases a construction of the statute delegating the legislative power has often been necessary in order to ascertain the extent to which the power has been delegated. If a municipality is given power merely to license or to regulate occupation.?, it of course cannot tax them. It can impose fees for the purposes of regulation only and must be limited to such reasonable amounts as the purposes of regulation require in the particular cases. Such fees may cover the cost of the issuance of the license, the expenses of necessary police supervision and inspection and the incidental expenses to which the public may be put by reason of the exercise of the occupation. In some cases any more than a nominal fee might be excessive. In other cases, as in the case of vendors of intoxicating liquors, the fee may be large,— even so large as to be prohibitive of the business, if the business is
Whether the fee in the present case would be excessive if it were imposed for purposes of regulation only is a question that we need not decide, for in our opinion it may be sustained as to its amount by reference to the power to tax whether it may be sustained by a reference to the police power or not. We however call attention to the fact that the business in question is one that is usually regarded as calling for more or less police supervision, generally requiring the attendance of one or more police officers at each performance to control the arrival and departure of vehicles and for other purposes.
This case differs from those chiefly relied on for the petitioner (see, for instance, In re Wan Yin, 22 Fed. Rep. 701; City of Ottumwa v. Zekind, 95 Ia. 622; Chilvers v. People, 11 Mich. 43) in that the statute in this case was passed by the legislature itself which was free to act under either the police power or the tax power or both subject only to constitutional restrictions, while those were cases of ordinances passed by municipal governments acting under limited delegated powers, — with in fact only power to license or regulate and not to tax. It is, however, contended on behalf of the petitioner that the legislature in passing the portion of the statute in question intended to act solely under its police power for purposes of regulation and did not intend to exercise its power to tax. We cannot so hold. This is a portion of a comprehensive act relating to licenses, some portions of which apparently were intended chiefly for purposes of regulation and others just as clearly chiefly for purposes of revenue. We cannot select certain parts and say that in passing them the legisla
It may be that the legislature when it fixed the amount of the fee in question contemplated only occasional performances such as occurred here at that rime and that if it had contemplated daily or almost daily performances such as the petitioner gives, it would have imposed a lighter fee, but that is a matter for the legislature, not for the court.
Two other questions were raised but submitted without argument, and, although under the pleadings and in view of our ruling on the constitutionality of the statute we are not obliged to decide these questions,- we shall refer to them briefly. The first is whether the fee is payable in advance of the issuance of the license. In our opinion the Minister is not obliged to deliver the license until he receives the fee. Ordinarily these acts would be concurrent. The other question is whether the Minister may arbitrarily refuse a license unless the applicant procures from the Marshal an approval of the application. In our opinion he cannot.
The decree appealed from, dismissing the' petition and discharging the writ, is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF CHARLES S. DESKY FOR A WRIT OF MANDAMUS AGAINST JAMES A. KING, Minister of the Interior
- Cited By
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- Published