Freeholders of Essex v. Barber
Freeholders of Essex v. Barber
Opinion of the Court
The borough of Elizabeth had collected the tax, within their bounds, from innkeepers, and paid over to the county collector, for the use of the county of Essex, all moneys arising therefrom, ever since the year 1794, up to the 1st of May, 1814, at which period they concluded that the payment’to the county was wrong, and that the money belonged, in law, to the borough; they have, therefore, retained these taxes in the hands of their clerk, the defendant, for the use of the borough, from the date last mentioned, until they amount, with interest, to $834. For this amount the board of chosen freeholders prosecuted an action to recover it, as money belonging to the county ; and the-question is, to which party it belongs, according to law.
The law for granting licenses to innkeepers, under certain limitations, restrictions, and provisions, is, at least, as old as the Revolution, and must not -be confounded with a much later law in 1797, introductory of a regulation of quite a different kind, for taxing innkeepers, under certain limitations, restrictions, and provisions.
An act of 1784 incorporated the inhabitants of Amboy, (Rev. Laws 61.) and another, of the same date, those of Burlington, (Rev. Laws 74.) giving them power respectively to license innkeepers, under certain limitations and provisions. An act of 1789 incorporated the borough of Elizabethtown, (Rev. Laws 101.) giving them power also to license innkeepers within their bounds.
Seven years after the date of that last charter, viz. in 1797, a general act was passed, (Rev. Laxos 281.) giving power to the Sessions of counties to license innkeepers, under certain regulations, limitations, and provisions. But this general act gave a new power to the county Session to impose-
Having carefully distinguished the power of licensing, from that of taxing inns, we shall have no difficulty about the true moaning of the 30th section of the last mentioned act, on which the dispute lias arisen. It provides that nothing in this act "shall affect the rights, powers, privileges, and immunities given and granted by law to any city or town corporate, relative to the licensing of inns and taverns,” they “ conforming to the directions, and being subject to the limitations, restrictions, and provisions herein contained and given to the Courts of General Quarter Sessions of the Peace in the several counties of the state. What power of towns corporate is not to bo affected ? The statue specifies plainly the power of licensing. It is in the exercise of this power that they are to conform to the directions, and be subject to the limitations, restrictions, and provisions that govern the county Sessions in exercising the power of licensing.
The legislature knew how to give a regulated power of taxing as well as how to give a regulated power of licensing, and if they intended both powers in the 30th section, it is strange that they should have mentioned only one. Instead
My opinion is, therefore, that judgment must be entered for the defendant.
Judgment for defendant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.