Town of Valley Springs v. Flatt
Town of Valley Springs v. Flatt
Opinion of the Court
Appellant was convicted in a justice’s court of Valley Springs, Minnehaha county, of a violation of an ordinance described as Ordinance No. 53, which reads:
“Sec. 1. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons, firm or corporation within the limits of the incorporated town of Valley Springs, South Dakota, to engage in, pursue or transact any business or calling hereinafter named or described, without first having obtained a license therefor and complying with the regulations as hereinafter provided. * * *
“Sec. 4. Transient merchants shall pay a license fee of five dollars ($5.00) per day, twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per week*182 or fifty dollars ($50.00) per month. Any person or persons, firm or corporation who shall bring any stock, of goods, wares or merchandise into the town of Valley Springs and shall engage a temporary place, store or room from which to sell the same, or Avho shall engage in the sale of any stock of goods, wares or merchandise which is not intended to be replenished by purchase of neAv: goods to its normal value, or shall sell any goods, wares or merchandise from a wagon, wagons or other vehicles, or other temporary houses, buildings or places, shall be deemed a transient merchant,” etc.
The ordinance also provides that, upon conviction, a fine not exceeding $100 shall be imposed.
The accused was convicted and fined in justice’s court, and upon appeal and trial in the circuit court, was again convicted, and fined in the sum of $50. The cause was submitted to the trial court upon stipulated facts which, so far as material to this appeal, are as follows:
Appellant maintained and operated a meat market, in the town of Brandon, and carried on his business in Minnehaha county, S. D. He owned the fixtures and stock in trade used by him in said business at Brandon, and paid taxes on all of his said property in Minnehaha county, but pays no taxes in the town of Valley Springs. Certain times each week he.took meat from his shop in the town of Brandon and hauled it, by truck or otherwise, to a building which he had rented in the town of Valley Springs, and there sold said meat from said truck to his customers without having paid the license fee or taken out the license required by the ordinance above quoted. It is appellant’s contention that he is exempt from the provisions of said ordinance No. 5*3, for the reason that he is not a transient merchant or peddler under the laAvs of South Dakota.
“Permanent merchants, traders or dealers being defined to be those who pay taxes upon their goods, wares and merchandise, or other articles of trade ,in the county where the business is carried on, the same as other resident dealers.”
It seems, therefore, to be the legislative intent to make the county the unit in determining whether a merchant, trader, or dealer is or is not a transient merchant, trader, or dealer. By the stipulated facts, defendant is not a transient merchant, but is a permanent'merchant.
Respondent relies upon the decision in City of Dell Rapids v. McShane, 37 S. D. 86, 156 N. W. 789, as an authority in support of its position. In that case the defendant was concededly a transient merchant within the language of both the statute and the ordinance. That case, therefore, is not applicable to the one now before us.
It follows that the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with direction to the trial court to dismiss the action. It will be so ordered.
Reference
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- TOWN OF VALLEY SPRINGS v. FLATT
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