Edmonds v. Carpenter
Edmonds v. Carpenter
Opinion of the Court
The only question in this case was, whether, under the act of Assembly entitled “An act laying taxes for the support of government,” passed the 23d of January, 1799,
Wickham, for the plaintiff in error, contended that the tax under this' law was merely personal, nothing having been said, in the enacting clause, about a store. The words of the act are “upon an3r person’s producing to the commissioner of the revenue” a receipt for so much money he should grant a license in the manner therein prescribed to sell goods, &c. Nothing could create any doubt but the proviso to that clause, which declares that “not above one tax shall be paid on account of so selling at one and the same store. ” But he contended that a proviso never could have the effect of enlarging a general enacting clause. Where the general words of a law are plain, we never have recourse to the proviso.
The Attorney-General, for the defendant in error, contended that this was clearly a tax upon each store, and not a personal tax. The license was for permission to vend certain commodities; and the proviso being a part of the act must be taken into the construction of it, and is explanatory of the intention of the Eegislature that a tax was to be paid for each store.
If we look into the subsequent revenue laws,
Tuesday, June 23. By the whole Court, the judgment of the District Court was reversed. _
Rev. Code, c. 243, s. 2, p. 386. See also Sessions Acts of 1797, c. 1, s. 4.
This act was afterwards amended, and a separate tax directed to be paid for each store. See Rev. Code, 1, v. p. 396, c. 255. s. 2, and the subsequent revenue laws annually passed. — Note In Original Edition.
See Rev. Code, c. 255, s. 2, p. 396, and every annual revenue law since passed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.