Court Opinion

ID: 3650116
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:05:01.675668+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:14:12.987844
License: Public Domain

The controversy is submitted to determine the legality of a tax assessed against the plaintiff under sections 60 and 63, chapter 247, Laws 1903. The plaintiff operates a 40-bushel distillery, and it is admitted he is liable to the tax of $125 assessed against him under section 63. He operates, also, a rectifying plant at the same place and rectifies the product of his own distillery. Section 60 imposes a tax of $200 on rectifiers of liquor. The plaintiff in his brief (501) contends, "that the tax is unconstitutional; that the process of purifying the whiskey is one and the same process in manufacturing whiskey, and that the manufactur's [manufacturer's] license covers the business in which he is engaged," and he also contends "that rectifying or purifying his own whiskey is not a trade or business in itself, such as to be taxable under the Constitution."
We are not conversant with the processes of distilling and manufacturing liquor, but the General Assembly, exercising its knowledge, has classified rectifying as a business entirely distinct from distilling. It has taxed rectifying in the section with wholesalers and has exempted the rectifier from the wholesaler's tax. Therefore, the rectifier may deliver his product under section 60 to the common carrier without additional tax.
The same privilege is given distillers in section 63, but nowhere in that section is the rectifier associated with the distiller. The two seem to have been regarded by the Legislative mind as separate and distinct vocations, although dealing in the same commodity. *Page 361 
The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show that the two are but one and the same trade or business. There are no facts set forth in the record from which we can infer it.
Assuming that the two occupations of distilling and rectifying may be united in one and conducted by one person, there is nothing in our Constitution which prohibits the General Assembly from imposing the increased tax upon the distiller who also operates a rectifying plant. Subject to the organic law, the power of the General Assembly to tax is supreme.
Affirmed.
Cited: Washington v. Lumber Co., 145 N.C. 14.
(502)