The defendant was arrested in August, 1924, by the chief of police of plaintiff city, charged with violating chapter 13 of the city'Ordinances; a warrant was issued and defendant was brought before the police magistrate where he pleaded not guilty; after trial *3be was found guilty and fined $5. Defendant, in due course, appealed to tbe district court, where tbe facts were stipulated, a jury waived and tbe case submitted to tbe court without a jury for determination on both law and fact.
Tbe facts are substantially as follows: One West, a resident of Casselton, bad employed tbe defendant for general work and labor. Sometime- prior to Lee’s arrest, West wished to move a quantity of brick owned by him from one part of the city to another. West hired a team and wagon from one Schwenke, and directed tbe defendant to use tbe outfit in moving tbe bricks. Defendant received as wages $2.50 per day and apparently was not hired for tbe specific purpose of transporting tbe bricks. His employment appears to have been general and tbe moving of tbe bricks was one of its incidents. None of tbe parties mentioned bad a drayman’s license from tbe city.
Tbe material portions of chapter 13 of tbe ordinances of tbe city of Casselton under which tbe defendant was arrested and fined, are as follows: “Section 115. It shall be unlawful for any person, by agent or otherwise, to have, keep, establish or run any back, omnibus, dray or any other vehicle of any description for the purpose of carrying or transporting passengers, goods, wares or merchandise, or any other material or commodity, from place to place within the limits <j£ Casselton, for pay or compensation, without first obtaining license therefor.” Section 116, prescribes tbe period to be covered by tbe license, tbe amount of graduated fees, and from whom tbe license may be procured. Section 118, provides that each licensee shall procure from tbe city auditor a number corresponding with bis license and such number shall be “fastened to tbe bus or dray operated under said license, so that it may be easily seen.” (Emphasis is ours.) It provides also that any person violating any provisions of this chapter shall be fined not less than $1 and not more than $5 for each offense.
Tbe trial court held against tbe plaintiff and dismissed tbe proceeding and discharged tbe defendant, finding that tbe facts stipulated do not constitute an offense under tbe ordinance.
Tbe plaintiff contends that tbe proceeding is a civil action and is governed by statutes pertaining to appeals in civil cases; that tbe ordinance of the city of Casselton is an occupation tax, sanctioned and permitted-by § 3599, subdivision 31, Comp. Laws 1913. Subdivision *431, supra, reads as follows: “The city council shall háve power to license, tax and regulate hackmen, draymen, omnibus drivers, carters, cabmen, porters, expressmen, watermen, and all others pursuing like occupations, and to prescribe their compensation(The emphasis is ours.)
It is the contention of the defendant, on the other hand: (a) That the proceeding’s before the magistrate and in the district court are criminal in nature and in fact and that the defendant, having been once acquitted in the district court and discharged from custody, has been put in jeopardy and that, therefore, the question is wholly moot, within the decision of this court in State v. Kelsey, 49 N. D. 148, 190 N. W. 817. (b) That there is no provision for an appeal by the city from a final decision of the district court in prosecutions for violations of city ordinances; (c) That the licensing ordinance under which the defendant was prosecuted purports and was intended only to deal with persons who pursue the business of hackmen, draymen, etc., as an occupation for compensation; and (d) that to hold the ordinances applicable to individual or private acts of citizens when not engaged in draying as a business or an occupation, would be to render the ordinance unreasonable and beyond the charter powers of the city. See § 3599, Comp. Laws 1913, supra.
We find it unnecessary to consider more than one of the interesting questions raised by the counsel for the defendant. Assuming that the ordinance is intended to tax the occupation of a drayman, hackman, carter, driver, porter, etc., we think the evidence wholly fails to bring the defendant within the terms of the ordinance. Before an occupation tax can be levied, there must be an occupation on which it can be laid. The stipulated facts clearly disclose that the defendant was in the general employ of West who, in the course of such employment, turned over to him a team and a wagon with instructions to use the outfit in transporting some personal property owned by the employer from one place in the city to another. The team and wagon, it is true, were obtained from another resident of Casselton and compensation made for their use. All the stipulated facts negative the contention of the plaintiff that the defendant was engaged in the occupation of a dray-man within the statute authorizing the city to tax or license such an occupation. We think it is clearly the intent of subdivision 31 that *5tbe occupations therein enumerated are occupations pursued fpr biro or compensation. Ordinarily that subdivision would not be construed as giving authority to the city to impose a vehicle tax in any proper sense, or to declare the ordinary use, by the general public, of the streets a privilege or occupation subject to tax. Cooley, Tax. 4th ed. § 16S0. The statute assumes hire or compensation; and the ordinance itself, especially §§ 115 and 116, supra, clearly contemplates that the work of draying, etc., shall be for hire. Lee was hauling brick as a general employee of West, the latter having furnished him a team and wagon with which to do the hauling. Lee was not engaged in the occupation of a drayman within the purpose or purview of the ordinance.
If the ordinance be not viewed as an occupation tax, but merely as a license regulation of draymen, cabmen, etc., the same result follows: The statute — § 3599, subsection 31 — does not give the city the power to exact a license for the general use of streets and highways from individuals who may drive a wagon thereon, either hauling their own property, or, as servants, hauling their master’s property with outfits furnished by the employer. Nor is such the purpose of the ordinance. Whether the charge imposed is collected in the exercise of the police power, or is an exaction made pursuant to the power to levy a tax, is of no importance in this case. In either event the result is the same.
The judgment is affirmed.
CheistiaNsoN, Ch. J., and Nuessle, Bueiie, and Biudzell, JJ., concur.