Texas Co. v. Carmichael

ERVIN, District Judge.

This is a bill seeking to enjoin the state of Alabama from levying an excise tax on such gasoline as the complainant sells to United States government, in which it is contended that such tax would be unconstitutional if so levied.

Hearing wa’s had on an agreement that the matter would be submitted both for a preliminary and final injunction. The submission was on an agreed statement of facts.

In this case it is contended that the Alabama statute levying an excise tax on gasoline is unconstitutional in so far as it undertakes to tax a sale of gasoline to the government.

In section 1 of the act of 1927 (Gen. Acts, p. 326), amending the act of 1923 (Gen.Acts, p. 36), we find a tax levied in the following words: “To impose an excise tax on persons, corporations, copartnerships, companies, agencies or associations engaged in the business of selling, distributing, storing or withdrawing from storage for any purpose whatsoever gasoline or other liquid motor fuels or devices or substitutes therefor in this State; and providing for the collection and payment of such tax and distribution of the funds derived therefrom, and providing for its enforcement and fixing a penalty for the violation of any of the provisions hereof.”

It will be noticed that the tax is levied on persons “engaged in the business of selling, distributing, storing or withdrawing from storage for any purpose whatsoever.”

It will be observed then that the statute classifies three different operations as separate businesses, namely: First, selling ; secondly, distributing; and, thirdly, storing or withdrawing from storage the gasoline. Other portions of the act define these various businesses.

“The term ‘Distributor’ shall include any person who shall engage in the selling of gasoline as herein defined in this State by wholesale in domestic trade, but shall not apply to any transaction by such distributor in interstate commerce. The term ‘retail dealer’ shall include any person herein defined as ‘distributor’ who is also engaged in the sale of gasoline as herein defined, at any place in this State, in broken quantities. The term ‘storer’" as herein used shall include any person who ships gasoline into this State, in tank quantities and stores the same and withdraws or uses the same for any purpose.” Section 2.

Section 3 of the act provides: “Every distributor, retail dealer or storer of gasoline as herein defined shall pay an excise tax of two cents per gallon upon the selling, distributing or withdrawing from storage for any use gasoline as herein defined in this State.”

Here the tax is to be paid, not on the storage, but on the sale, distribution, or withdrawal from storage.

It further provides: “The excise tax imposed by subdivision (a) of this section shall apply to persons, firms, corporations, dealers or distributors storing gasoline and distributing the same or allowing the same to be withdrawn from storage, whether such withdrawals be for sales or other use —provided, that ‘sellers’ of gasoline and its substitutes paying the tax herein provided may pay the same computed and paid on the basis of their sales as hereinafter *244required and storers and distributors shall compute and pay this tax on the basis of their withdrawals or distributions.” (All italics mine.)

It is 'observed: “That ‘sellers’ of gasoline and its substitutes paying the tax herein provided may pay the same computed and paid on the basis of their sales as hereinafter required and storers and distributors shall compute and pay this tax on the basis of their withdrawals or distributions.”

Certainly sales are computed as such, while users are to be computed on the basis of withdrawals or distributions. How can it be contended then that sales are to be computed and paid as on storage ? If sales are to be computed and paid on the basis of their sales, how can it be contended that such Sales are to be computed on the storage of gasoline?

The act provides for monthly reports showing the amount of gasoline sold or withdrawn. Reports shall be sworn to. The act also imposes a penalty of 25 per cent, for failure to make this report.

There were several other acts passed imposing additional taxes aggregating 6 cents per gallon, but they contain the same verbiage, so the construction of one applies to all.

These definitions are the same in the act approved January 31, 1935, and also in the act of July 10, 1935, where the definition of a storer is in the following words: “The term ‘storer’ as herein used shall include any person who ships or causes to be shipped or receives, gasoline into this State in any quantities, and stores the same in any amount and withdraws or uses the same for any purpose.”

It is contended by defendants that the tax is on the storage of gasoline measured by the number of gallons withdrawn from storage regardless of the purpose for which such withdrawals were made.

The Constitution (art. 1, § 8, cl. 3), in effect, forbids .the use of either sales or withdrawals of gasoline as a measure for state taxation, when made either in interstate transactions or in direct sales to the government. Panhandle Oil Co. v. State of Mississippi ex rel. Knox, 277 U.S. 218, 48 S.Ct. 451, 72 L.Ed. 857, 56 A.L.R. 583.

In the first place, we see the tax is levied on persons engaged in these separate businesses dealing in gasoline, and not anywhere on the gasoline dealt in.

First, -are those- engaged in the business of selling gasoline, such as retail dealers who store the gasoline in tanks and withdraw it from tanks and deliver it into autos and such vehicles as may buy it, in other words, filling stations.

Second, the distributors or wholesalers.

Third, storers, persons who ship gasoline into the state in tank quantities and withdraw or use it for any purpose.

In each instance the tax is “measured by” the number of gallons sold, distributed, or withdrawn. It nowhere- imposes a tax on storage alone.

It is manifest that no double taxation is imposed. It is also manifest that one person may be engaged in one or all these businesses, but without increasing the tax he is required to pay. If he sells the gasoline, he pays so much a gallon for' such as he sells, but does not have to pay an additional tax for the distribution or withdrawal of such as he has sold.

Recognizing that all dealers in gasoline must first store it, section 156.2 of the act of 1935 says: “The excise tax imposed by section 156.1 hereof shall apply to person's defined in this chapter, storing gasoline and distributing the same or allowing the same to be withdrawn from storage whether such withdrawals be for sale or other uses."

It is manifest that retail dealers or filling station operators must first store the gasoline in their tanks before they can retail it. The act manifestly contemplates that the retail dealers and distributors will be engaged in selling gasoline while the storer does not sell it but uses it himself in some way, so that he is taxed not on the sale, but on the use of the gasoline he withdraws from storage. This tax must have been imposed to cover those who brought gasoline into the state in large quantities and stored and withdrew it as needed for use to save paying the tax.

These people do not sell gasoline, but use it in their own vehicles or engines.

This is what the Alabama Supreme Court had before it in the case of State v. City of Montgomery, 228 Ala. 93, 151 So. 856, 857, where it is said: “A tax upon the separate acts of the owner in taking his property out of storage for his own use. * * * The acts in question impose a tax upon a storer as well as a distributor or retail dealer”

*245So a storer is one who stores for his own use and not for the purpose of sale, and the tax is levied only where he withdraws the gasoline for his own use.

The act expressly recognizes the fact that both dealers as well as users may store gasoline and withdraw it from storage where it says: “Every distributor, retail dealer or storer of gasoline as herein defined shall pay an excise tax of two cents per gallon upon the selling, distributing or withdrawing from storage for any use gasoline as herein defined in this State.” Section 3.

This seems to me to recognize the proposition that the tax is imposed not on the storage, but on the use for which it is withdrawn.

In Edelman v. Boeing Air Transport, 289 U.S. 249, 252, 53 S.Ct. 591, 592, 77 L. Ed. 1155, it is said: “It is at the time of withdrawal alone that ‘use’ is measured for the purposes of the tax. * * * A state may validly tax the ‘use’ to which gasoline is put in withdrawing it from storage within the state, and placing it in the tanks of the planes, not withstanding that its ultimate function is to generate motive power for carrying on interstate commerce.”

The act and the practice of the state has been where gasoline was withdrawn from one place of storage and placed in another no tax was imposed, yet here was a withdrawal from storage, but the purpose was not to use it or sell it, so again it was the use for which the withdrawal was made that determined whether the tax was imposed.

Suppose a man builds a large tank and stores gasoline for others at a price, he never sells or uses it, they withdraw it and place it in their filling stations for sale. He is in the business of storing gasoline, but he would pay no tax.

Or, if one figured the price would go up and he bought and stored gasoline in large quantities during a period of more than a year, he would pay no tax for that year. So we see the tax is not levied on the storage, but on the use for which it is withdrawn.

Again section 3 (a) says: “Every distributor, retail dealer or storer of gasoline as herein defined shall pay an excise tax of two cents a gallon upon the selling, distributing or withdrawing from storage for any use gasoline as herein defined in this State, provided however that this excise tax shall not be levied upon the sale of gasoline in interstate commerce.”

Why not add “or to the United States,” for the one is as much protected by the Federal Constitution as the other.

Now if the withdrawal from storage of gasoline on a sale in interstate commerce is not to be taxed, why should not a sale to the United States government also be exempt?

In the instant case, we are not concerned with the withdrawal for use, but with the sale by one who is cither a retail dealer or a distributor, or both, to the federal government, which seems to me to bring the facts in line with the case of Panhandle Oil Co. v. State of Mississippi ex rel. Knox, 277 U.S. 218, 48 S.Ct. 451, 452, 72 L.Ed. 857, 56 A.L.R. 583, where the court says: “The states may not burden or interfere with the exertion of national power or make it a source of revenue or take the funds raised or tax the means used for the performance of federal functions. * * * While Mississippi may impose charges upon petitioner for the privilege of carrying on trade that is subject to the power of the State, it may not lay any tax upon transactions by which the United States secures the things desired for its governmental purposes. The validity of the taxes claimed is to be determined by the practical effect of enforcement in respect of sales to the government. * * * Sale and purchase constitute a transaction by which the tax is measured and on which the burden rests. * * * To use the number of gallons sold the United States as a measure of the privilege tax is in substance and legal effect to tax the sale. * * * And that is to tax the United States — to exact tribute on its transactions and apply the same to 'the support of the State.”

The Panhandle Case quotes the Mississippi act (Laws 1922, c. 116), which imposes a tax of one cent a gallon upon its sales, on persons engaged in the business of distributing gasoline or a retail dealer in gasoline. It excepts that sold in interstate commerce or purchased outside the state and brought in by the consumer for his own use.

The Alabama act also excepts sales in interstate commerce, but undertakes to tax the other exception, viz., the use of the gasoline in this state by the purchaser. *246That is the only difference between the two acts, they both tax the sale, but the Alabama act also taxes the use of the gasoline.

If a sale by a dealer is reported as such and the tax so paid, it cannot be again imposed as on a withdrawal of the same gasoline.

The case of State v. Montgomery, supra; Nashville, C. & St. L. R. Co. v. Wallace, 288 U.S. 249, 53 S.Ct. 345, 77 L.Ed. 730, 87 A.L.R. 1191, and Edelman v. Boeing Air Transport, 288 U.S. 249, 53 S.Ct. 591, 77 L.Ed. 1155, involved only the withdrawal for use and not sales to the government, and what was said would be applicable only to that feature of the act. No right is claimed in the instant suit as to gasoline used by complainant.

It is urged that State v. Montgomery is a construction of the act and is binding on this court, but it did not involve the question here presented.

Even if it did, it would not bind this court on the federal question as to whether a sale by a dealer to the government was exempt from state taxation.

In the Panhandle Case, the Mississippi act levied a tax on the business of selling or distributing gasoline, and the court held it invalid as to sales to the government as the effect was to raise the price the government would have to pay for the gasoline.

Here the tax is levied on persons engaged in the business of selling and distributing gasoline. Certainly the effect of this act will be to raise the price the government will have to pay for gasoline in Alabama.

“To use the number of gallons sold the United States as a measure of the privilege tax is in substance and legal effect to tax the sale. * * * And that is to tax the United States — to exact tribute on its transactions and apply the same to the support of the State.” Panhandle Oil Co. v. State of Mississippi ex rel. Knox, supra.

I see no difference between the two cases.

Even treating it as a tax on the withdrawal for the purpose of a sale to the government, it would' make no difference as the effect would be the same, viz., to increase the price to the government. : On the argument, it was admitted that if the tax was levied on the sale to the government, it would be invalid. •

Then why would it not be invalid if the tax is levied on the withdrawal on a sale to the government, as the effect would be the same?

The court will look beyond the mere phraseology to get the substance and effect, and so judge the transaction.

It is said, however, that the plaintiff should wait until sued and then raise the question as a defense, but the act imposes heavy penalties to be determined by the taxing authorities and they have made demand for the disputed tax, interest, and penalties, and under the rule laid down in Pennsylvania v. West Virginia, 262 U.S. 553, 592, 43 S.Ct. 658, 663, 67 L.Ed. 1117, 32 A.L.R. 300: “One does not have to await the consummation of threatened injury to obtain preventative relief. If the injury is certainly impending, that is enough.”

I feel constrained to hold that so far as the act undertakes to tax a sale to the government, it is violative of the Federal Constitution and should be enjoined. The act contemplated sales to be made after its passage.