Allegheny County Motor Co. v. Pittsburgh

62 A.2d 64, 360 Pa. 407
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 27, 1948
DocketAppeals, 127 and 128
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 64 (Allegheny County Motor Co. v. Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allegheny County Motor Co. v. Pittsburgh, 62 A.2d 64, 360 Pa. 407 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

These are appeals by the defendants from similar decrees entered in two separate suits instituted by the same plaintiffs, in the one instance, against the. City of Pittsburgh and James P. Kirk, City Treasurer, and, in the other, against the Board of .Public Education, of the School District of Pittsburgh and James P. Kirk,, School Treasurer.

The decrees appealed from enjoin the respective defendants from enforcing an identical article of similar tax regulations promulgated by the individual defendant in his official capacities for the proper administration of an ordinance of the City imposing an annual mercantile license tax and a resolution of the School District levying a like tax pursuant to the imposition thereof by an Act of Assembly., The regulations, while separate for the City and the School District, are identical throughout except for a difference in tax rates conformable to the provisions of the taxing ordinance and the levying resolution. The territorial limits of the City and the School District are co-terminous. ‘

The City’s tax ordinance (No. 488 of 1947) was enacted under authority conferred by the Act (No. 481) of June 25, 1947, P. L. 1145. Section 4 of the ordinance imposes upon wholesale and retail vendors or dealers in goods, wares and merchandise a mercantile license tax at specified rates “on each dollar of the volume of the annual gross business transacted by him.” In like manner, Section 4 of the Act (No. 320) of June 20, 1947, P. L. 745, pursuant to'which the School District’s levying resolution was passed, imposes upon wholesale and retail vendors and dealers in goods, wares and merchan *410 dise the same character of tax but at lesser rates “on each dollar of the volume of the annual gross business transacted by him.”

Briefly summarized, the assailed regulation, Article 6 (a), 1 requires a taxable vendor or dealer to include in his return of “the volume of the annual gross business transacted by him” the full selling price of all property sold even though he is paid therefor partly in cash and partly by his receipt of other property, commonly called “trade-in”; and, when such “trade-in” property is sold, the dealer is also required to include the full selling price thereof in the current return of the volume of his “annual gross business”. The plaintiffs, who are dealers in automobiles in Pittsburgh where they sell both new and used cars, point out that compliance with the regulation will require them to include in their gross sales the full selling price of a new automobile even though they accept a used car in trade as part payment and that when they sell the used ear they will be required to include the sale price thereof in their current annual gross sales. This, they contend, unlawfully subjects them to double taxation. They also assert that Article 6 (b) of the Regulations, to which we shall later refer, makes the tax non *411 uniform in violation of Section 1 of Article IX of the Pennsylvania Constitution.

Article 6 (a) is but a detailed practical application of the definition of gross volume of business' as supplied by Article 5(b) 2 which, incidentally, the plaintiffs do not attack. The primary question involved, therefore, is whether the scope of the definition of gross volume of business as defined by Article 5 (b) transcends the intent of the City ordinance (No. 488 of 1947) or the statute (No. 820 of 1947) authorizing the School District’s levy and collection of an annual mercantile license tax, both of which (i. e., the ordinance and the Act) employ “the volume of the annual gross business” of the vendors or dealers as the taxable base. As defined by Article 5(b), “'Gross volume of business’ corresponds generally to 'gross receipts’ or 'gross sales’ depending on the nature of the business . . . [and includes] not only receipts in money but also, in the case of barter and exchange transactions, in which other than money is received as payment or part payment, an amount equal to that which would have been received if full payment had been required in cash.”

The definition of “gross volume of business,” as contained in Article 5(b), is both reasonable and sound. In no way does it transgress the legislative authority for *412 the imposts. And, Article 6 (a) appropriately applies the definition to sales where goods, wares or merchandise are taken in trade by a vendor or dealer. In Puntureri v. Pittsburgh School District, 359 Pa. 596, 599, 60 A. 2d 42, the mercantile license tax authorized by the same Act of June 20, 1947, was under , attack. Mr. Justice Stern, speaking for this Court, there declared substantially in the words of the statute that the tax “is measured by the gross volume of business transacted annually.” Earlier decisions construing the same statutory language, viz., “annual gross business” as used in the former State mercantile license tax Act, show that the term has been deemed to be synonymous with “gross receipts” (see Commonwealth v. McKinley-Gregg Automobile Co., 345 Pa. 544, 548, 549, 28 A. 2d 919) and “gross sales” (see Knisely v. Cotterel, 196 Pa. 614, 617, 46 A. 861, and Commonwealth v. Bailey, Banks & Biddle Company, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 210, 219). It is but logical to conclude, -therefore, that, in determining the annual gross volume of the plaintiffs’ businesses, it is immaterial whether their “gross sales” were paid for in cash or partly in cash and partly by allowances for used cars taken in trade. The gross amount of the sales is to be computed by adding together the sale prices of all automobiles sold within the taxable period, new or used: cf. Philadelphia v. Heinel Motors, Inc., 142 Pa. Superior Ct. 493, 16 A. 2d 761. In that case, the former Philadelphia sales tax upon “gross retail sales” was held to be upon the selling price of all automobiles sold by the taxpayer regardless of whether they were paid for in part by “trade-in” cars.

True enough, there is a characteristic difference between a mercantile license tax and a sales tax. But, the distinction is of no argumentative significance where the tax base used in both instances is the same measure. No doubt it was because of a failure so to recognize that the learned court below-ignored the cogency of the reasoning of the Supreme Court of South Dakota in State ex rel. Sioux Falls Motor Co. v. Welsh, 65 S. D. 68, 270 N. W. *413 852 (1936),—a case which is on all fours with the present so far as the merit of Article 6 (a) is concerned. The title to the South Dakota statute (Laws of 1935, Chapter 205) did indeed denominate the impost a “Retail Occupational Sales Tax”. But, actually, the tax, as Section 34 (a) of the Act discloses, was “upon the gross receipts from all sales of tangible-personal property, consisting of goods, wares, or merchandise” for “the privilege of engaging in business as a retailer”, — -veritably the same as a mercantile license tax, as the latter has frequently been recognized by both “this Court and the Superior Court . . .”: see Blauner’s, Inc., v. Philadelphia, 330 Pa. 342, 346, 198 A. 889, and cases there cited; also Puntureri v.

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62 A.2d 64, 360 Pa. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allegheny-county-motor-co-v-pittsburgh-pa-1948.