American Book Co. v. Shelton

117 Tenn. 745
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 117 Tenn. 745 (American Book Co. v. Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Book Co. v. Shelton, 117 Tenn. 745 (Tenn. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant filed this bill to recover the sum . of |82.21, State and county taxes, which it paid to the clerk [747]*747of the county court of Davidson county under protest.

The theory of the bill is that the taxes were illegally assessed and complainant was not liable as matter of lav? for their payment. The chancellor decreed in favor of complainant. Defendant appealed, and has assigned errors. The case is before this court on a stipulation of agreed facts.

The American Book Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of New Jersey, with power to manufacture and deal in books of all kinds. In 1899 it made and entered into a contract with the State of Tennessee under chapter 205, p.. 428, of the Acts of 1899, for the supply of certain schoolbooks, pursuant to the terms of that act, to the school children of the State. This contract expired in September, 1904, and thereupon the book company entered into another contract with the State of Tennessee by which the provisions of the former contract were renewed and enlarged for another term of five years beginning September 1, ÍL904, and being'now in force.

It is then stipulated as follows:

“(1) Pursuant thereto and in accordance therewith, the American Book Company established a depository in the State of Tennessee at Nashville, in Davidson county, in that State. It made the Marshall & Bruce Company its depository, as above stated, and by written contract with said company, entered into on the 15th day of August, 1904, it agreed not to supply said books to any other dealer in any of certain counties in Middle [748]*748Tennessee which were enumerated. It further obligated itself to ship to said Marshall & Bruce, during the first year of said State contract, supplies of said books sufficient to' meet such demands therefor in said counties as shall be reported to it by said Marshall & Bruce upon a consignment account upon the following terms and conditions as to prices and payments, which were then spec- ’ ified.
“(2) The said Marshall & Bruce, in consideration thereof, agreed, first, to establish and maintain in each of said counties not less than one nor more than four agencies, as may be required from time to time by the schoolbook commission under said act for the sale and distribution of said books, and to see to it that said Marshall & Bruce and all such agencies complied with all the provisions of said act and of said State contract, etc.
“(3) To order from said American Book Company and keep in the depositories at Nashville and in said agencies a stock of said books sufficient to supply all demands, and to sell said books to the pupils and patrons of the public schools at the retail prices printed thereon and no other, and at the exchange price herein stated to those pupils who give in exchange corresponding old books of same kind and grade as in actual use in the schools during the exchange period established by said act and said contract and this contract, but no exchange shall be made after the expiration of said exchange.
“(4) To sell only new and no second-hand copies of [749]*749said text-books, and only for tbe purpose of said Tennessee contract, and not to sell any of them to any persons outside of said counties, or of said State, or to any one wbo, it has reason to believe, buys to so sell.
“Tt was further agreed between the parties, first, that all books placed with the said party of the second part at any time during this contract, or under its terms, Shall at all times be on consignment, the title thereto shall remain in said first party, and that said books, until sold under the provisions hereof, shall be subject to the order of the American Book Company.
“(5) Upon the execution of said contract, and after the said contract with the State went into effect, the book company began to and did deliver and supply the Marshall & Bruce Company with the said books in said contract mentioned and from time to time needed, and during this time has kept a greater or less number of the books on hand with the said Marshall & Bruce Company as its depository. It has not, during any of said years, kept with them, or at any other depository, or at any other branch place of business in the State of Tennessee, any other books than those called for by its contract with the State of Tennessee, nor has it kept them at any other place than with its depository. Neither has the book company placed with or delivered to or kept at the Marshall & Bruce Company any other books than books of the character above mentioned.
“(6) The Marshall & Bruce Company upon its part has designated certain agencies in the counties named [750]*750in tbe contract with them for the distribution of said books, said agents or agencies in all cases being merchants at such places doing business for themselves as merchants where located, excepting that its business for the counties of Smith, Putnam, Cumberland, Fentress, Overton, Clay, and White, is handled by an agent through a subdepository at Cookville, which agent or subdeposi-tory is not a merchant and does not pay taxes or license.”

The theory of the revenue agent is that the American Book Company is doing business in the State of Tennessee as a merchant, within the definition of that term found in section 27, c. 174, p. 329, Acts of 1901, and chapter 258, p. 655, Acts of 1903, as follows:

“Section 27. That merchants shall pay an ad valorem tax upon the capital invested in their business equal to that levied on taxable property. The term ‘merchant’ as used in this act, includes all persons, common partnerships, or corporations engaged in trading or dealing in any kind of goods, wares and merchandise, either on land or in steamboats, wharf boats or other craft stationed or plying in the waters of this State and confectioners, whether such goods, wares or merchandise be kept on hand for sale, or the same be purchased and delivered for profit as ordered.”

Counsel also relies on the case of American Steel & Wire Co. v. Speed, 110 Tenn., 524, 75 S. W., 1037, 100 Am. St. Rep., 814, wherein this court, in applying this statutory definition of a merchant, held that “a manufac-[751]*751taring corporation of another State, selling and distributing its manufactured products from warehouses here through its agent, is a merchant, and taxable as such under our statute.”

A yerj able argument has been submitted on behalf of the American Book Company to show that the said company is not doing business as a merchant in the State of Tennessee; and, while conceding that the legislature might tax its business, it is earnestly insisted there is no authority in our statute law for the assessment and collection of such a tax.

It is said that the American Book Company is not doing business in Tennessee in any way whatever, unless the keeping of books at its depositories in accordance with the requirements of the schoolbook law is doing-business in Tennessee within the meaning of the revenue laws of the State. Liability for these taxes is denied on two grounds:

First.

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Bluebook (online)
117 Tenn. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-book-co-v-shelton-tenn-1906.