Anthony v. Kozer

11 F.2d 641, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1020
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJanuary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 8784
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 641 (Anthony v. Kozer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony v. Kozer, 11 F.2d 641, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1020 (D. Or. 1926).

Opinion

WOLYERTON, District Judge.

The plaintiffs herein, of whom there are a number, are owners and operators of motor vehicles within the state of Oregon, and are users of the public highways within the state, including the rural post roads. The defendant is secretary of state of the state of Oregon, and is. authorized and required to receive from dealers in motor vehicles fuel statements of account for the sale of such fuel to users, and to collect from them the license tax provided by law to be paid by them, upon the amount of sales made thereof.

It is charged that the license tax provided for by the state statutes is illegal, unconstitutional, and inoperative, and therefore not enforceable, and that defendant has collected a large amount of such taxes, approximating $6,000,000, illegally and without authority of law; the contention being that the license tax imposed upon dealers by the state law is in legal effect a toll exacted from users for the privilege of operating automobiles upon the rural post roads of the state, which is inhibited by the Rural Post Roads and Highway Acts of Congress.

The prayer is for a disclosure and discovery on the part of the secretary of state respecting the taxes collected by him, and for [642]*642judgment against him for the amount of such taxes so collected, and further for a decree enjoining him from further collection of any and all such taxes. The sufficiency of the complaint is challenged by motion to dismiss.

The laws and regulations of Congress relative to rural post roads are comprised in the Act of Congress of July 11, 1916 (chapter 241, 39 Stat. 355 [Comp. St. §§ 7477a— 7477i]), as amended February 28, 1919 (chapter 69, 40 Stat. 1189, 1200 [Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 7477bb et seq.]), and the federal Highway Act of November 9, 1921 (chapter 119, 42 Stat. 212 [Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, §§ 7477%-7477%y]).

The Rural Post Roads Act authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to co-operate with the states through their respective highway departments in the construction of rural post roads, but it declares that no money appropriated under the act shall be expended within a state until its Legislature shall have assented to the provisions thereof; it being provided that the Secretary of Agriculture and the state highway department shall agree upon the roads to be constructed and the character and method of construction,- and further “that all roads constructed under the provisions of this act shall be free from tolls of all kinds.” Comp. St. § 7477a. This latter provision is, in effect, also incorporated in the Highway Act of November 9, 1921. See section 9 thereof (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 7477%h).

It is sufficient to say that the Legislative Assembly of the state has regularly and legally assented to the requirements of these acts of Congress. By certain acts of the Legislative Assembly of the state of Oregon, namely, as set forth by chapter 159, General Laws of Oregon 1919, chapter 412, General Laws of 1921, and chapter 274, General Laws of 1923, in their ultimate repose (see section 2 as amended by the last statute), it is declared that each and every dealer, being a person, firm, or corporation, who imports or causes to be imported gasoline, distillate, benzine, naphtha, liberty fuel, and such other volatile and inflammable liquids produced or compounded for operating or propelling motor vehicles, for use, distribution or sale in, and after the same reaches, the state, or who produces, refines, or compounds such fuel within the state for use, distribution or sale therein, who is now engaged or may hereafter engage in the sale or distribution as dealers and distributors of motor vehicle fuel, is required to pay a “license tax.” of 2 eents per gallon on all motor vehicle fuel sold or distributed; this license tax to be paid to the secretary of state, .who is required to turn it over to the state treasurer. The treasurer in turn is required to place the same to the credit of the general fund, and at the end of each calendar month to transfer the receipts, except $5,000 reserved for paying designated claims, to the state highway fund. It is further declared that the act and the tax thereby levied shall not be deemed to be construed to apply to any motor vehicle fuel sold or distributed in original packages or. containers exempt from taxation under the Constitution and laws of the United States relating to interstate commerce.

Plaintiffs assail the legality of this/“license tax” on the hypothesis that it is, in effect, a toll exacted by the state of persons who use and are entitled to úse the highways and rural post roads of the state for operation .of their motor vehicles thereon, contrary to the interdiction of the acts of Congress. Defendant’s theory is that the “license tax” is an excise levied upon the dealers for the privilege of engaging in the business of selling and distributing motor fuel to the owners and operators of motor vehicles, and is not, in legal sense, a toll imposed for the use of or privilege of using the rural post roads of the state.

The Supreme Court of the state has heretofore, in the ease of Portland v. Kozer et al., 217 P. 833,108 Or. 375, in a measure passed upon the question involved here. This was a suit by the city of Portland to enjoin Kozer, the secretary of state, from exacting the payment of the license tax from the city of Portland, it being a municipal corporation and an arm of the state sovereignty, and therefore, it was contended, exempt from the payment of such tax, or, in other words, privileged to buy its motor fuel from the dealers without being burdened with the license tax imposed upon them. The court was of the opinion that the statute in question did not provide for levying the tax upon the municipalities of the state, but against the seller or dealer prior to purchase of gasoline by the city, and therefore refused to relieve the city from the payment of such tax. There the city claimed exemption from payment of the tax because a part of the state itself. Here plaintiffs claim that they are not required to pay the tax because it is, in effect, a toll exacted from them for use of the rural post roads of the state. While there is a difference as to the form of legal inquiry, the character of the tax under consideration here was involved and discussed, and the decision of the controversy was made to impend thereon. 1 give here at some length the reasoning of the court touching the subject:

[643]*643“It is no doubt true that tbe amount of tbe tax usually finally falls upon tbe purchaser because tbe seller will naturally fix tbe price to be collected for tbe commodities sold wbieb will include tbe amount of tbe tax: See Clark v. Titusville, 22 S. Ct. 382, 184 U. S. 329, 333, 46 L. Ed. 569. See, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes. It may also be said that what is ultimately gained by tbe purchaser for tbe amount of tbe tax so included in tbe price is tbe use of tbe highways for automotive vehicles propelled by motor vehicle fuels. There are also some of tbe essential elements of tbe tax upon tbe sale, or tbe privilege of tbe sale of motor fuels. Tbe dealer, however, is required to pay tbe tax. * 5 * Tbe tax is not imposed upon tbe purchaser directly. He is not required to do anything by tbe act although tbe result may incidentally cause tbe price of tbe motor vehicle fuels to be enhanced. Pierce Oil Corp. v. Hopkins [C. C. A.] 282 P. 253.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F.2d 641, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-v-kozer-ord-1926.