Askren v. Continental Oil Co.

252 U.S. 444, 40 S. Ct. 355, 64 L. Ed. 654, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1522
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 19, 1920
Docket521-523
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 252 U.S. 444 (Askren v. Continental Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Askren v. Continental Oil Co., 252 U.S. 444, 40 S. Ct. 355, 64 L. Ed. 654, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1522 (1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Day

delivered the opinion of the court.

.These suits were brought by the three companies, 'appellees, in the District Court of the United States for the *446 District of New Mexico, to enjoin the enforcement of an act of the legislature of the State entitled: “An Act providing for an excise tax upon the sale or use of gasoline and for a .license tax to be paid by distributors and retail dealers therein; providing for collection and application of such taxes; providing for the inspection of gasoline and making it unlawful to sell gasoline below a. certain grade without notifying purchaser thereof; providing penalties for violations of this act and for other purposes.” The law is found in Session Laws of New Mexico, 1919, c. 93, p. 182.

The cause came before three judges upon an application for temporary injunction and a counter-motion to dismiss the- bills of complaint. The temporary injunction was granted, and a direct appeal taken to this court,

The provisions of the act so far as necessary to be considered define a distributor of gasoline as meaning “every person, corporation, firm, co-partnership and association who sells gasoline from'tank cars, receiving tanks or stations, or in'or from tanks, barrels or packages not purchased from a licensed distributor of gasoline in this State. ” A retail dealer is defined as meaning: “A person, other than a distributor of gasoline, who sells gasoline in quantities of fifty gallons or less. ” Every distributor is required to pay an annual license tax of $50.00 for each distributing- station, or place of business, and agency. Every retail dealer is required to pay an annual license tax of $5.00 for every place of business or agency. An excise tax is imposed upon the sale or use of gasoline sold or used in the State after July 1, 1919; such tax .to be 2c per gallon on all gasoline so sold or used. Any distributor, or dealer, who shall fail to make return or statement as required in the act, or shall refuse, neglect or fail to pay the tax upon all sales or use of gasoline, or who shall make any false return or statement, or shall knowingly sell, distribute or use any gasoline without the tax upon the sale or use thereof *447 having been paid as provided in the act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and punished by a fine and forfeiture of his license. It is made unlawful for any person-(except tourists or travelers to the extent, provided in the act) to use any gasoline not purchased from a licensed distributor or retail dealer without paying the tax of 2c per gallon. Inspectors are provided for, for each of the eight Judicial Districts of the State, who are required to sée that the provisions of the act are enforced, and privileged to examine books and accounts of distributors and retail dealers, or warehousemen or others receiving and storing gasoline and of railroad and transportation companies, relating to purchases, receipts, shipments, or sales of gasoline; their salaries are provided, and salaries and- expense bills are to be paid out of the State Road Fund. Any person who shall engage or continue in the business of selling gasoline without a license or after such license has been forfeited, or shall fail to render , any statement, or make any false statement therein, or who shall violate any provision of the act the punishment for which has not been theretofore provided, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be punished by a fine or imprisonment, or both. The State Treasurer is required to. set aside from the license fees and taxes collected under the provisions of the act a sufficient sum to pay the salaries and traveling expenses of the inspectors out of the money received frofn such collections, and to place the balance to the credit of the State Road Fund to be used for the construction, improvement and maintenance of public highways.

It' is evident from the provisions of the act thus stated that it is not an inspection act merely; indeed, the inspectors do not seem to be required to make any inspection, beyond seeing that the provisions of the act are enforced, and the excess of the salaries and fees of the inspectors is to be used in making roads within the State. Considering *448 its provisions and the effect of the act, it is a tax upon the privilege of dealing in gasoline in the State of New Mexico. .

The bills in the three cases are identical except as to the number of distributing stations alleged to belong to the companies respectively. As there was no answer, and the bills were considered upon application for injunction, and motion to dismiss, their allegations must be taken to be true.

Plaintiffs are engaged in the business of buying and selling gasoline and other petroleum products. The bills state that they purchase gasoline in the States of Colorado, California, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas, and ship it into the State of New Mexico, there to be sold and delivered. The bills describe two classes of business — first, that they purchase in the States mentioned, or in some one of said States, gasoline, and ship it in tank cars from the State in which purchased into the State of New Mexico, and there, according to their custom and the ordinary method in the conduct of their business, sell in tank cars the whole of the contents thereof to a single customer, before the package or packages, in which the gasoline was shipped have been broken. In the usual and regular course of their business they' purchase gasoline in one of the States, other than the State of New Mexico, and ship it, so purchased from that State, in barrels and packages containing not less than two 5-gallon cans, into the State of New Mexico, and there, in the usual and ordinary course of their business, without breaking the barrels and packages, containing the cans, it is their custom to sell the gasoline in the original packages and barrels. The gasoline is sold and delivered to the customers in precisely the same form and condition as when received in the State of New Mexico; that this manner of sale makes the plaintiffs distributors of gasoline as the term is defined in the statute, and they are required to pay the sum of $50.00 per annum for each of their stations *449 as an annual license tax for purchasing, shipping and selling gasoline as aforesaid.

A second method of dealing in gasoline is described in the bills: That the gasoline shipped to the plaintiffs from the other States, as aforesaid, is in tank cars, and plaintiff, or plaintiffs, sell such gasoline from such tank cars, barrels and packages in such quantities as the purchaser requires.

As to the gasoline brought into the State in the tank cars, or in the original packages, and so sold, we are unable to discover any difference in plan of importation and sale between the instant case and that before us-in Standard Oil Co. v. Graves, 249 U. S. 389, in which we held that a tax, which was in effect a privilege tax, as is the one under consideration, providing for a levy of fees in excess of the cost of inspection, amounted to a direct burden on interstate commerce.

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Bluebook (online)
252 U.S. 444, 40 S. Ct. 355, 64 L. Ed. 654, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/askren-v-continental-oil-co-scotus-1920.