Boeing Air Transport, Inc. v. Edelman

51 F.2d 130, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467
CourtDistrict Court, D. Wyoming
DecidedJune 27, 1931
DocketNo. 2049
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 130 (Boeing Air Transport, Inc. v. Edelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Wyoming primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boeing Air Transport, Inc. v. Edelman, 51 F.2d 130, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467 (D. Wyo. 1931).

Opinion

KENNEDY, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity in which the plaintiff seeks to restrain the enforcement of a state law in regard to the collection of a gasoline tax upon the gasoline used by the plaintiff in its operation of an air line in interstate commerce in connection with the use of airports at the cities of Cheyenne and Rock Springs in the state of Wyoming. The prayer of the bill seeks an interlocutory injunction and upon final hearing a permanent injunction against the collection of such tax.

The set-up of the case is one which would seem to bring it within the purview of a statutory court of three judges (28 TTSCA § 380), but, as no action was taken by the plaintiff to move for a hearing upon an interlocutory injunction, the case proceeded to final hearing before a single judge without objection on the part of the defendants, and we assume therefore that the court has jurisdiction of the proceeding. Seaboard Air Line Railway v. Railroad Commission, 213 F. 27 (C. C. A. 5).

The substance of t)ie statutory enactment challenged by the plaintiff as being unconstitutional in regard to the interstate business of the plaintiff is found in chapter 14 of the Session Laws of Wyoming 1929; Special Session, reading as follows: “Ota and after April 1, 1929, each and every wholesaler as defined in this Act, who is now engaged or who may hereafter engage in his own name,' or in the name of others, or in the name of his representatives or agents in this State, in the sale or use of gasoline as herein defined shall not later than the fifteenth of each month, render to the State Treasurer a statement of all gasoline sold or used by them in the State of Wyoming during the preceding calendar month, and pay to the State Treasurer at the same time, the license tax of four cents per gallon on all such gasoline. Said statement to the State Treasurer shall be upon blanks furnished by him, and shall be sworn to by the owner or managing agent in the ease of an individual, firm or association, by the resident general agent or attorney, in the ease of a foreign corporation or by one of the principal officers in the ease of a domestic corporation. Every person, firm or corporation, who shall use any gasoline in this state upon which the said tax has not been paid by any wholesaler in this state, shall, on or before the 15th day of each calendar month, beginning with the first calendar month after this Act has become effective, render a true statement to the State Treasurer, duly signed and sworn to, and accompany such statement with the payment of a tax of four cents per gallon on all gasoline as shown by such statement to have been used by him; provided that before making the distribution of funds provided for in Section 1 hereof the State Treasurer shall pay over all funds received from the gasoline license tax on gasoline used at any municipal air field to the city or town where such air field is located, to be used for the maintenance and improvement of such air field.”

Upon the final hearing testimony was adduced by the parties, and the following may [131]*131be considered as a sketchy outline of the f aets in the case:

The plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Washington and engaged in the operation of an air transport line upon regular schedule between Chicago, Illinois, and San Francisco, Cal. In such operation it enjoys a contract with the United States government in the transportation of United States mails, and likewise transports passengers and express •for hire over its entire line. The substantial portion of its business is interstate, in fact the testimony sho.ws that its transportation of mails, passengers, or express within the state of Wyoming is an insignificant percentage of its entire business, so that it would be impractical and impossible to determine or estimate the relative amount of gasoline Which would be consumed in carrying on its intrastate business. In the operation of its air line it makes use of two landing fields owned by the defendant cities of Cheyenne and Rock Springs, respectively, at which points its planes are regularly landed on schedule for the discharge and reception of mail, passengers, and express. At these points its planes are refueled, .examined, and conditioned. Some time after the passage and operation of the law which the plaintiff challenges, it began a segregation of the gasoline used by it by tolling the amount of such gasoline which was used for the operation of its ships, traveling in interstate commerce, as distinguished from the gasoline which was used 'in the testing of airships at the field, conditioning its motors, and sales made to other airplane users. As to the first-mentioned gasoline, the tax of 4 cents per gallon was paid to the state treasurer under protest in consideration of the high penalties fixed for a violation of the statute, but as to the latter classification of gasoline the said tax was paid thereon to the state treasurer without protest. During the period covering substantially eight months, from the I5th of March, 1930, to the 15th of November, 1930, the plaintiff paid to the state treasurer, in the amount of this protested tax, the sum of $5>-529.28, representing the tax upon gasoline used in interstate commerce at the Cheyenne field, and during the same period it paid to the state treasurer $2,726.32 as representing the tax upon 'gasoline used in interstate commerce at the Rock Springs field. Testimony was likewise offered as to the continuing payments of said protested and unprotested amounts after the filing of the bill and substantially up to the final hearing. The amount testified to as having been paid of the unprotested tax is considerably that Paid « the protested tax at í30^ aborts. The city of Cheyenne entered lnto a eontraf with the plamtiff company f^mie ln the year of 1929 which provided f°r o£ the mumeipalair field by the pbuntiff m the operation of its transconti?ental air lme' The Provisions of such contract f™ numerous, and not all of them are material to the matter here being considered Among other provisions of the contract, it m3,Y be said £ba£ £be plamtiff and the city were to share the expense of grading additmnal land and building a new outlining ^tmg 3ystem at a cost of $7,000. The city a°rees to acquire additional land for the air-P01't f°r which it should pay the expense, and that {t should keeP *he field during the term of the lease (designated as twenty-five years) a3 a well-maintained and well-regulated air-PIane landlnS ñeId for the reasonable use of any and ad Planes and airships operated by the plaintiff. In addition, the plaintiff agrees to Pay the city an annual rental of $1,050 for hanSar sPace and taxiways, and $3,000 for rental of several hangars located on the field and owned by the city. The city agrees to Pay the plaintiff $2,400 a year for the genera^ supervision of the field, under the general direction of the city. Similar contract relaturns exist between the plaintiff and the city °f ftock Springs, but of less magnitude owing to the smaller business of the company at that P°mt, but involving a rental there paid by the plaintiff of $609 per year. At both ports the plaintiff has the privilege of selling gasoIme to the public for airplane purposes. As to the city of Cheyenne, the money received £rom the state treasurer representing this tax on gasoline used at the airport is placed in an alrPort £and and used exclusively for the Purpose of improving and maintaining the airfield- DurmS the _ year last past not all o£ the money so received and maintained in thls separate fund had been expended, but all o£ which had been expended was expended in connection with the airport.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 130, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boeing-air-transport-inc-v-edelman-wyd-1931.