Calvert v. Canteen Co.

365 S.W.2d 662, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1643
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1963
DocketNo. 11050
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 365 S.W.2d 662 (Calvert v. Canteen Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calvert v. Canteen Co., 365 S.W.2d 662, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1643 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

PHILLIPS, Justice.

This suit was brought in the District Court of Travis County, Texas, by the Neelley Vending Company, Canteen Co., B & M Vending Company and Tom E. Conner-Business Investments for themselves and for all others similarly situated as a class, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, against Robert S. Calvert, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas, Jesse James, State Treasurer of the State of Texas and Will Wilson, Attorney General of Texas, hereinafter referred to as defendants. This suit is brought as a class action.

The following is taken from the stipulations agreed upon between the parties.

Each of the plaintiffs has qualified under the provisions of Chapter 24, Acts of the 57th Legislature, First Called Session, 1961, commonly known as the Limited Sales, Excise and Use Tax Act, Chapter 20, Title 122-A, Taxation-General, Revised Civil Statutes, 1925, V.A.T.S.Tax.-Gen. art. 20.-01 et seq,, and has received from the defendant Comptroller sales tax permits as authorized and required by the Act.

Each of the plaintiffs is in the business of making retail sales of tangible personal property from mechanical vending machines, and since the effective date of said Act, each of the plaintiffs has made retail sales of tangible personal property within this State from such mechanical vending machines. The property being so sold is candy, chewing gum, coffee, soda water or soft drinks, and other such items, with the sales price of each such separate item being twenty-four cents or less to the purchaser or consumer. For instance, the plaintiff Tom E. Conner-Business Investments makes sales from mechanical vending machines limited to chewing gum with a sales price of one cent each to the purchaser or consumer, and each of the other plaintiffs make sales of such property from such machines with prices ranging from the one cent chewing gum item to other items costing twenty-four cents or less each.

Since the effective date of the Act, the plaintiffs have within the time required by said Act, and as required by the defendant Comptroller, filed with the defendant Comptroller a report on the form prescribed enumerating all retail sales of such tangible personal property made by the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs have paid the Comptroller a tax required by the Comptroller of two percent of all receipts by plaintiffs from the total sales of such tangible personal property from the mechanical vending machines.

At the time of making such payments to the defendant Comptroller, each of the plaintiffs made such payments under protest in writing, fully setting out in detail each and every ground or reason why the plaintiffs contend-that the Comptroller’s demand that they pay such tax is unlawful and [664]*664unauthorized by said Act. Subsequently, each of said plaintiffs filed with the Comptroller detailed written requests or claims that the money be refunded to the plaintiffs, or that said sums be applied and credited to future tax payment under said Act, which written requests or claims were filed in accordance with Article 20.10 of said Act. Thereafter, a public hearing was held before the Comptroller at which each of the plaintiffs was represented and evidence and argument presented to the Comptroller. Thereafter, the defendant Comptroller on April 24, 1962, issued an order to each of the plaintiffs giving notice of disallowance of such requests or claims for refunds of such sums paid under protest.

The defendant Comptroller requires each of the plaintiffs to pay a two per cent tax of the total gross receipts such plaintiffs have from such sales of such tangible personal property from the mechanical vending machines, even though the sales price to the consumers or purchasers of each such item of tangible personal property is twenty-four cents or less, and even though the plaintiffs are prohibited by said Act from collecting from the consumer or purchaser of such tangible personal property the two per cent sales tax on each of such sales of twenty-four cents or less, and cannot therefore collect said tax from the consumer.

The Trial Court held that the requirement of the Comptroller that the plaintiffs pay a two per cent tax on the total gross receipts of plaintiffs from their respective total sales of such tangible personal property to the consumers for one cent to twenty-four cents for each such separate sale, is not authorized by and is contrary to the provisions of the said Limited Sales, Excise and Use Tax Act. The Court found that both plaintiffs and defendants acknowledged to the Court that the Act levied and imposed the tax upon the consumer, and the Court further found that Article 20.02 thereof specifically provides that the tax imposed by said Act shall be collected from the consumer, not the retailer, and that as to each retail sale of tangible personal property of one cent to twenty-four cents, said Article specifically provides that there shall be no tax and no-tax shall be collected on such retail sales, and in requiring the plaintiffs, as retailers, to pay the taxes as they did, the Comptroller was acting contrary to the express terms of the statute. The Court further ordered the Comptroller to refund plaintiffs the sums paid under his ruling.

This Court holds that the judgment of the Trial Court is correct.

The provisions of the above mentioned Act pertinent to this opinion are as follows r

“Art. 20.02. Imposition of Limited Sales Tax
“There is hereby imposed upon each separate sale at retail of tangible personal property made within this State a limited sales tax at the rate of two-per cent (2%) of the sale price of each item or article of tangible personal property when sold at retail in this-State.
“(A) Method of Collection and Rate-of Limited .Sales Tax. The tax hereby imposed shall be collected by the retailer from the consumer.
“(1) The tax shall be as follows and' shall be collected by using the following bracket system formula on each retail sale:
Amount Tax
$ .01 to $ .24 No Tax
.25 to .74 $ .01
.75 to 1.24 .02
1.25 to 1.74 .03
1.75 to 2.24 .04
Provided, further, that for each additional fifty cents (50⅜ of purchase,, or fraction thereof, one cent (10)-limited sales tax shall be collected! thereon.
* * * * * ¡fe.
[665]*665“Art. 20.05 Return and Payments
“(B) Method Retailer is to Use in Computing Tax. The limited sales tax levied under Article 20.02 hereof shall be computed and paid to the Comptroller on the basis of two percent (2%) of all receipts from the total sales of such tangible personal property sold by such retailer under said Article.”

This is the first time that a court has been asked to construe these provisions of the Act.

The defendants contend that Section (B) of Art. 20.05 requires that the tax be computed and paid on the basis of two per cent of “all” receipts from the “total” sales. Defendants further argue that the only exceptions are found in Article 20.04 of the Act, which does not include an exemption for sales of less than twenty-five cents.

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Related

Calvert v. Canteen Company
371 S.W.2d 556 (Texas Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
365 S.W.2d 662, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calvert-v-canteen-co-texapp-1963.