Calvert v. Marathon Oil Company

389 S.W.2d 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 1965
Docket11305
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 389 S.W.2d 153 (Calvert v. Marathon Oil Company) 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. Marathon Oil Company, 389 S.W.2d 153 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinions

HUGHES, Justice.

This is a summary judgment case in which all facts were.stipulated.

Marathon Oil Company, appellee, filed suit against Robert S. Calvert, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas, asking for a declaratory judgment regarding its liability, vel non, or extent of liability, for taxes under the provisions of the 1961 Texas Limited Sales, Excise and Use Tax Act1 by reason of the following described transaction and other relevant facts.

On December 28, 1961, appellee2 entered into a contract with Plymouth Oil Company, a foreign corporation, under which appel-lee agreed to buy substantially all of its assets, except an oil payment which Plymouth simultaneously agreed to sell to a third party. This contract and both sales were consummated on April 3, 1962.

The property purchased by appellee from Plymouth consisted principally of oil and gas leases and other real property. The only personal property included in the sale was that which was held by Plymouth for use or disposition incidental to the conduct of the business of finding, producing, processing and refining oil and gas and wholesale marketing of oil, gas and petroleum products.

Some of the property purchased by Marathon was to be resold, but not at retail.

Immediately following consummation of these sales, Plymouth wound up its affairs and withdrew from the State of Texas.

Plymouth applied for and received a Sales Tax Permit under the provisions of the Tax Act, and it held such permit until the consummation of these sales on April 3, 1962. Texas sales of tangible personal property by Plymouth in the amount of $3,507.71 were included in Plymouth’s reports to the Comptroller for the period September 1, 1961 through April 3, 1962, and the sales taxes due thereon were paid.

It was stipulated that Mr. Frank W. MacLean, Controller of Plymouth for six years prior to June 1962, would testify in conformity with his affidavit which is in the record. The affidavit of Mr. MacLean is not controverted and we accept it as accurate.

We quote the following from such affidavit :

“During the entire time that I was Controller of Plymouth Oil Company, as stated above, up to and including the date of consummation of sale of substantially all of the assets of Plymouth to Marathon Oil Company (then the Ohio Oil Company) on April 3, 1962, the only business Plymouth engaged in was the business of finding, producing, processing and refining of oil and gas, and wholesale marketing of oil, gas and petroleum products. Plymouth owned no personal property, except such personal property as was owned or held for use or disposition incidental to the conduct of that business. At no time during that period did Plymouth engage in any retail operation or in any way hold itself [155]*155out as a seller of personal property to the general consumer trade.
“3. I have examined the accounting records of Plymouth and those records disclose that during the period from September 1, 1961, through March 31, 1962, Plymouth had gross sales income of $43,765,101.21 which was derived almost entirely from sales of oil, gas and petroleum products to wholesalers, jobbers or other oil companies for resale or for further processing and resale. Of the total gross sales income of $43,765,101.21 only $3,507.71 of the sales in the State of Texas was from sales other than sales for resale or sales otherwise exempt from the Texas Limited Sales and Use Tax.
“4. Except for the very rare sales to outsiders listed below, these Texas sales in the amount of $3,507.71 represented sales by Plymouth to its employees at its Texas City Refinery and consisted of sales of grease, motor oil, transmission fluid and miscellaneous items of scrap. The sales of grease, motor oil and transmission fluid to employees were made at wholesale prices and the sales of miscellaneous scrap were made at junk value. All sales to employees were made as an accomodation to them and to foster employee good will. The employee sales were not made for profit as a part of Plymouth’s business because the expenses incident to such small sales at wholesale prices ordinarily offset any profit on the sale. Except for the following five sales, all of the foregoing sales were made to Plymouth’s refinery employees (or in one instance to the son of a refinery employee)
(Here are listed five sales to named purchasers totalling $39.95)
Between April 1, 1962, and the sale by Plymouth on April 3, 1962, of its business assets, Plymouth made no further accomodation sales to its employees or other such incidental sales to outsiders.
“5. On the basis of Plymouth’s records, which I have examined, and on the basis of my experience as an accountant and auditor and as Controller of Plymouth, I know that Plymouth was not engaged in the business of making sales directly to consumers.
“6. In accordance with its previously adopted plan of liquidation, Plymouth on April 3, 1962, sold en masse to Marathon Oil Company substantially all of its assets, except for a production payment which Plymouth sold to a third party. While the assets sold included some personal property, there was no separate sale of any personal property or real property by Plymouth to Marathon Oil Company. All of the assets sold to Marathon Oil Company were sold to it in one single transaction.”

It is stipulated that in the event final judgment herein is adverse to appellee that there are other possible exemptions and issues with respect to the amount of taxes due and that such matters are “outside the scope of this action and are not now presented for determination.”

Appellee has contracted that it will pay all sales taxes imposed on Plymouth by the sale to appellee on April 3, 1962.

Appellee moved for a summary declaratory judgment declaring:

“(a) The liquidation sale by Plymouth to Plaintiff insofar as it included incidentally any tangible personal property located within the State of Texas was not a ‘retail sale' or a ‘sale at retail’ within the meaning of House Bill 20, Acts 1961, 57th Legislature, First Called Session, Chapter 24 and is, [156]*156therefore, not subject to any sales tax;
“(b) In the alternative if said liquidation sale was a retail sale or a sale at retail within the meaning of said Act, said sale is nevertheless exempt from taxation as an ‘occasional’ sale within the meaning of the same Act, * * *”

Appellant also moved for a summary declaratory judgment to the effect that the sale by Plymouth of all its tangible personal properties located in Texas was a taxable “retail sale” or “sale at retail” within the Act and that such sale was subject to the 2% limited sales tax imposed by the Act.

The motion of appellee was granted, and the motion of appellant denied. The trial court did not indicate in its judgment whether it declared the law to be as stated in (a) or (b) in appellee’s motion, supra. It is our opinion that the law is as stated in (a) in such motion, and we do not determine the validity of the declaration of law in (b) in such motion.

The sale which appellant seeks to tax is a sale not made in the regular course of business of Plymouth.

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Calvert v. Marathon Oil Company
389 S.W.2d 153 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
389 S.W.2d 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calvert-v-marathon-oil-company-texapp-1965.