Commonwealth Ex Rel. Nelson v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc.

72 S.W.2d 1032, 255 Ky. 111, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 1032 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Nelson v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Nelson v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc., 72 S.W.2d 1032, 255 Ky. 111, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 198 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Reversing.

The case presents the question of liability of the. appellee for the 5-cent gasoline tax under the conditions stated. In this suit of the commonwealth by its revenue agent against the appellee to collect such tax and penalties, the court adjudged upon the pleadings that there is no liability. We are of opinion that the defenses interposed cannot be sustained and the judgment is erroneous.

The material facts are substantially agreed upon. The appellee is a foreign corporation engaged in operating busses carrying passengers for hire. It has a station at Paducah, Ky., in and out of which its busses arrive and depart from and to destinations in Illinois and Tennessee over the highways of Kentucky and of those-states. The greater number of its passengers are carried from points in one state to those in another. A comparatively small part of the traffic is between places wholly within Kentucky. The defendant alleged that it was not possible to determine what percentage of its traffic during the past period covered by the petition was intrastate. The company purchased 18,077 gallons of gasoline outside of this state which was delivered to its station at Paducah, where it was stored and distributed to its motors as needed. The case seeks to impose the tax upon this gasoline. At the time the answer was filed, part of it had been consumed in the operation of the busses entering and departing from that station, as *113 above stated. The defendant alleged that it was not in position to ascertain what quantity was used in the operation of its cars in Kentucky and what quantity was used in other states, but charged that all of it was used in interstate traffic and that not more than 15 per cent, was actually used within Kentucky. None of the gasoline had been sold or distributed to another.

The law under which the tax is sought to be imposed is chapter 127 of the Acts of 1928, incorporated in the Kentucky .Statutes as section 4224b-l et seq., 1930 Edition. That act was repealed and re-enacted with some changes at the 1932 session of the General Assembly (chapter 150, Acts 1932), but the re-enactment had not become effective in time to affect the subject-matter, nor do the changes made in the statute affect the question to be determined.

Section 1 of the act (4224b-l, Statutes) defines gasoline for the purposes of the act and continues:

“A state tax of five cents (5c) per gallon is hereby imposed on all gasoline, as defined herein, sold in this Commonwealth at wholesale, as the words ‘at wholesale’ are hereinafter defined. * * * The word ‘at wholesale’ as used in this act, shall be held and construed to mean and include any and all sales made for the purpose of re-sale or distribution, or for use, and, as well, the gasoline furnished or supplied for distribution within this State, whether the distributor be the same person who so furnished the same, his agent or employee, or another person; and also to mean cmd include any person who shall purchase or obtam gasoline without the state and sell or distribute or use the 'same tuithin the state.”

The portions of the act particularly applicable to the case are italicized.

This is not a license or. privilege tax. It is levied on the commodity itself and is an excise tax on distribution, consumption, or use and not on the act of selling. It is necessarily contemplated that the ultimate consumer shall pay the tax. The seller or distributer is made an agency of collection. State Tax Commission v. Hughes Drug Company, 219 Ky. 433, 293 S. W. 944; Shanks v. Kentucky Independent Oil Company, 225 Ky. 303, 8 S. W. (2d) 383; Kentucky Independent Oil Com *114 pany v. Coleman, 236 Ky. 592, 33 S. W. (2d) 615; Willis’ Thornton on Oil & Gas, sec. 857.

The appellee contends that imposition of the tax upon this gasoline would be a direct burden upon interstate commerce, and hence offensive to the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, which commits the regulation of transportation between states exclusively to Congress. If it has that effect, it is to be quite readily agreed that it is beyond the power of the state to impose the tax. The two factors to be regarded in determining the usually perplexing question of applicability of that principle in cases of this character are, obviously, the nature of the tax and the particular facts.

The appellee relies principally upon Helson v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 279 U. S. 245, 49 S. Ct. 279, 281, 73 L. Ed. 683, in which this identical statute (changed only in respect of matters not material here) was construed in relation to a different state of fact and which reversed our decision in Metropolis Ferry Company v. Commonwealth, 225 Ky. 45, 7 S. W. (2d) 506. The Supreme Court held under the circumstances that the tax was a burden upon the use of means of interstate transportation. The defendants in that action were nonresidents of Kentucky operating a ferryboat across the Ohio river between Metropolis, 111., and a point near Padu-cah, Ky. The situs of their office and all of their personal property was in Illinois. The gasoline used in generating motive power for propelling the ferry was purchased and delivered to the defendants in Illinois. Because the river below the north low-water mark is in Kentucky, 75 per cent, of the gasoline was actually consumed within the limits of Kentucky, but all of it was in the making of interstate journeys. It was sought to impose the tax upon the use of gasoline thus consumed. It is to be observed that Mr. Justice McRey-nolds dissented from that opinion, and that three other members of that court acquiesced in the result only because of the earlier decisions, but, as stated in the concurring opinion by Mr. Justice Stone, they could find no justification for the interpretation given the commerce clause which would relieve those engaged in interstate commerce from their fair share of the expenses of government of the states in which they operate by exempting them from the payment of a tax of general application.

*115 The appellant would distinguish the two cases upon the ground that as the tax is levied for the sole purpose of raising revenue for constructing and maintaining the highways of the state, its imposition upon the gasoline is hut to require the appellee to compensate the state for the use of its roads, while the ferryboat made no such use, and point o.ut that the Supreme Court in that case declared that, “The tax is exacted as the price of the privilege of using an instrumentality of interstate commerce.” We doubt the intention of the court to make the distinction as made by counsel, for it must have had in mind the more practical conception that the gasoline itself was the instrumentality which was actually being used. The Louisiana court, in State v. Johnson, 173 La. 669, 138 So. 503, placed the applicability of a gasoline tax consumed by interstate motorbusses upon that ground. Perhaps there are other cases. Undoubtedly the state may impose on motor vehicles engaged exclusively in interstate commerce a reasonable charge as a fair contribution to the cost of the highways. Clark v. Poor, 274 U. S. 554, 47 S. Ct. 702, 71 L. Ed. 1199; Sprout v.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 1032, 255 Ky. 111, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-nelson-v-dixie-greyhound-lines-inc-kyctapphigh-1934.