Commonwealth v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.

145 S.E.2d 206, 206 Va. 550
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 29, 1965
DocketRecord Nos. 6047, 6048
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 S.E.2d 206 (Commonwealth v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Greyhound Lines, Inc., 145 S.E.2d 206, 206 Va. 550 (Va. 1965).

Opinion

Gordon, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the decision appealed from, the State Corporation Commission ruled that the Virginia gross receipts road tax is not now applicable to revenue derived from the transportation of property in the appellees’ buses. The only question is whether the Commission properly interpreted the provisions of the 1956 amendment to Code § 58-638, (1) the statute imposing the gross receipts road tax.

The appellees (who will be referred to collectively as “Greyhound”) hold certificates of public convenience and necessity issued by the State Corporation Commission under Code § 56-280,(2) authorizing Greyhound to engage in intrastate operations as a common carrier of passengers. As authorized by Code § 56-284, the certificates include the authority to transport certain property in the same vehicle with passengers: passengers’ baggage, newspapers, express parcels not exceeding one hundred pounds weight, and United States mail. Va. Code Ann. § 56-284 (Supp. 1964).

In its tax returns for the years 1957-1963 and for the first quarter [552]*552of 1964, Greyhound included revenue derived from the transportation of property, as well as passengers, and it paid the gross receipts road tax for those years on total transportation revenue. In 1964, Greyhound filed petitions with the Commission seeking a refund of $26,692.40, the total amount of the gross receipts road tax paid by Greyhound and attributable to revenue derived from the transportation of property during the year 1963. (This was the only prior year not subject to the statute of limitations.) This appeal is from the Commission’s orders directing the Commonwealth to refund overpaid taxes in the amount requested by Greyhound.

The relevant provisions of Code § 58-638, as in force before the 1956 amendment and as now in force, are set forth below. The stricken words appeared in the statute before the 1956 amendment; the statute as amended in 1956 (effective April 1, 1957) and now in force does not contain the stricken words.

“§ 58-638. Rate of Tax; levy. — Except as hereinafter otherwise provided, every person who operates, or causes to be operated, on any highway in this State any motor vehicle, trailer, or semi-trailer for ■the transportation of property for-eompensation, whether for rent, or for hire, or as- •» -contract -carrier, -or as a common carrier, and-every common carrier -by motor vehicle, trailer or semi-trailer of passengers shall pay quarterly to the State Treasurer, on or before the fifteenth day of April, July, October and January of each year, in addition to any other fees and taxes imposed by law upon motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers, and upon the operation thereof, and in addition to any motor fuel tax paid or payable by such person, a road tax calculated on the gross receipts derived from such operations during a quarter year ending with the preceding month, according to the following schedule:

(1) Two per centum of the gross receipts derived by such person from all intrastate operation; and

(2) Two per centum of such proportion of the gross receipts derived by such person from all interstate operations as the total number of miles traveled in interstate operations by the vehicles of such person on the public highways of this State bears to the total number of miles traveled in interstate operations by the vehicles of such person both within and without this State, including miles traveled on streets in cities and towns embraced within the highway system of this State, but exclusive in each case of the miles traveled in this State on any street maintained exclusively by any city or town.”

[553]*553[The emphasis of the words “gross receipts derived from such operations”, by the use of italics above, has been supplied.]

By the terms of the statute, the tax is to be calculated on Greyhound’s gross receipts derived from “such operations”. The crucial inquiry, then, is what operations are included within the term “such operations”.

The obvious interpretation of the statute as amended in 1956 is that “such operations” means operations of a common carrier of passengers, and that the phrase “gross receipts derived from such operations” means gross passenger receipts. These conclusions flow logically from the words of the statute, since it prescribes that any person who operates motor vehicles on State highways “as a common carrier of passengers” shall pay “a road tax calculated on the gross receipts derived from such operations”.

The main thrust of the Commonwealth’s argument against this obvious interpretation is that the Legislature, in striking the words appearing in the statute before the 1956 amendment, intended to relieve only certain classes of carriers from the obligation to pay the gross receipts tax.

Before the 1956 amendment, says the Commonwealth, Code § 58-638 referred to two classes or categories of taxpayers, (1) carriers of property for compensation and (2) common carriers of passengers. Category (1) was eliminated by the striking of the words italicized below:

“. . . every person who operates . . . any motor vehicle, trailer or semi-trailer for the transportation of property for compensation, whether for rent, or for hire, or as a contract carrier, or as a common carrier...”

According to the Commonwealth, Greyhound never fell in category (1); it is a common carrier of passengers, and not a carrier of property, and always fell within the description of “common carrier of passengers” or category (2). So, in the Commonwealth’s view, the elimination of property carriers or category (1) by the 1956 amendment could have no effect upon Greyhound or its obligation to pay a tax computed on gross transportation receipts.

But at least in the context of Code § 58-638, Greyhound may be identified not only as a common carrier of passengers, but also as a contract or common carrier of property. Greyhound offers and performs two different transportation services, the transportation of passengers and the transportation of property.

[554]*554True, the authority to offer and perform both services is derived from one certificate of public convenience and necessity, and Greyhound’s authority to transport property may be regarded as incidental to its principal service, the transportation of passengers. It does not follow, however, that to describe Greyhound as both a carrier of persons and a carrier of property is inept. It is not inconsistent, moreover, to conclude that the Legislature intended, by the language of Code § 58-638 (before the words were stricken by the 1956 amendment), to refer to a carrier like Greyhound as both a carrier of property and a common carrier of passengers. “When carrying passengers under a public holding out, these [certain specified carriers] and other carriers are common carriers of goods as to passengers’ baggage.” Dobie, Bailments and Carriers 307.

Bearing in mind the dual services or operations of Greyhound, we can perceive readily why Code § 58-638 required that the gross receipts road tax be calculated on gross transportation receipts before the 1956 amendment (as was conceded by all parties) and now requires that the tax be calculated on gross passenger receipts only. As used in Code § 58-638, the words “gross receipts derived from such

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Related

Commonwealth, Department of Taxation v. Lewis
156 S.E.2d 589 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1967)
Carter v. City of Norfolk
147 S.E.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.E.2d 206, 206 Va. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-greyhound-lines-inc-va-1965.