Opinion by
Mr. Justice Eagen,
The appellants, Fred B. Lafferty, J. D. Lafferty and Charles W. Albright, Jr., partners, d/b/a Lafferty Trucking Company (Lafferty), by this appeal challenge
the correctness of the judgment entered below following dismissal of their appeal from a decision of the Commonwealth’s Board of Finance and Revenue sustaining an assessment for a use tax deficiency.
The sole question for decision is whether a contract carrier (Lafferty), which is not a public utility, but which renders a service identical to that rendered by a common carrier, which is a public utility, is entitled to the exclusion from taxation afforded to those engaged in a “public utility service” within the meaning of §§2(j) (7) (c) and 2(n) (4) (c) (iii)
of the Selective Sales and Use Tax Act.
Lafferty contends it is entitled to the exclusion. The facts were stipulated below. Lafferty conducts a business of contract carrier by motor vehicle in both interstate and intrastate commerce under rights granted to it by the Interstate Commerce Commission and Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission. Lafferty serves only one customer, a retail food chain (A. & P.) for which it transports goods and merchandise.
The first argument advanced by Lafferty is that the definitional exclusion for “public utility service” facilities, supra, is not limited by the definition of “public utility” in the Public Utility Code,
so that one
need not be a “public utility” in order for one’s services to be excluded. However, it admits the term “service” is defined by reference to the Public Utility Code. This rather ingenious argument rests on two fairly recent decisions of this Court:
Commonwealth v. McHugh,
406 Pa. 566, 178 A. 2d 556 (1962), and
Commonwealth v. Equitable Gas Company,
415 Pa. 118, 202 A. 2d 11 (1964).
In-
McHugh,
a construction contractor sought the public utility exclusion on its purchase of materials and supplies used in the erection of a facility for the municipal water department of the City of Philadelphia. The issue in
McHugh
was whether the exclusion, admittedly applicable to the repairing and' renovation of existing public utility facilities, also extended to- purchases utilized in the erection of new facilities. We held the exclusion did so extend.
In the
Equitable Gas Company
case, the question was whether or not tangible property of two public utilities was used directly in rendering a “service,” so - as to ■ qualify for the public utility service exclusion. .We held that, in determining whether or not an “excluded” service was being rendered by a public utility, one must refer to the definition of “service” in the Public Utility Code.
Lafferty uses these two decisions to construct a syllogism which would enable it to claim the public utility service use tax exclusion, even though it is not á “public' utility” as that term is defined by the Public .Utility Code.
The premises involved in this syllogism are-as follows: (-1) The
Equitable Gas Company
case, supra, held “service”) as defined by the
Public Utility Code, to control in the meaning of that word as contained in the exclusion in question. The code definition of “service” includes transportation by contract carrier. (2) The
McHugh
case, supra, held the exclusion applied in the case of materials purchased for the construction of new facilities for the Philadelphia Water Department. Lafferty points out that the Philadelphia Water Department is not a “public utility” as that term is defined in the Public Utility Code because it is municipally operated.
Therefore, claims Lafferty, “public utility service” as used in the exclusion cannot mean “service rendered by a public utility.” Rather, it actually means something like “service similar to that which a public utility renders.” “Service” is defined by reference to the Public Utility Code
(Equitable Gas Company,
supra) under which definition Lafferty qualifies. “Public utility” would not be defined by reference to the Public Utility Code, of course, because the
McHugh
case, supra, granted the exclusion to an entity not qualifying as a Public Utility Code “public utility.” The “public utility” facet of the exclusionary phrasing is claimed to be a general modifier only, inserted to limit the provision to any entity which performs services identical to those rendered by genuine, bona fide public utilities. Presumably, “public utility” would also be needed to direct anyone reading the statute to the Public Utility Code definition of “services”. Since Lafferty performs services which can be equated with
those of a genuine public utility, i.e., a common carrier, it asserts that it is encompassed within the ambit of the exclusionary clause.
While we admire both the ingenuity and the originality of this argument, we do not accept it. Under close analysis, the premises upon which it depends break down on several counts.
The
McHugh
decision reasoning by Lafferty is based on the assumption that this Court in
McHugh
recognized and proceeded on the ground that the Philadelphia Water Department was not a Public Utility Code “public utility”. In fact, we made no such assumption. The only issue raised before us in that case was whether the tax exclusion applied to the construction of new facilities, as well as to the improvement of existing facilities. It was assumed, or tacitly conceded, in every one of the six briefs
filed by the various parties and amici curiae in that case, as well as by this Court speaking through the present writer, that the Philadelphia Water Department was a bona fide public utility. This “given” was an integral part of the
McHugh
decision. The correctness of this concession by the Court and the Commonwealth, as well as the other parties, is presently irrelevant.
Turning now to the
Equitable Gas Company
branch of Lafferty’s argument, we see that in that case the taxpayers were admittedly genuine public utilities. The sole ■ question was whether or not certain tangible property (meters) was used by the admitted public utilities in rendering a “service.” The whole em: phasis of our opinion in
Equitable Gas Company
was
devoted to the question of whether or not the use of meters by a public utility constituted the rendering of a “service” by that public utility.
A careful reading of
Equitable Gas Company
clearly manifests that we proceeded to an analysis of the “service” question only after an initial determination that the entities involved were genuine public utilities.
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Opinion by
Mr. Justice Eagen,
The appellants, Fred B. Lafferty, J. D. Lafferty and Charles W. Albright, Jr., partners, d/b/a Lafferty Trucking Company (Lafferty), by this appeal challenge
the correctness of the judgment entered below following dismissal of their appeal from a decision of the Commonwealth’s Board of Finance and Revenue sustaining an assessment for a use tax deficiency.
The sole question for decision is whether a contract carrier (Lafferty), which is not a public utility, but which renders a service identical to that rendered by a common carrier, which is a public utility, is entitled to the exclusion from taxation afforded to those engaged in a “public utility service” within the meaning of §§2(j) (7) (c) and 2(n) (4) (c) (iii)
of the Selective Sales and Use Tax Act.
Lafferty contends it is entitled to the exclusion. The facts were stipulated below. Lafferty conducts a business of contract carrier by motor vehicle in both interstate and intrastate commerce under rights granted to it by the Interstate Commerce Commission and Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission. Lafferty serves only one customer, a retail food chain (A. & P.) for which it transports goods and merchandise.
The first argument advanced by Lafferty is that the definitional exclusion for “public utility service” facilities, supra, is not limited by the definition of “public utility” in the Public Utility Code,
so that one
need not be a “public utility” in order for one’s services to be excluded. However, it admits the term “service” is defined by reference to the Public Utility Code. This rather ingenious argument rests on two fairly recent decisions of this Court:
Commonwealth v. McHugh,
406 Pa. 566, 178 A. 2d 556 (1962), and
Commonwealth v. Equitable Gas Company,
415 Pa. 118, 202 A. 2d 11 (1964).
In-
McHugh,
a construction contractor sought the public utility exclusion on its purchase of materials and supplies used in the erection of a facility for the municipal water department of the City of Philadelphia. The issue in
McHugh
was whether the exclusion, admittedly applicable to the repairing and' renovation of existing public utility facilities, also extended to- purchases utilized in the erection of new facilities. We held the exclusion did so extend.
In the
Equitable Gas Company
case, the question was whether or not tangible property of two public utilities was used directly in rendering a “service,” so - as to ■ qualify for the public utility service exclusion. .We held that, in determining whether or not an “excluded” service was being rendered by a public utility, one must refer to the definition of “service” in the Public Utility Code.
Lafferty uses these two decisions to construct a syllogism which would enable it to claim the public utility service use tax exclusion, even though it is not á “public' utility” as that term is defined by the Public .Utility Code.
The premises involved in this syllogism are-as follows: (-1) The
Equitable Gas Company
case, supra, held “service”) as defined by the
Public Utility Code, to control in the meaning of that word as contained in the exclusion in question. The code definition of “service” includes transportation by contract carrier. (2) The
McHugh
case, supra, held the exclusion applied in the case of materials purchased for the construction of new facilities for the Philadelphia Water Department. Lafferty points out that the Philadelphia Water Department is not a “public utility” as that term is defined in the Public Utility Code because it is municipally operated.
Therefore, claims Lafferty, “public utility service” as used in the exclusion cannot mean “service rendered by a public utility.” Rather, it actually means something like “service similar to that which a public utility renders.” “Service” is defined by reference to the Public Utility Code
(Equitable Gas Company,
supra) under which definition Lafferty qualifies. “Public utility” would not be defined by reference to the Public Utility Code, of course, because the
McHugh
case, supra, granted the exclusion to an entity not qualifying as a Public Utility Code “public utility.” The “public utility” facet of the exclusionary phrasing is claimed to be a general modifier only, inserted to limit the provision to any entity which performs services identical to those rendered by genuine, bona fide public utilities. Presumably, “public utility” would also be needed to direct anyone reading the statute to the Public Utility Code definition of “services”. Since Lafferty performs services which can be equated with
those of a genuine public utility, i.e., a common carrier, it asserts that it is encompassed within the ambit of the exclusionary clause.
While we admire both the ingenuity and the originality of this argument, we do not accept it. Under close analysis, the premises upon which it depends break down on several counts.
The
McHugh
decision reasoning by Lafferty is based on the assumption that this Court in
McHugh
recognized and proceeded on the ground that the Philadelphia Water Department was not a Public Utility Code “public utility”. In fact, we made no such assumption. The only issue raised before us in that case was whether the tax exclusion applied to the construction of new facilities, as well as to the improvement of existing facilities. It was assumed, or tacitly conceded, in every one of the six briefs
filed by the various parties and amici curiae in that case, as well as by this Court speaking through the present writer, that the Philadelphia Water Department was a bona fide public utility. This “given” was an integral part of the
McHugh
decision. The correctness of this concession by the Court and the Commonwealth, as well as the other parties, is presently irrelevant.
Turning now to the
Equitable Gas Company
branch of Lafferty’s argument, we see that in that case the taxpayers were admittedly genuine public utilities. The sole ■ question was whether or not certain tangible property (meters) was used by the admitted public utilities in rendering a “service.” The whole em: phasis of our opinion in
Equitable Gas Company
was
devoted to the question of whether or not the use of meters by a public utility constituted the rendering of a “service” by that public utility.
A careful reading of
Equitable Gas Company
clearly manifests that we proceeded to an analysis of the “service” question only after an initial determination that the entities involved were genuine public utilities. In applying the “public utility service” exclusion,, the “public utility” question should be decided before reaching the “service” question. An entity must be a “public utility” under the Public Utility Code to qualify for the sales and use tax public utility service exclusion. This threshold determination was made in
Equitable Gas Company
and is the bedrock upon which that opinion rests.
It is our view, therefore, that the reading given to the
Equitable Gas Company
case, as well as to the
McHugh
case, by Lafi'erty is incomplete, and cannot serve to support the argument based thereon, that contract carriers qualify for the public service sales and use tax exclusion.
We feel then that the statutory exclusion in question was meant by the Legislature to apply only to Public Utility Code “public utilities” when they render Public Utility Code “services.”
Lafferty next argues that the purpose of the exclusion is to prevent “tax pyramiding,” i.e., to insure that the sales and use tax is paid only once in the sequence from creation of the commodity or service to the consumer, to prevent a tax on a tax situation. Thus, Lafferty says that contract carriers are as much within the scope of such a purpose as common carriers. While we tend to agree with Lafferty that obviation of “tax pyramiding” is indeed the purpose of the instant exclusion, we cannot agree that contract carriers therefore qualify thereunder. Our prior determination interpreting the exclusion in question as being unavailable to entities not qualifying as “public utilities” under the Public Utility Code disposes of this argument. The Legislature may well have intended to block “tax; pyramiding”, but it likewise intended to bar contract carriers from the instant exclusion. Apparently, the Legislature felt that the effects of such “pyramiding” insofar as contract carriers are involved were not of such gravity to warrant the exclusion, perhaps since the scope of contract carrier service, by definition, is limited. The “purpose” argument was made to bolster the syllogistic argument and when the latter fell, the former becomes, in effect, moot.
Tlie final argument advanced by Lafferty contends that Regulation 227
(which glosses the exclusion in question) is an incorrect and unconstitutional interpretation of the exclusion, because it specifically states that such is only open to Public Utility Code “public utilities”, thereby distinguishing between contract carriers and Class D common carriers. Lafferty contends that there is no difference or, at least, not enough difference between the two types of carriers to constitutionally sustain differing tax treatment.
Lafferty’s argument is actually directed against the Regulation. But in view of the fact that we have today held that the essential meaning of the exclusion is accurately reflected by the Regulation, it would now be judicially unrealistic to separate a constitutional attack on the Regulation from such an attack on the statutory provision itself.
The question then becomes: Are contract carriers and Class D common carriers the “same class of subjects”? If it is reasonable to separately classify them for sales tax purposes, they are not.
The actual distinction made in the exclusion is between public utilities and entities which are not public utilities. It is to this broad classification that we must look in determining the reasonableness, and hence the constitutionality, of any exclusionary differentiation. If that is proper, then the exclusion of Class D com
mon carriers is necessarily valid, such exclusion then being incidental to the larger distinction.
The distinctions between a public utility and a business entity which is not a public utility are well known. For example, a public utility holds itself out to the public generally and may not refuse any legitimate demand for service, while a private business independently determines whom it will serve. 43 Am. Jur. Public Utilities and Services, §2 (1942) ; 73 C.J.S. Public Utilities §1 (1951). If the purpose of the exclusion indeed is to prohibit tax pyramiding, it is reasonable for the Legislature, steering a course between the need for revenue and consideration for the consumer, to deem public utility customers the most appropriate beneficiaries of the exclusionary safeguard.
Further, it is in the context of the whole Sales and Use Tax statute that we must view the exclusion. Since this statute is one designed to raise revenue, the state need not justify any distinction drawn between the taxed and the nontaxed “so long as some other reasonable basis for treating the various classes differently exists. Where such distinction exists, the wisdom of the legislative policy of taxing one class and not another is not a matter for the courts.”
Commonwealth v. Life Assurance Co. of Pa.,
419 Pa. 370, 377 n. 11, 214 A. 2d 209, 215 n. 11 (1965). As stated in
Commonwealth v. Life Assurance Co. of Pa.,
Id. at 376-377, 214 A. 2d at 214: “By necessity a wide discretion must be conceded to' the Legislature in the classification of various businesses or occupations for purposes of taxation. ...
“The only constitutional limitation placed upon the power of the Legislature to distinguish between various
entities for purposes of taxation is that their basis for doing so be reasonable. . . . And the burden of showing that the classification employed by the Legislature is not reasonable is upon the party attacking the tax.” (Citations omitted.)
Since we are dealing here with two different classes, public utilities and nonpublic utilities, which are reasonably differentiated, the exclusion clause does not conflict with the uniformity clause (Art. IX §1) of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
The fact that some Class D common carriers look very much like contract carriers in terms of their external operations is thus accidental to the larger legislative design. Cf.
Philadelphia Association of Linen Suppliers v. Philadelphia,
139 Pa. Superior Ct. 560, 567, 12 A. 2d 789, 792 (1910).
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Jones and Mr. Justice Cohen took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.