Commonwealth v. Pure Oil Co.

154 A. 307, 303 Pa. 112, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 372
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 12, 1931
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 154 A. 307 (Commonwealth v. Pure Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Pure Oil Co., 154 A. 307, 303 Pa. 112, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 372 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Simpson,

The fundamental question involved in this case is whether the City of Philadelphia is required to pay the tax per gallon provided by the Act of May 1,1929, P. L. 1037, on all gasoline purchased and consumed by it in the performance of its governmental functions as an agent of the Commonwealth.

Defendant sold to the city a large quantity of gasoline during March, 1930. The city refused to pay the four cents per gallon specified in the statute. The State settled an account against defendant on the theory that it should have collected the tax from the city. In due course, defendant appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, which decided that for gasoline used for the purpose stated, the city was not liable, and hence defendant could not be required to pay the sum assessed against it. The Commonwealth appealed. The judgment must be affirmed.

Much of the Commonwealth’s argument is based on the proposition that this is an excise tax and not a tax on property. The court below held it was the latter, and with its conclusion we agree. The title of the statute is “An act imposing a state tax on liquid fuels,” etc. It does not express an intention to tax anything else. If, then, we were to construe the act as providing for a tax *116 of any other character, it would violate article III, section 3, of the state Constitution, which requires that the subject of a statute must be “clearly expressed in its title”: Union Passenger Ry. Co.’s App., 81* Pa. 91, 94, 95; Provident L. & T. Co. v. Hammond, 230 Pa. 407, 413; Spangler’s Est., 281 Pa. 118. To avoid this result, we must, if reasonably possible, so construe it as to make it constitutional (Com. ex rel. v. Snyder, 279 Pa. 234; Fluke v. Lang, 283 Pa. 54), and this we can readily do by treating it as exactly what it says it is: “a state tax on liquid fuels,” and therefore a property tax.

Fortunately, the body of the statute likewise requires it to be so construed. An ingenious argument to the contrary was made by taking scattered excerpts from other portions of the act, but when the provision which imposes the tax is considered, its character is precisely the same as expressed in the title. Section 3 (P. L. 1039) says: “a state tax......is hereby imposed and assessed upon all liquid fuels sold by dealers in this Commonwealth......and upon all liquid fuels used within this Commonwealth by consumers when no such tax has been collected thereon by a dealer,” etc., etc. There is no pretense in this that the tax is assessed upon the vendor for the privilege of carrying on his business, and, indeed, this would be impossible where it is assessed on gasoline purchased outside of the State. Section 9 of the act (P. L. 1042) provides that “The tax imposed by this act shall be paid by the person......purchasing liquid fuels from dealers for his OAvn use......or by the person......using liquid fuels, upon which no tax has been collected by a dealer.” It follows that the tax is a property tax, assessed against the property itself, and payable by its owner at the time of the purchase. It is not correct, therefore, to assert, as appellant repeatedly does, that it is a tax “imposed on the privilege of transferring property”; nor that the gasoline is “taxed before it becomes the property of a municipal purchaser.” Nor is it accurate to say that the “reasoning upon which ex *117 emptions have been presumed in connection with taxes on real estate has no application to the facts and circumstances here involved.” On the contrary, each is a tax on the property of the municipality, and each takes from it money which would otherwise be used for governmental purposes, thereby pro tanto disabling it from properly performing its public duties, or compelling it to raise money from some other source in order to be able to pay this tax to the State, whose agent it is in the performance of those public duties. It is not necessary, therefore, to consider what answer would have to be given to the fundamental question stated at the beginning of this opinion, if the tax under consideration were an excise tax.

Wlxat, then, is the true construction of the act on the question of whether or not the tax is payable by municipalities in the performance of their governmental functions, in view of the fact that they are not expressly charged with the payment thereof, nor expressly exempted therefrom? At this late day, the answer thereto cannot be seriously disputed. We have many times said that while the State may, by a general statute, tax subordinate governmental agencies in matters affecting the performance of their governmental duties, the presumption is that this was not intended, and nothing short of an expressed or necessarily implied purpose to tax them will suffice to make them liable therefor. The legislature knew, for it was bound to know, of our oft-repeated statement to that effect; hence its failure to express its intention to impose the tax, in the act under consideration, can only mean that it did not intend to impose it under the circumstances stated. That the presumption is as above expressed, so clearly appears in a number of eases, including Directors of the Poor of Schuylkill County v. School Directors of N. Manheim Twp., 42 Pa. 21, 24-5; County of Erie v. City of Erie, 113 Pa. 360; Pittsburg v. Sterrett Subdistrict School, 204 Pa. 635; Wilkinsburg Boro. v. School District, 298 Pa. 193; Robb *118 v. Phila., 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 343, and is so well known, that it is not necessary to quote from them.

The Commonwealth contends, however, that, in the instant case, this presumption is overcome, under the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius, by the fact that section 3 of the act excludes from its purview “liquid fuels purchased, received or consumed by the United States, or any department, board, commission, or other agency or instrumentality thereof” and also “transactions in interstate or foreign commerce,” and does not expressly exempt municipalities when acting in their governmental capacities. The fact stated is true, but no such inference can properly be drawn from it. It would probably be conceded that the maxim would not apply if a prior statute provided that, in all future taxing enactments, general words should not be held to apply to municipalities when acting in their governmental capacities, but, in order to include them, this must be • stated expressly, and that, in the later act under consideration, others were exempted but nothing was said as to exempting the municipalities. This is substantially the present situation. Over and over again we have said just that thing as to all present and future taxing statutes, and, as already stated, the legislature was bound to know this, and to govern itself accordingly. It follows, that the maxim cannot be held to apply in such cases as the present, and so it was said, in effect, in County of Erie v. City of Erie, 113 Pa. 360. There it was sought to overcome the presumption by a reference to article IX, section 1, of the Constitution and the legislation passed in pursuance of it, which specified what classes of property were exempted from taxation, that used by a municipality not being among them. We there said (page 367) : “The provision of [article IX] section 1 [of the Constitution] cannot operate to repeal any preexisting laAV exempting public property from taxation, because there Avas no such law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 A. 307, 303 Pa. 112, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pure-oil-co-pa-1931.