Cook, Comm. of Revenues v. Sears-Roebuck Co.

206 S.W.2d 20, 212 Ark. 308, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 17, 1947
Docket4-8253
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 206 S.W.2d 20 (Cook, Comm. of Revenues v. Sears-Roebuck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook, Comm. of Revenues v. Sears-Roebuck Co., 206 S.W.2d 20, 212 Ark. 308, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 683 (Ark. 1947).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice.

In this appeal two questions are presented: first, whether the Arkansas G-ross Receipts Tax (as levied by Act 386 of 1941) is applicable to the transactions described in the stipulations in this case; and, second, whether appellee Sears-Roebuck & Company is prevented, by its conduct, from obtaining an answer to the first question. We decide only the second question; that is, we hold that Sears-Roebuck & Company, by its conduct, is prevented from obtaining an answer to the first question as above stated.

Otho A. Cook (hereinafter referred to as “appellant”) is, and was at all times hereinafter mentioned, Commissioner of Revenues of the State of Arkansas; and appellee Sears-Roebuck & Company (hereinafter referred to as “Sears”) is, and was at all times hereinafter mentioned, a large merchandising establishment with retail stores in Little Rock, Hot Springs and Fort Smith. In each retail store there was a “mail order desk” 1 where the consumer could examine the catalogue for items not found in the retail store. In addition to the three retail stores, Sears also had “mail order offices” in Pine Bluff, Camden, Jonesboro, El Dorado and Helena. These “mail order offices” had no merchandise on hand for sale, but had only Sears catalogues from which items could be ordered.

At either the mail order desk in any of the three retail stores, or at the mail order office in any of the other five cities mentioned, the procedure was the same: the prospective customer could examine the catalogues and order from the Memphis, Tennessee, or the Kansas City, Missouri, store of Sears any item found in the catalogues. Such an order was subject to acceptance or rejection in Memphis or Kansas City, and was shipped by carrier to the purchaser. The method of payment varied. Prices listed in the catalogue were f.o.b. the point of shipment. Were these sales thus made through such mail order desk or mail order .office “sales made in Arkansas,” so as to be taxable transactions under our Gross Receipts Tax Act 386 of 1941 (hereinafter called the “Tax Act”) ? That is the original question; and the one that led to this litigation.

Prior to 1945, Sears had regularly collected, and remitted to appellant, as provided by the said Tax Act, the gross receipts tax arising from all sales made at the mail order desks and mail order offices . Beginning in January, 1945, Sears continued to collect the tax from its customers, but refused to remit to appellant any taxes so collected. In July, 1945, appellant made an assessment against Sears for $2,688.44 for the tax on sales made by Sears at its mail order desks and mail order offices in Arkansas during the months of January and February, 1945. After the said assessment, Sears undertook to follow the procedure of § 10 of the Tax Act, 2 in that Sears: (a) seasonably protested the assessment; (b) had a hearing before the Commissioner; and (c) from the order of the Commissioner sustaining the assessment, seasonably filed its appeal in the Pulaski Chancery Court. In its chancery pleading, Sears said ■:

‘ ‘ Sears-Roebuck & Company now desires that an appeal be granted it from the order of the said Commissioner of Revenues as provided in § 10 of Act 386 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Arkansas for 1941, and that the legality of the assessment hereinbefore mentioned be determined by this court.”

Sears failed to completely follow the procedure of § 10, in that it failed to pay the tax; but, by reason of the stipulation hereinafter to be mentioned, we treat the tax as paid, and this as a suit for refund. Appellant by answer claimed that the sales of Sears to its customers at the mail order offices and mail order desks were consummated in Arkansas, and that the assessment was correct.

With the issue thus joined, appellant and Sears entered into a stipulation reciting the method of business, as hereinbefore explained, and also containing the two paragraphs, as follows: • ' t

“Sears-Roebuck & Company was duly licensed by the Revenue Department of the State of Arkansas under the Gross Receipts Tax Law and has been issued permit No. 76-190-23. This permit is a blanket permit for the Company in Arkansas and retail stores in Little Rock, Hot Springs and Fort Smith have been issued sub-permits.
“Sears-Roebuck & Company has been collecting the Arkansas Gross Receipts Tax from the customers placing orders through order desks and order offices. Prior to 1945, the tax was remitted to the State of Arkansas on these orders. Since that time, the amounts collected have been held by Sears-Roebuck & Company pending the ultimate outcome of this suit.”

The chancery court entered a decree cancelling the assessment made by the Commissioner; and from that decree, there is this appeal.

I. The Status of the Suit. At the outset, we state that we treat this case as though Sears had. paid the $2,688.44 and penalty, and was here seeking to recover the same. We do this because Sears said that it was proceeding under § 10 of the Tax Act, and that section expressly tequires that the money must be paid as a prerequisite to an appeal to the chancery court. Whether appellant exceeded his authority, in failing to' require Sears to make actual payments of such money, we need not now decide; but we treat this case as though Sears had fulfilled all the essentials required of it under § 10. We do this since Sears, in invoking for its benefit § 10 of the Tax Act, also necessarily assumed the concomitant burdens of that section.

II. Unjust .Enrichment. We have previously copied two paragraphs of the stipulation; and these show (1) that Sears obtained a permit from the State to collect the sales tax from Sears’ customers; and (2), that, acting under the authority and power of that permit, Sears actually collected the sales tax from the purchasers in the transactions here involved. Whose money is it now? Either, it belongs to the State, or it belongs to the persons who paid the taxes to Sears. At all events, it is not Sears’ money. How, then, can Sears be heard in this effort to recover the money that it has paid? Or, if we should treat the money as still in the hands of Sears, how can Sears be heard in its effort to keep the money, which it collected as an agent of the State? The propounding of the questions suggests the answers that must be made in a court of equity. To allow Sears to recover this money, or to retain it, is to disregard completely the entire doctrine against unjust enrichment. t

In the American Law Institute’s Restatement of the Law of Restitution, the following appears in § 1-A, as a fair statement of what is meant by unjust enrichment: 3 “A person is unjustly enriched if the retention of the benefit would be unjust.”

A well-considered ease, applying the rule against unjust enrichment in a situation similar to the one in the case at bar, is Shannon v. Hughes & Co., 270 Ky. 530, 109 S. W. 2d 1174. There, the State of Kentucky had undertaken to enact a retail sales tax of seven cents per quart of ice cream.

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206 S.W.2d 20, 212 Ark. 308, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-comm-of-revenues-v-sears-roebuck-co-ark-1947.