D. & A. Construction Co. v. Jefferson Davis Parish School Board

207 So. 2d 542, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5365
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1968
DocketNo. 2276
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 207 So. 2d 542 (D. & A. Construction Co. v. Jefferson Davis Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. & A. Construction Co. v. Jefferson Davis Parish School Board, 207 So. 2d 542, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5365 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

LEAR, Judge.

This is a suit to determine the validity of a tax assessment on a dragline and tractor owned by petitioner and for the refund of Five Hundred Twenty-eight Dollars and Seventy-six Cents ($528.76) v'hich peti[543]*543tioner paid to defendant, under protest, as an assessed “use” tax, which defendant claims was legally assessed under that ordinance entitled, “Jefferson Davis Parish School Board General Sales and Use Tax.”

After trial and submission, the district court rendered judgment as prayed for in favor of plaintiff and defendant provoked an appeal to the Supreme Court.

That court, by a decision rendered November 6, 1967, 251 La. 257, 203 So.2d 712, determined that the petition in this matter did not assail the constitutionality of the ordinance and found that the objection raised by the petition was the application of the ordinance to the particular subject matter herein involved. For those reasons it transferred the appeal to this court.

After due and careful consideration, we feel that our learned brother in the district court has correctly analyzed and stated the facts and law of this matter. We, therefore, adopt his opinion as ours. The district court stated:

“D & A Construction, Inc., a Vermilion Parish corporation and contractor, that does oil field construction work in South Louisiana, filed this suit to recover ‘use’ taxes paid under protest to the Jefferson Davis Parish School Board. The Parish adopted a 1% sales tax for the benefit of the public schools effective January 1, 1966, to implement the unfunded teacher pay raise.

“In the spring of 1966 D & A moved a bulldozer and dragline into Jefferson Davis Parish to fulfill a contract with Union Oil Company, and in April the administrator of the School Board tax fund notified D & A that it was being assessed for this equipment under the sales tax.

“D & A bought the bulldozer on September 29, 1964, at Reserve, Louisiana, and the dragline on January 19, 1965, in Baton-Rouge, Louisiana, for delivery in Abbe-ville, and the 2% sales tax then applicable was paid at the time the equipment was purchased. No Parish sales or use tax was previously paid on this equipment. The equipment was used for several weeks in Jefferson Davis Parish, until the job was completed, then brought back to D & A in Abbeville, Louisiana.

“Mr. Steven Lejeune, the tax administrator for the School Board, readily acknowledges that he has not charged Jefferson Davis Parish residents a sales or use tax for equipment purchased before January 1, 1966, on the equipment that they had in the Parish on the effective date, but states that he has charged everyone, residents and nonresidents, a 1% tax on equipment bought outside the Parish and brought into the Parish subsequent to the effective date, regardless of when the equipment was purchased. He made a point of getting out a bulletin, dated August 5, 1966 (approximately one month after this suit was filed) warning a few contractors of this possibility. No effort has been made to collect such a use tax on automobiles or farm implements which leave the Parish and later return. Mr. Lejeune cites no authority for his letter of August 5th and it appears to be a misconstrual of Section 3.01(14) of the Ordinance.

“Mr. Claude Sirmon, one of the three owners of plaintiff company, testified that when the equipment in question was bought, his company had no contract to do work in Jefferson Davis Parish and certainly wasn’t trying to avoid the Jefferson Davis Parish sales tax, which actually wasn’t then in existence.

“Plaintiff’s primary complaint is that Mr. Lejeune is giving retroactive effect to the use portion of this sales and use tax, and that this is unconstitutional. Alternatively he alleges that this results in discriminatory application of the tax since, in fact, it makes it apply to out of Parish contractors but not to Jefferson Davis Parish contractors. Furthermore, D & A contends that the equipment has not ‘come to rest’ in Jefferson Davis Parish and has not become a part of the mass of property in this Parish’ as required by Section 3.02, p. 9 of [544]*544the Ordinance before the tax becomes applicable.

“Sales and use taxes adopted at one and the same time are not to he construed separately but together. The use tax is for the purpose of catching those transactions which escaped imposition of sales tax because the actual transaction took place outside the Parish. The Ordinance itself shows this. Section 5.02 p. 12 and Section 3.02 p. 9.

“Since all parts of the Ordinance are to be construed in parii materii, Mr. Lejeune should not be giving retroactive effect to the use tax just as he is not giving retroactive effect to the sales tax. There is nothing in this Ordinance that calls for its retroactive application.

“Statutes and Oridinances are to be prospective and not retrospective, and the Ordinance in question specifically states that it is to be effective only from and after January 1, 1966. Section 2.01 p. 5. Therefore, the tax ought to cover only retail sales in Jefferson Davis Parish after that date, or equipment bought elsewhere after that date but then brought into and used in Jefferson Davis Parish.

“The Ordinance bears this out in Section 2.01 (2) when it calls for imposition of a use tax on the ‘cost price’ of each item bought elsewhere but used in Jefferson Davis Parish. If the Ordinance was meant to apply to anything but newly purchased equipment it would not call for the use of the ‘cost price’ in computing the tax, because obviously the cost price in a one, two or ten year old transaction is no longer proper basis for assessing a tax. There is no authority in the Statute for the imposition of the tax based on the ‘fair market value’ of the property when it enters the Parish.

“Mr. Lejeune testified that he is applying this tax retroactively only to the use tax portion. Apparently he is using as his authority Section 3.01(4) found on page (8) of the Ordinance. Section 3.01 contains the exemptions and exclusions from the tax and provides that taxes imposed by the Ordinance shall not apply to transactions involving, among other things, the purchase of property in the Parish for use outside the Parish. The subsection goes on to say:

‘If tangible personal property purchased tax free under the provisions of this Section is later brought into this Parish for use herein, the property shall be subject to the use tax as of the-time it is brought into the Parish for use herein * * *’ (emphasis added).

“It is apparent that this refers to that rare situation where property bought in Jefferson Davis Parish, necessarily after the passage of the sales tax Ordinance, but for use outside the Parish and thus exempt, is later brought back into the Parish for use, then the sales tax which was missed in the first place will then be imposed in the form of the use tax, unless a use tax has been paid in the Parish of initial use. There is nothing to give this minor subsection the broad application that Mr. Le-jeune has given it, applying it to items purchased in Jefferson Davis Parish before the imposition of the tax, which may by chance leave the Parish and then come back in, nor was it designed to apply to property purchased outside of Jefferson Davis Parish before the imposition of the sales tax, for use elsewhere and then brought into Jefferson Davis Parish only temporarily.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

American Finance Corp. of Coushatta, Inc. v. Small
250 So. 2d 768 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 So. 2d 542, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-a-construction-co-v-jefferson-davis-parish-school-board-lactapp-1968.