Dal-Worth Shippers Ass'n v. United States

211 F. Supp. 590, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6417, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5078
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 18, 1962
DocketCiv. A. No. 9148
StatusPublished

This text of 211 F. Supp. 590 (Dal-Worth Shippers Ass'n v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dal-Worth Shippers Ass'n v. United States, 211 F. Supp. 590, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6417, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5078 (N.D. Tex. 1962).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

This is an action to recover $10,524.30 of federal transportation taxes paid by the plaintiff to the defendant for the period beginning October 1, 1954 and ending July 31, 1958.

Plaintiff filed excise tax returns reporting liability for transportation of property taxes assessed on May 23, 1958 and September 5, 1958, respectively, for periods and in amounts as follows:

Date Filed or Scheduled Period Amount
4- 28-58 10-1-54 thru 12-31-57 $ 8,904.48
5- 1-28 1-1-58 thru 3-31-58 751.37
8-6-58 4-1-58 thru 6-30-58 763.41
10-31-58 1-1-58 thru 9-30-58 105.04
TOTAL $10,524.30

[591]*591This liability and addition liability for assessed interest and penalty with respect thereto were satisfied in full by payments and credits applied as follows:

Date Amount
5-28-58 $2,226.12
7-25-58 2,226.12
10-15-58 4,452.24
$8,904.48
Date Amount
10-23-58 (interest) 129.50
(total) 9,033.98
5-1-58 (full paid return) 751.37
8-6-58 763.41
9-12-58 (17.16 Penalty ' 0.34 interest)
TOTAL 780.91
10-31-58 (full paid return) 105.04
Total Payments $10,671.30

On March 8, 1960, plaintiff filed timely claims for refund for periods and amounts as follows:

Period Amount
10-1-54 thru 12-31-54 $ 518.02
1-1-55 thru 12-31-55 2,699.55
1-1-56 thru 12-31-56 2,783.84
1-1-57 thru 12-31-57 2,908.07
1-1-58 thru 7-31-58 1,619.82
Total $10,524:30

Each of plaintiff’s claims for refund was disallowed in full by separate statutory notices under date of August 18, 1960. The instant action for recovery of the sum of $10,524.30, plus statutory interest was timely instituted on May 3, 1962.

Plaintiff is a corporation which was incorporated on the 12th day of February, 1949. It was organized as a membership organization under the sponsorship of a group of merchants in Dallas for the purpose of reducing the cost of their transportation from their principal sources of supply. At a later date the privilege of membership was extended to merchants in the Fort Worth area.

The Association does not issue shares of stock. Membership is evidenced by a letter of acceptance of a member’s application. ■ Services of the Association are rendered for members only. There are about two hundred members at this time. Control of the Association is exercised by a Board of Directors consisting of twenty-one persons, representing about ten per cent of the active membership, and an Executive Committee consisting of seven members. Under present Bylaws the maximum membership of the Board of Directors is twenty-five. A manager is employed who oversees the clerical work which constitutes the day-to-day operation of the Association. Bylaws permit admission of new members to the Association by majority vote either of the Board of Directors or the Executive Committee, although in normal practice a prospective member will be rejected or admitted by unanimous action. No members are solicited by the Association or any of its officers. The Directors all serve without pay.

The Association arranges the transportation of freight for its members from their vendors in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago and surrounding areas to Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas. Almost all of the present members are located either at Dallas or Fort Worth and [592]*592their freight is handled on a collect basis. About one-half dozen vendors at origin, however, have been permitted to participate to the extent that their freight is prepaid.

Shipments for Association members will vary in size from extremes of less than one pound to a maximum of twenty thousand. Typically they will range in weight from twenty-five to a hundred fifty pounds.

Through the efforts of the Association the members’ individual small shipments are combined at origin and moved on a volume basis to obtain the benefit of railroad carload volume rates. These rates are substantially lower in cents per hundredweight than would apply to the individual movement of such shipments, and it is on this difference that the Association effects savings in the freight costs of its members.

Physical movement of freight for the members of the Association is commenced through the agency of a consolidator at the origin cities. A representative of the consolidator receives traffic for the Association on the docks of the initial rail carrier. When freight is so received by the consolidator, then immediately thereafter and as a part of one related transaction, he turns it over to the railroad which loads and commences the physical transportation. The Association shipments are moved by railroad as carload traffic.

The shipments received from vendors in the industrial area of the origin city, except at Chicago, are transported to the consolidator at the railroad docks in local drayage service. This drayage is arranged and the charge therefor and tax are paid for by the vendor. Shipments from outlying towns and cities in the origin areas are received from the over-the-road motor carriers from the point of shipment. These are received in the same fashion as local shipments, but on them the motor freight charge and tax is paid by the consolidator and billed by him to the Association. The drayage at Chicago is also handled-in this manner. The consolidator maintains a record of receipts on all shipments and prepares a shipping order and a railroad bill of lading on each consolidated carload of traffic. This bill of lading is executed by an agent for the railroad. In the bill of lading the consolidator ordinarily is named as consignor and Dai-Worth as consignee. Some bills are consigned to “Dai-Worth, c/o Texas Express Company,” which is drayage agent for the Association at Dallas and Fort Worth.

A detailed manifest of the contents of each railroad freight car is prepared by the consolidator and mailed to the Association. The railroad uses its copiés of the original bill of lading and manifest for the preparation of a waybill to accompany the carload movement and as the basis for its subsequent bill of charges to the Association.

The rail cars may be loaded in straight carload quantities either to Dallas or Fort Worth, or they may be consigned to either one of those points with a stopoff for partial unloading at the other.

At destination the freight is delivered by the railroad to its own dock and warehouse facilities both at Dallas and Fort Worth. In Dallas the freight is unloaded by railroad employees over dock space within the railroad’s exclusive possession. At Fort Worth the freight is unloaded by employees of Texas Delivery Service on space leased by it from the railroad company.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F. Supp. 590, 10 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6417, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dal-worth-shippers-assn-v-united-states-txnd-1962.