Gold Trading Stamp Company v. Commonwealth

5 S.W.2d 910, 224 Ky. 136, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 20, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 910 (Gold Trading Stamp Company v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gold Trading Stamp Company v. Commonwealth, 5 S.W.2d 910, 224 Ky. 136, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 551 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

In this opinion the appellant, Gold Trading Stamp 'Company, will be referred to as “defendant,” and the .appellee, commonwealth of Kentucky, by its state rev.enne agent, will be referred to as “plaintiff.”

Plaintiff by its state revenue agent sought, by this .action, instituted in the Jefferson circuit court against .defendant, to collect from it the annual license fees of :$350 prescribed by section 4224 of our present statutes for doing business as a trading stamp company in this -commonwealth, for the years 1920 to 1927, both inclusive. .Defendant contends that it is not liable under the lan.guage of the statute for the license fees sought to be recovered; but the trial court held otherwise and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the aggregate amount of the fees, with interest from the time each installment was due, and 20 per cent, penalty thereon as is .prescribed by section 4263-4 of the 1922 edition of Carroll’s Statutes, and to reverse that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The statute levying the annual license fee here involved says:

“For all resident or foreign trading stamp companies or corporations doing business in this state, three hundred and fifty dollars ($350.00). A trading stamp company, as used in this act, shall be construed to mean any company or organization that .gives premiums of valuable personal property in *138 exchange for stamps or checks furnished to purchasers of merchandise.”

Defendant admits that it is engaged in the trading stamp business, i. e., it manufactures them, sells them to merchants and redeems them with cash, and all of those facts were indisputably established at the trial; but it strenuously insists through its counsel that its redeeming the stamps sold by it to its subscribers (merchants) in money or cash is not the giving of “premiums of valuable personal property in exchange” therefor, and which is the only character of trading stamp company upon which the statute levies the license fee.

The method of conducting defendant’s business is in substance this: It manufactures and sells trading stamps to any and all retail merchants who desire to purchase them, and collects therefor $2.50 per 1,250 stamps and delivers to the purchaser blank books with blank pages upon which may be pasted in each book 600 stamps. The merchant who purchases the stamps delivers them to his cash-paying customers and those who settle their accounts within 10 days from the first of the succeeding month after the purchase, and they are supposed to preserve the stamps and paste them in the blank book, which the merchant also furnishes to his customer; the face value of stamps so given to the customer being the amount of 2% per cent, of the accounts so paid. Upon a return of the stamps to any merchant who handles defendant’s .stamps the customer is entitled to their face value in merchandise, or the merchant will pay him cash for the stamps by discounting their face value 20' per cent. The merchant so redeeming the stamps, with either merchandise or cash, afterwards returns them to defendant, who pays cash for them, less 20 per cent, of their face value. The customer of the various merchants handling the stamps may likewise have them cashed by defendant at its office at the same discount.

Plaintiff contends: (1) That such method of handling stamps comes squarely within the statute, since the premium (cash) that it gives in return therefor, or with which it redeems them, is of “valuable personal property,” and renders defendant liable for the license fees according to the express terms of, and the definition contained in the statute. It also contends: (2) That if the redemption of the stamps by defendant in cash at its *139 .central office in the city of Louisville does not bring it within the terms of the statute, then under the method of doing business by defendant and the rules it promulgated therefor, each merchant who redeems stamps in merchandise is its agent for that purpose, and for that reason it is liable for the license fees, since the redemption of the stamps by the merchant (being the agent of .defendant) with merchandise is a redemption of them by defendant, upon the ground that whatever one does by his agent he does by himself. Our consideration of tins case has convinced us that plaintiff is correct in contention (1), and it will therefore not be necessary to discuss or determine contention (2).

It will be observed that the statute requires all trading stamp companies coming within its purview to pay the license fee. It defines its purview in this language:

“A trading stamp company, as used in this act, shall be construed to mean any company or organization that gives premiums of valuable personal property in exchange for stamps or checks furnished to purchasers of merchandise.”

Defendant, as we have seen, redeems with cash the .stamps purchased from it by its subscriber (the merchant) on presentation for that purpose, either by the subscriber or the customer to whom he delivered them, and the only question is: Whether the case with which the redemption is made is “valuable personal property?”

To our minds there is no possible room for interpretation, since the involved language is so plain that there is not the least possibility of doubt concerning its meaning. The contention of defendant is (and must necessarily be) that the phrase “valuable personal property,” as used in the statute in defining the character of trading stamp company that must pay the license fees, limited the character of trading stamp companies who are liable .therefor to those who redeemed its stamps with premiums consisting of corporeal personal property. In other words, that it was the intention of the Legislature to prescribe that the premium with which the stamps were redeemed should consist of some article of merchandise and unless it was so the company was not required to pay the license fee. But we know of no rule of interpretation "that would require us to utterly ignore the plain and univerally understood meaning of words in a statute so as *140 to narrow their plain and well understood significance, in the absence of qualifying expressions therein. In fact, the first and fundamental rule for the interpretation of statutes is to attribute to the words contained therein their usual and ordinary meaning, unless there is something therein contained plainly indicating a contrary sense in which the Legislature employed them.

There is nothing contained in the statute under consideration to detract from or limit the plain and unambiguous meaning of the phrase, “valuable personal property” with which the trading stamp companies that are made liable for the license fee redeemed the stamps in which they deal. If money or cash is not valuable personal property, then every lexicographer, law writer, and every court, who, without exception, have so stated and held, have written in vain. See 18 R. C. L. 1268, and 27 Cyc. 820. To hold otherwise as defendant would have us do would revolutionize the commercial activities of the country, to say nothing about overruling the invariable and long-standing law upon the subject.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 910, 224 Ky. 136, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-trading-stamp-company-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1928.