Gully v. Harrison County

162 So. 166, 173 Miss. 402, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 243
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1935
DocketNo. 31767.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 So. 166 (Gully v. Harrison County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gully v. Harrison County, 162 So. 166, 173 Miss. 402, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 243 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

McGrOWen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1932, W. J. Miller, state tax collector, brought his action at law against Harrison county seeking to recover from said county the proportion of privilege taxes levied on gasoline alleged to have been wrongfully distributed by the state auditor to Harrison county which should have been paid to Hancock county. The suit was for gasoline taxes so paid to' Harrison county from December 1, 1928, to 1932. The court below tried the case without the intervention of a jury upon an agreed statement of facts and some evidence, and rendered a judgment in favor of the appellant, J. B1. Gully, as state tax collector, the suit having been revived in his name for gasoline taxes paid to Harrison county from December 1, 1928, until November 1, 1930, but declined to award a judgment for any sum subsequent to the latter date. From that judgment the state tax collector appeals, and a cross-appeal is filed *407 by Harrison county as to the judgment rendered against it.

The declaration and proof show that since the 1st day of December, 1928, five large companies distributing gasoline in this state have conducted their business in this manner: They constructed large storage tanks at Gulf-port, in Harrison county, Mississippi, where each of them store gasoline in large quantities for sale in this state, and from their several storage tanks they deliver such commodity to the retail dealers and customers in the several counties, and especially in Hancock county. From these storage tanks located in Harrison county, by means of trucks, gasoline was transported to Hancock county and sold and delivered there to retail dealers, which retail dealers paid to the several companies the price of the gasoline plus the excise tax levied by the state auditor, and then sold to the customers and consumers the gasoline, and collected therefrom, in addition to the price of the gasoline, the tax imposed by the state and county thereon, under the statute. The special excise tax on gasoline levied by the county for sea walls was, on proper report thereon, collected by the state auditor and by him distributed to that county.

Harrison and Hancock counties are located on and about the Gulf of Mexico, and have constructed sea walls for the protection of their beach highways, and have issued bonds to pay for same in conformity with the statutes.

The distributors of gasoline, from the New Orleans offices of the several distributors, paid the amount of the state tax thereon promptly upon delivery of the commodity in the city of Gulfport in Harrison county, to the state auditor. Gulfport was selected by these companies as the point of storage because of its shipping facilities.

It is the contention of the cross-appellants that no recovery should be had against Harrison county because, *408 under the controlling statute, the gasoline táx levied and collected by the auditor in Harrison county had been properly distributed, and that Hancock county was entitled to none of it.

The appellant contends that the court properly awarded a judgment on behalf of Hancock county for the period ending November 1, 1930, but erred in not allowing the further sum subsequent to that date.

There is no controversy as to the amount of the tax, and the number of gallons of gasoline shipped from Harrison county by these distributors and sold in Hancock county.

By chapter 319!, Laws of 1924, the Legislature passed an act conferring upon counties bordering or abutting on the beach or shore of any body of tidewater the power to issue bonds to. build sea walls to protect their beach highways, giving them power to levy special privilege taxes on gasoline and other like products, for the payment of said' bonds and interest, and also, provided that these counties, so situated and so issuing bonds, should be entitled to one-half of the sum collected on account of gasoline taxes by the state auditor, which would otherwise have been paid over to. the state highway department. Section 8 of said act provides as follows: “Where any county issues bonds under this act for construction, improvement, or protection of any state highway, there shall be paid into the treasury of such county fifty per cent of any license taxes which would otherwise be paid into the state highway fund collected by the state in such county on motor vehicles or drivers thereof, and fifty per cent of any excise taxes levied and collected in such county by the state on gasoline, naphtha, alcohol or other fuel or substance ordinarily used for the operation of automobiles or like vehicles or machines operated by motor power, sold in or shipped into such county for sale therein, which would otherwise be paid into the state treasury to the credit of the state highway fund,” etc.

*409 This section was amended by chapter 234, Laws of 1926, by striking out the word “state” in the second line thereof immediately preceding the word “highway,” which in nowise affected the general operation thereof.

In order to understand this case, it is necessary to review the legislation imposing a privilege tax on gasoline. Chapter 116, Laws of 1922, imposed a tax of one cent per gallon on any person engaged in the business of distributing or retailing gasoline, to be paid to the state auditor upon monthly reports required to be made by each person subject to the tax. This tax was divided by giving sixty per cent to the highway commission, and forty per cent to the counties for gasoline sold therein.

Section 115, Laws of 1924, amended sections 2 and 3 of chapter 116, Laws of 1922, and -fixed a tax of three cents per gallon on all gasoline sold, the tax to be distributed fifty per cent to the counties, and fifty per cent to the state highway commission. The payment to the counties was based upon the proportion the number of the motor vehicles registered in that county bore to the number in the entire state, and hence the amount of the gasoline sold in each county then became unimportant.

In turn, this act was amended by chapter 198, Laws of 1928, by which privilege taxes were imposed upon all gasoline received in this state. Chapter 21, Laws of 1928, Extraordinary Session, was a general re-enactment of the laws of 1922, with amendments, and preserved intact section 8' of chapter 319, Laws of 1924.

Sections 4785 to 4799, Code of 1930, re-enacted gasoline laws as set forth in chapter 21, Extraordinary Session of 1928.

It will be observed that since 1924 the amount of the gasoline tax collected by the state auditor has been unimportant in so far as that amount bore relation to the several counties of the state, except as these coast counties, which were awarded a part of the state highway fund in addition to the amount which they received up *410 on the number of registered motor vehicles. The state auditor was required to collect the sea wall gasoline tax in each coast county on the gasoline sold therein from the dealers and distributors, and, upon so doing, to distribute it in accordance with the levy of excise taxes in the counties so interested during this period.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 166, 173 Miss. 402, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gully-v-harrison-county-miss-1935.