Cutter, J.
The plaintiff (Payne) seeks a declaration under G. L. c. 231A to determine whether, pursuant to G. L. c. 64C,
§§ 12,13, and 14, “in computing his minimum price
for cigarettes, a wholesaler must first add the State cigarette excise ... to the price paid by him to the manufacturer and then apply the 2% and %% markups provided by” §13 (c). In the Superior Court, the judge made findings of material facts, and reported the case without decision on the pleadings and findings.
Payne and the defendant The Slate Company (Slate) are corporations licensed as wholesalers under c. 64C and for many years have been in competition “for the business of cigarette retailers” in metropolitan Boston. Pursuant to § 25 (see fn. 2,
supra)
the Commissioner of Corporations and Taxation periodically issued rulings prescribing the method by which “cost to the wholesaler,” as defined in G. L. c. 64C, § 13 (as amended through St. 1958, c. 633, §§ 1, 2),* *
should be computed for purposes of § 14. Until the
enactment of St. 1953, c. 654, reorganizing the Department of Corporations and Taxation, the “method of computation prescribed by the Commissioner . . . was to add the Massachusetts cigarette excise tax to the price paid by the wholesaler to the manufacturer and then apply to that sum the wholesaler’s markups of 2% and %% prescribed by” § 13 (c), see fn. 3. The “State Tax Commission has issued no regulation or ruling prescribing or utilizing a method of computation. However, since December, 1959, the Commissioner . . . acting through the bureau of excises, has stated orally that in computing his minimum price a wholesaler may add the cigarette excise tax after he had applied the prescribed markup to the invoice price paid by him to the manufacturer. . . . From the . . . enactment of chapter 64C in 1945 until December, 1959, the wholesalers of cigarettes added the state cigarette excise tax to the manufacturers’ invoice price as their usual practice upon the belief that . . . [this] was required by the Commissioner. . . . On December 9, 1959, . . . Slate . . . notified the Commissioner . . . that ... it intended to reduce its wholesale selling price of cigarettes to the lowest legal limit and that such price would be computed by applying the wholesaler’s markups to the manufacturers’ invoice price before and not after the addition of the State cigarette excise tax. . . . Thereafter . . . Slate . . . sold cigarettes in accordance with its announced intention, the reduction in price accomplished thereby amounting to approximately two cents per carton.” In 1956, there was enacted an amendment of c. 64C, § 6, to provide for reimbursing wholesalers for their services in tax collection (see St. 1956, c. 720, § 1). Statute 1953, c. 246, § 13, and later enactments, including St. 1956,
c. 354, § 11, contained a provision (now found in c. 64C, § 6, see St. 1960, c. 774, § 7) that the Massachusetts cigarette taxes should
‘ ‘
conclusively be presumed to be a direct tax on the retail consumer.” See fn. 2,
supra.
The purpose of this latter “amendment was to make the amount of the Massachusetts cigarette excise tax included in the price paid by the consumer an allowable deduction for purposes of Federal income tax under the provisions of section 164 (c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.”
“The manufacturer’s invoice price of cigarettes averages about $9.00 per one thousand cigarettes. . . . The invoice submitted by a wholesaler to a retailer in connection with the sale of cigarettes to the retailer includes the State cigarette excise tax.”
Payne contends that, under c. 64C, even since the 1953 and later amendments, a wholesaler, in computing his price, must add the Massachusetts excise to the “manufacturer’s invoice price” and then apply the prescribed percentage markups to the aggregate of these two items. Slate and the State Tax Commission, on the other hand, take the position that the wholesaler should add the excise after the application of his markup to the manufacturer’s invoice price. Our own decisions furnish no definite answer to this controversy. See
Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn.
v.
Ryan,
323 Mass. 154;
Westerly Tobacco Co.
v.
Huberman,
333 Mass. 548;
Harvey Payne, Inc.
v.
Slate Co.
342 Mass. 368, 370-371. Chapter 64C contains no provision defining the term, “invoice cost.”
We are dealing with a somewhat ambiguous statute, which has received at different times somewhat different administrative interpretations. One interpretation, as has been stated, antedated the 1953 reorganization of the department and the 1953 and later statutory amendments. The later interpretation has been oral only, except for the commission’s brief filed before us, and has not been embodied in official regulations. There were significant statutory changes in 1953 and thereafter.' We entertain doubts whether the early administrative action was consistent with the general structure of c. 64C. All these considerations
lead us to feel that this is not a case where substantial weight can be given to administrative interpretation. See
Allen
v.
Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn.
272 Mass. 502, 509;
Second Bank-State St. Trust Co.
v.
State Tax Commn.
337 Mass. 203, 211.
We do not regard as significant the failure of the Legislature to pass a bill clarifying the situation. See 1961 Senate Bill No. 375; 1961 House Journal, p. 1234; 1961 Senate Journal, p. 652;
State Tax Commn.
v.
Gray,
340 Mass. 535, 541-542. Cf.
Gordon
v.
State Tax Commn.
335 Mass. 431, 437.
Chapter 64C, § 6, as amended, indicates to us that the scheme of the excise, at least since 1953, calls for collection of the excise from the consumer. Each vendor of cigarettes within the Commonwealth must be licensed. See § 2. Each licensee (other than a retailer or “an unclassified acquirer,” a class of licensees with whom in this case we are not concerned) must file a return monthly showing “the number of cigarettes sold by such licensee . . . during the preceding . . . month” and must pay to the Commissioner an excise for each cigarette, unless an excise has previously been paid on that cigarette. See § 6, as amended, fn. 2. The provision makes the first vendor of a cigarette within the Commonwealth responsible for actual payment of the excise to the Commissioner. That vendor must collect the excise from his vendee, and each successive vendor must do likewise, until finally the excise is collected from the ultimate purchaser at retail. There is a declaration that the consumer pays the tax and this in essence means that three mills per cigarette of the total amount billed by each successive vendor within the Commonwealth is the excise. The price of the cigarette to any vendee (apart from the excise, but including the particular vendor’s markup) can only be what is left after the excise is subtracted.
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Cutter, J.
The plaintiff (Payne) seeks a declaration under G. L. c. 231A to determine whether, pursuant to G. L. c. 64C,
§§ 12,13, and 14, “in computing his minimum price
for cigarettes, a wholesaler must first add the State cigarette excise ... to the price paid by him to the manufacturer and then apply the 2% and %% markups provided by” §13 (c). In the Superior Court, the judge made findings of material facts, and reported the case without decision on the pleadings and findings.
Payne and the defendant The Slate Company (Slate) are corporations licensed as wholesalers under c. 64C and for many years have been in competition “for the business of cigarette retailers” in metropolitan Boston. Pursuant to § 25 (see fn. 2,
supra)
the Commissioner of Corporations and Taxation periodically issued rulings prescribing the method by which “cost to the wholesaler,” as defined in G. L. c. 64C, § 13 (as amended through St. 1958, c. 633, §§ 1, 2),* *
should be computed for purposes of § 14. Until the
enactment of St. 1953, c. 654, reorganizing the Department of Corporations and Taxation, the “method of computation prescribed by the Commissioner . . . was to add the Massachusetts cigarette excise tax to the price paid by the wholesaler to the manufacturer and then apply to that sum the wholesaler’s markups of 2% and %% prescribed by” § 13 (c), see fn. 3. The “State Tax Commission has issued no regulation or ruling prescribing or utilizing a method of computation. However, since December, 1959, the Commissioner . . . acting through the bureau of excises, has stated orally that in computing his minimum price a wholesaler may add the cigarette excise tax after he had applied the prescribed markup to the invoice price paid by him to the manufacturer. . . . From the . . . enactment of chapter 64C in 1945 until December, 1959, the wholesalers of cigarettes added the state cigarette excise tax to the manufacturers’ invoice price as their usual practice upon the belief that . . . [this] was required by the Commissioner. . . . On December 9, 1959, . . . Slate . . . notified the Commissioner . . . that ... it intended to reduce its wholesale selling price of cigarettes to the lowest legal limit and that such price would be computed by applying the wholesaler’s markups to the manufacturers’ invoice price before and not after the addition of the State cigarette excise tax. . . . Thereafter . . . Slate . . . sold cigarettes in accordance with its announced intention, the reduction in price accomplished thereby amounting to approximately two cents per carton.” In 1956, there was enacted an amendment of c. 64C, § 6, to provide for reimbursing wholesalers for their services in tax collection (see St. 1956, c. 720, § 1). Statute 1953, c. 246, § 13, and later enactments, including St. 1956,
c. 354, § 11, contained a provision (now found in c. 64C, § 6, see St. 1960, c. 774, § 7) that the Massachusetts cigarette taxes should
‘ ‘
conclusively be presumed to be a direct tax on the retail consumer.” See fn. 2,
supra.
The purpose of this latter “amendment was to make the amount of the Massachusetts cigarette excise tax included in the price paid by the consumer an allowable deduction for purposes of Federal income tax under the provisions of section 164 (c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.”
“The manufacturer’s invoice price of cigarettes averages about $9.00 per one thousand cigarettes. . . . The invoice submitted by a wholesaler to a retailer in connection with the sale of cigarettes to the retailer includes the State cigarette excise tax.”
Payne contends that, under c. 64C, even since the 1953 and later amendments, a wholesaler, in computing his price, must add the Massachusetts excise to the “manufacturer’s invoice price” and then apply the prescribed percentage markups to the aggregate of these two items. Slate and the State Tax Commission, on the other hand, take the position that the wholesaler should add the excise after the application of his markup to the manufacturer’s invoice price. Our own decisions furnish no definite answer to this controversy. See
Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn.
v.
Ryan,
323 Mass. 154;
Westerly Tobacco Co.
v.
Huberman,
333 Mass. 548;
Harvey Payne, Inc.
v.
Slate Co.
342 Mass. 368, 370-371. Chapter 64C contains no provision defining the term, “invoice cost.”
We are dealing with a somewhat ambiguous statute, which has received at different times somewhat different administrative interpretations. One interpretation, as has been stated, antedated the 1953 reorganization of the department and the 1953 and later statutory amendments. The later interpretation has been oral only, except for the commission’s brief filed before us, and has not been embodied in official regulations. There were significant statutory changes in 1953 and thereafter.' We entertain doubts whether the early administrative action was consistent with the general structure of c. 64C. All these considerations
lead us to feel that this is not a case where substantial weight can be given to administrative interpretation. See
Allen
v.
Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn.
272 Mass. 502, 509;
Second Bank-State St. Trust Co.
v.
State Tax Commn.
337 Mass. 203, 211.
We do not regard as significant the failure of the Legislature to pass a bill clarifying the situation. See 1961 Senate Bill No. 375; 1961 House Journal, p. 1234; 1961 Senate Journal, p. 652;
State Tax Commn.
v.
Gray,
340 Mass. 535, 541-542. Cf.
Gordon
v.
State Tax Commn.
335 Mass. 431, 437.
Chapter 64C, § 6, as amended, indicates to us that the scheme of the excise, at least since 1953, calls for collection of the excise from the consumer. Each vendor of cigarettes within the Commonwealth must be licensed. See § 2. Each licensee (other than a retailer or “an unclassified acquirer,” a class of licensees with whom in this case we are not concerned) must file a return monthly showing “the number of cigarettes sold by such licensee . . . during the preceding . . . month” and must pay to the Commissioner an excise for each cigarette, unless an excise has previously been paid on that cigarette. See § 6, as amended, fn. 2. The provision makes the first vendor of a cigarette within the Commonwealth responsible for actual payment of the excise to the Commissioner. That vendor must collect the excise from his vendee, and each successive vendor must do likewise, until finally the excise is collected from the ultimate purchaser at retail. There is a declaration that the consumer pays the tax and this in essence means that three mills per cigarette of the total amount billed by each successive vendor within the Commonwealth is the excise. The price of the cigarette to any vendee (apart from the excise, but including the particular vendor’s markup) can only be what is left after the excise is subtracted. The first licensed vendor within the Commonwealth is really acting as a compensated excise collection representative of the Commissioner.
This fundamental structure of c. 64C sheds light on the meaning of the term “invoice cost” as used throughout § 13, as amended. The tax must be passed on to the consumer. Without regard to how a manufacturer or wholesaler makes up his invoices, the invoice cost to the purchaser is what the purchaser pays apart from the excise. The invoice is to be treated as if the excise had been billed as a separate item.
This has the effect of treating all licensees equally. For instance, a wholesaler who buys from an out of State manufacturer, who presumably will not have paid the excise, will add a markup computed on the same basis as that computed by one who buys from a manufacturer licensed in Massachusetts, who will state the excise as an item in the bill. This interpretation avoids a possible inequality of treatment which might present constitutional problems. See
Ferguson
v.
Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn.
316 Mass. 318, 323-324;
Opinion of the
Justices, 341 Mass. 760, 785.
We recognize that the principal purpose of the 1953 amendment (now in § 6) clearly stating that the excise was “a direct tax on the retail consumer” was to avoid doubts with respect to whether the tax was a proper deduction from the consumer’s gross income for purposes of Int. Rev. Code of 1954, 26 IT. S. C. (1958) § 164 (c). See Rev. Rul. 54-132, 1954-1 C. B. 57, distinguishing I. T. 3670, 1944-1 C. B. 114. That purpose seems to us wholly consistent with our interpretation of c. 64C.
A final decree is to be entered declaring that the excise imposed by Gr. L. c. 640, as amended, is not a part of the “cost to the wholesaler” as defined in Gl. L. c. 640, § 13 (c) ; that it must be included in a wholesaler’s invoice as a separate item after, and wholly unrelated to, the markups prescribed by § 13 (c); and that it must be collected by the wholesaler and eventually from the ultimate consumer in addition to the price of the cigarettes themselves.
So ordered.