Hickok Oil Corp. v. Evatt

49 N.E.2d 937, 141 Ohio St. 644, 141 Ohio St. (N.S.) 644, 26 Ohio Op. 202, 1943 Ohio LEXIS 473
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1943
Docket29417
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 N.E.2d 937 (Hickok Oil Corp. v. Evatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickok Oil Corp. v. Evatt, 49 N.E.2d 937, 141 Ohio St. 644, 141 Ohio St. (N.S.) 644, 26 Ohio Op. 202, 1943 Ohio LEXIS 473 (Ohio 1943).

Opinions

Turner, J.

Appellant, a dealer in motor vehicle fuel and liquid fuel, contends that the Ohio motor vehicle fuel excise tax, the Ohio liquid fuel excise tax, the Michigan gasoline tax and the Ontario gasoline tax which remain in its hands at the end of its fiscal year should not be treated as taxes or assessments under Section 5327, General Code, but should be held to be current accounts payable and, therefore, deductible by appellant from its accounts receivable and prepaid items in making its return for taxation.

*648 Section 5327, General Code, provides:

“Tlie term ‘credits’ as so used, means tlie excess of the snm of all current accounts receivable and prepaid items used in business when added together estimating every such account and item at its true value in money, over and above the sum of current accounts payable of the business, other than taxes and assessments. ‘Current accounts’ includes items receivable or payable on demand or within one year from the date of inception, however evidenced. ‘Prepaid items’ does not include tangible property. In making up the sum of such current accounts payable there shall not be taken into account an acknowledgment of indebtedness, unless founded on some consideration actually received, and believed at the time of making such acknowledgment to be a full consideration therefor; nor an acknowledgment for the purpose of diminishing the amount of credits to be listed for taxation.”

We are asked in this case to decide when a tax is not a tax or at least when a tax may become an account payable notwithstanding that the Ohio statute under consideration specifically eliminates taxes and assessments from accounts payable and, furthermore, provides that accounts payable must be founded upon some consideration actually received. The only possible consideration actually received by appellant is the privilege of acting as a dealer in motor vehicle fuel under Sections 5526, 5527 and 5541, General Oocle, or of acting as a dealer of liquid fuel under Sections 5542-1 and 5542-2, General Code.

Appellant takes the position that it handles these taxes “only as a collection agency” as “collected by appellant and remitted to the state of Ohio”; “that an account payable may arise from * * * ‘fiduciary relation’ ”; that as to the state of Michigan appellant “stands in a fiduciary relation with reference to the money collected”; and with reference to the Ohio taxes, “The relationship is that of a fiduciary relation of a public nature created by law.”

*649 As will be shown later, we think appellant’s contention is correct in respect of its relationship to the state of Michigan. Assuming that appellant is correct also as to Ohio, we are at once met with the query in respect of all such taxes, by what right does appellant attempt to set off the funds belonging to its principals against claims owing to appellant in its own right? Of course, the agent or fiduciary may be compelled to account in equity to' his principal, but this does not convert appellant’s liability to his principal into an account payable. An account payable results from the relationship of debtor and creditor. In the event of the debtor’s failure, the creditor has to participate in the debtor’s assets pro rata. In case an agent or fiduciary fails to account to his principal the relationship is not that of debtor and creditor for the reason that the ownership of the fund is in the principal and the principal may follow and recover the entire fund without sharing with creditors to whom accounts payable are owing.

Appellant argues for a liberal construction of the term “accounts payable” as used in Section 5327, General Code. The benefit of a doubt is to be given to the taxpayer in the construction of tax laws. But there must first be some doubt. The positive language of the statute in question eliminates taxes and assessments from the category of accounts payable.

In the case of Black-Clawson Co. v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 139 Ohio St., 100, 106, 38 N. E. (2d), 403, we called attention in the concurring opinion to the fact that prior to the amendment of Section 5327, General Code, in 115 Ohio Laws, 553, the taxpayer was permitted to deduct the sum total of his debts and obligations from accounts receivable. The purpose of the amendment was to narrow the class of liabilities which might be deducted from accounts receivable and prepaid items. It is within the power of the General Assembly not to allow any deduction and to tax re *650 eeivables at their face value.

At a time when all legal bona fide debts might be deducted under Section 5327, General Code, this court held in Tax Commission v. National Malleable Castings Co., 111 Ohio St., 117, 144 N. E., 604, 35 A. L. R., 1448:

“The Legislature in its definition of ‘credits,’ in Section 5327, General Code (95 O. L., 533), used the word ‘debts’ in the significance of an obligation based, upon contract express or implied, and did not thereby include taxes due the government of the United States;, nor thereby authorize the deduction of such taxes, from the sum of all legal claims and demands.”

“Account payable ” is a narrower term than ‘ ‘ debt. ’ ’’ Yet the authorities generally hold that taxes do not come within the ordinary meaning of the word “debt,” this term being limited usually to liabilities arising-out of contract.

We are not unmindful of the cases of Welsh v. Perkins, 8 Ohio, 52, and Creps v. Baird, 3 Ohio St., 277, holding that under the facts of these cases taxes were debts.

Under appellant’s theory that it is an agent or fiduciary in respect of the items in question, such items do not become mere debts of appellant but are funds of the states of Ohio and Michigan collected by appellant as agent. Certainly such funds may not be deducted from appellant’s accounts receivable and prepaid items under Section 5327, General Code.

Appellant argues that because it increases the price of its fuel to its customers by the amount of the respective taxes, the amount of these taxes is in its accounts receivable and an equitable treatment would require the deduction claimed. That is a matter to be addressed to the General Assembly rather than to the courts. We are here limited to the amounts of deductions fixed by the General Assembly. If the matter were one of equitable cognizance we would have *651 to know the amount of the taxes in the accounts receivable at the time of the claimed deduction. Even if appellant’s credit terms to its customers coincided with its accounting or payment date to the respective states, common experience would tell us that the amounts claimed as taxes in the accounts receivable would seldom, if ever, balance with the amount of taxes claimed as an accounts payable deduction.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E.2d 937, 141 Ohio St. 644, 141 Ohio St. (N.S.) 644, 26 Ohio Op. 202, 1943 Ohio LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickok-oil-corp-v-evatt-ohio-1943.