Hunnewell Trucking, Inc. v. Johnson

172 A.2d 732, 157 Me. 338, 1961 Me. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 172 A.2d 732 (Hunnewell Trucking, Inc. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunnewell Trucking, Inc. v. Johnson, 172 A.2d 732, 157 Me. 338, 1961 Me. LEXIS 42 (Me. 1961).

Opinion

Dubord, J.

This is an appeal, filed under the provisions of Section 33, Chapter 17, R. S., 1954 (as amended), and M.R.C.P. 80 (B), from the imposition of a use tax by the State Tax Assessor upon personal property owned by the appellant.

*339 At the time of the imposition of the tax, the appellant was engaged in interstate commerce by motor truck between the States of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. The pertinent statutes involved are certain portions of § 2, and § 4 (as amended), and § 10 I, Chapter 17, R. S., 1954.

Section 4 (as amended), reads as follows:

“Sec. 4. Use tax. A tax is imposed on the storage, use or other consumption in this state of tangible personal property, purchased at retail sale on and after July 1, 1957, at the rate of 3% of the sale price. Every person so storing, using or otherwise consuming is liable for the tax until he has paid the same or has taken a receipt from his seller, thereto duly authorized by the assessor, showing that the seller has collected the sales or use tax, in which case the seller shall be liable for it.”

The words “storage” and “use” are defined in § 2, Chapter 17, as follows:

“ ‘Storage’ includes any keeping or retention in this state for any purpose, except subsequent use outside of this state, of tangible personal property purchased at retail sale.”
“ ‘Use’ includes the exercise in this state of any right or power over tangible personal property incident to its ownership when purchased by the user at retail sale.”

Section 10 I, reads as follows:

“Sec. 10. Exemptions. No tax on sales, storage or use shall be collected upon or in connection with:
“I. Exemptions by constitutional provisions. Sales which this state is prohibited from taxing under the constitution or laws of the United States or under the constitution of this state.”

*340 According to the agreed statement of facts the appellant purchased outside of the State of Maine, and brought in to the state certain materials and supplies (not including fuel) for use upon its motor trucks. More specifically these materials and supplies included motor parts, tires and other materials all to be used on the motor vehicle trucks by the appellant in its business in interstate commerce. All these materials, parts and supplies were placed in the Portland, Maine terminal of the appellant for the sole and exclusive purpose of being affixed to the motor trucks and used in the normal course of the business of the appellant. It is stipulated that no sales tax was paid upon these materials in the state or states of purchase.

Eelying upon the provisions of the statutes previously referred to, the State Tax Assessor imposed a use tax against the appellant. From this assessment, the appellant filed an appeal claiming that the imposition of this tax constitutes an unconstitutional burden upon the interstate operations of the appellant.

The State Tax Assessor made the assessment upon the theory that the goods upon which the tax was assessed had come to rest in the State of Maine after importation therein, and had become part of the common mass of property within the State of Maine. Henneford et al. v. Silas Mason Co., Inc., et al., 300 U. S. 577, 57 S. Ct. 524.

A study of the most recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States upon the point indicates that there is adequate precedent for the action of the State Tax Assessor.

In the case of Nashville, Chattanooga, St. Louis Railway v. Wallace (1933), 288 U. S. 249, 53 S. Ct. 345, an interstate rail carrier purchased large quantities of gasoline outside the State of Tennessee and brought it into the state in its tank cars unloading it into storage tanks where it remained *341 until withdrawn and used to operate the company’s engines in interstate commerce. The storage was a preliminary step to use. The State of Tennessee levied an excise tax on the storage of the gasoline. The court said:

“The gasoline, upon being unloaded and stored, ceased to be a subject of transportation in interstate commerce, and lost its immunity as such from state taxation.
“The fact that the oil was, in the ordinary course of appellant’s business, later withdrawn from storage for use, some within and some without the state, part of it thus becoming again the subject of interstate transportation, did not affect the power of the state to tax it all before that transportation commenced. Neither the appellant, the shippers, nor the carrier, at the time of the shipment of the gasoline from points of origin, arranged a destination for any part of the oil other than appellant’s storage tanks in Tennessee.
“We cannot say that the tax is a forbidden burden on interstate commerce because appellant uses the gasoline, subsequent to the incidence of the tax, as an instrument of interstate commerce.
“It cannot be doubted that, when the gasoline came to rest in storage, the state was as free to tax it, notwithstanding its prospective use as an instrument of interstate commerce, as it was to tax appellant’s right of way, rolling stock or other instruments of interstate commerce, which are subject to local property taxes.
“Hence there can be no valid objection to the taxation of the exercise of any right or power incident to appellant’s ownership of the gasoline, which falls short of a tax directly imposed on its use in interstate commerce, deemed forbidden in Helson v. Kentucky, 279 U. S. 245. Here the tax is imposed on the successive exercise of two of those powers, the storage and withdrawal from storage of the gasoline. Both powers are com *342 pletely exercised before use of the gasoline in interstate commerce begins. The tax imposed upon their exercise is therefore not one imposed on the use of the gasoline as an instrument of commerce, and the burden of it is too indirect and remote from the function of interstate commerce itself to transgress constitutional limitations.”

A basic case on the applicability of a use tax on transactions involving interstate commerce is Southern Pacific Company v. Gallagher (1939), 306 U. S. 167, 59 S. Ct. 389. In that case the State of California imposed a use tax upon materials used by the Southern Pacific Railroad Company in its interstate operations: The material to which the use tax applied had been purchased outside the state and brought into California in interstate commerce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 A.2d 732, 157 Me. 338, 1961 Me. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunnewell-trucking-inc-v-johnson-me-1961.