Interstate Oil Pipe Line Co. v. Stone

35 So. 2d 73, 203 Miss. 715, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 316
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1948
DocketNo. 36672.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 73 (Interstate Oil Pipe Line Co. v. Stone) 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
Interstate Oil Pipe Line Co. v. Stone, 35 So. 2d 73, 203 Miss. 715, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 316 (Mich. 1948).

Opinions

This is a suit wherein the appellant Interstate Oil Pipe Line Company seeks a refund of taxes in the sum of $25,326.63 which it paid on March 24, 1947, to the appellee A.H. Stone, Chairman of the State Tax Commission, *Page 722 for the period from January 1, 1944, to June 30, 1946, inclusive.

During the period aforesaid the appellant, a Deleware corporation which had qualified to do business in this State, owned and operated several pipe line systems for gathering crude oil from tanks on producing leases in numerous oil fields in Mississippi and transporting the same to some local shipping point on a nearby railroad where the same was in each instance transported in due time by the railroad company to an out of state destination.

The pipe lines systems, respectively consisted of pipes extending from a central or main line so as to connect with the oil tanks located on producing leases in the vicinity of the wells and thence to the loading racks or stations of the pipe line company adjacent to the railroad. At the oil tanks near the producing wells there were pumps installed by said company with which it pumped the oil from the tanks into its pipe line and then to the railroad, where it again pumped the same from its loading racks or tanks into the railroad tank cars as soon as such cars were "spotted" for that purpose.

The pipe line company made one charge of a few cents per barrel for pumping the oil from the lease tanks at the oil fields into its pipe line and thence to the railroad shipping point, the amount received for such service depending upon the distance to the railroad from each oil field, and then a separate and additional charge of two cents per barrel for pumping the same from its loading racks or tanks, into the railroad tank cars. Of course, it received no part of the charges collected by the railroad company for transporting the oil across the state line to its destinations. In fact, it had no contractual relation with the railroad company in connection with the latter's said interstate transportation of such oil.

The privilege tax for operating these pipe line systems for transporting the oil from one point to another in this *Page 723 State as well as the use tax on the use of the tangible personal property used in connection therewith were collected pursuant to assessments made after proper notices given and hearings had thereon in compliance with due process of law. The liability therefor is contested by the pipe line company on two grounds: (1) It contends that Sections 10105 and 10109, Code 1942, under which $20,296.63 of the amount involved was paid as a privilege tax for operating the pipe lines for transporting crude oil from one point to another in this State, and also Sections 10148 and 10149, Code 1942, under which the remaining $5,030.27 was paid as a use tax on its tangible personal property used in the operation of the pipe lines, contain express exemptions against liability therefor under the admitted facts of the case; and (2) that the taxpayer's transportation of the oil was in interstate commerce, and that, therefore, the imposition of both of the taxes here in question violates the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States, Article I, Section VIII, Cause 3 thereof, without regard to the alleged statutory exemption claimed in each instance.

The case was heard in the Circuit Court upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of the facts as to the method aforesaid whereby the business of the taxpayer was conducted in this State, and also as to the circumstances hereinafter mentioned under which it procured and brought into this State the tangible personal property used in the construction and operation of its pipe lines; and with the result that the trial court denied liability for the refund of all the taxes in question.

We are of the opinion that the Court was correct in disallowing a refund of the tax in the sum of $20,296.63, which had been collected for the privilege of operating the pumping machinery and other pipe line equipment in the transportation of oil in the manner hereinbefore set forth, but that the Court was in error in disallowing a refund of the use tax of $5,030.27, for reasons hereinafter stated. *Page 724

We shall discuss the question of liability for these taxes respectively in reverse order. Section 10148, Code 1942, assesses and levies "a tax or excise for the privilege of use, . . . of any article of tangible personal property" in this State, equal to 2% of the purchase price thereof; and Section 10149, Code 1942, provides that "the tax levied by this act shall not be collected in the following instances: . . . (d) On the use . . . of tangible personal property used . . . in the furtherance of interstate transportation or interstate commerce, or on the use, . . . of any property . . ., which is not procurable in the ordinary channels of trade in the state of Mississippi." And Section 10146, Code 1942, relating to this Use tax, recites, among other things, that "the primary purpose of which (the statute) is hereby declared to be the imposition of a tax for the privilege of using, . . . tangible personal property; . . ., and to protect, insofar as may be proved practicable, the merchants, dealers, manufacturers and persons engaged in businesses of rendering services in Mississippi, who operate under the privilege tax laws of this state, who pay the taxes imposed thereby, and who meet the requirements of the Mississippi sales tax laws, against the unfair competition of importation of goods and services into Mississippi without the payment of the retail sales tax imposed for the sale of goods, wares and merchandise usually carried for sale in this state, . . ."

It is agreed that $4,362.75 of the $5,030.27 was paid for the privilege of using tangible personal property in the construction and operation of the pipe line gathering systems hereinbefore mentioned, and that the remaining $667.52 was paid for the privilege of using certain copper wire, glass insulators, fittings, hardware, brackets, lamps, screws, and other supplies in constructing a telephone system adjacent to an interstatetrunk pipe line right-of-way separate and apart from the oil gathering pipe line systems hereinbefore mentioned, and that the same was necessary to and used solely in connection with thedispatching *Page 725 and movement of interstate shipments and the servicing and maintenance of its said interstate trunk line system.

It is further agreed that the total amount of the said Use tax was computed and paid upon the purchase price of material brought from without the State by the pipe line company "and that none of said property was available for purchase from stock piles in the State, but that all such materials were procurable from sales agents then operating in the State, who might have forwarded orders to suppliers located outside the State for shipment by said suppliers to appellant in Mississippi"; and from this factual situation we are asked to determine the question of whether or not such property was "procurable in the ordinary channels of trade in the State of Mississippi," and also whether or not the same was used "in the furtherance of interstate transportation or interstate commerce" by the pipe line company.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 73, 203 Miss. 715, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-oil-pipe-line-co-v-stone-miss-1948.