Jerome H. Sheip Co. v. Amos

130 So. 699, 100 Fla. 863, 1930 Fla. LEXIS 1111
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 130 So. 699 (Jerome H. Sheip Co. v. Amos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerome H. Sheip Co. v. Amos, 130 So. 699, 100 Fla. 863, 1930 Fla. LEXIS 1111 (Fla. 1930).

Opinion

Strum, J.

— The purpose of this suit is to determine the validity of the tax imposed by Chap. 13756, Acts of 1929 (page 456) upon the storage of certain petroleum products.

To a bill of complaint seeking to enjoin collection of the tax by the Comptroller, a general demurrer was sustained and injunctive relief denied, from which order this appeal is taken.

In testing the validity of, as well as in constructing a statute, resort may be had if necessary to the history of the legislation, the public history of the times in which it was passed, and it may be compared with cognate laws in order to determine its purpose, meaning and effect as an aid in determining its validity. Aldridge v. Williams, 3 *867 How. (U. S.) 9, 11 L. Ed. 469; U. S. V. Trans-Missouri Freight Asso., 166 U. S. 318; 41 L. Ed. 1019; Texas & P. R. Co. v. I. C. C., 162 U. S. 218, 40 L. Ed. 947. See also Amos v. Mathews, 126 So. R. 308, 316; 25 R. C. L. 1015.

Chapters 14575 and 14573, Acts of 1929, impose an excise aggregating six cents per gallon upon the sale of gasoline, such tax to be paid to the State by the dealer. The tax imposed upon that privilege is impotent when gasoline is purchased in interstate commerce and stored in this State by the owner for his own future use. Since there is no sale which the State could tax, gasoline so purchased and stored — though mingled with the common mass of property in this State and though enjoying the protection afforded by the laws of this State — would escape payment of its proportion of the public revenue designed to be derived from the use of gasoline in this State.

Chap 13756 provides in effect that in addition to a license tax of five dollars, every person, firm, corporation, municipality, county or subdivision thereof shall pay a tax of five cents per gallon (or such amount as will correspond to the sales tax) for every gallon of gasoline or like products of petroleum “which shall have been shipped or imported into this State from any other state or foreign country, and which shall thereafter for a period of twenty-four hours after it loses its interstate character as a shipment of interstate commerce, be kept in storage in this State to be used and consumed in this State,” and with reference to which no sales tax has been paid. Products in transit through this State in interstate or foreign commerce are exempt, and as to products coming to rest here payment of either the sales tax or the storage tax exonerates from liability for the other, only one of these two taxes being collected.

*868 Chap. 13756, supra, now under consideration, is complementary to Chapters 14575 and 14573, supra, in effectuating the State’s public policy as to the revenue to be derived from the use of gasoline in this State. While passed primarily for revenue purposes, and to forestall evasion of the sales tax (See Texas Co. v. Brown, 258 U. S. 466, 481; 66 L. Ed. 721, 728), the statute is also regulatory in effect. The storage of gasoline in large quantities is' inimical to public safety. If no financial advantage can be gained from storing it, one of the most' substantial inducements to store it is removed. That result is accomplished by imposing a storage tax equivalent to the sales tax, thus tending to curb the practice of storing. See Foster & Creighton v. Graham, 285 S. W. R. 570, 47 A. L. R. 971.

The. bill of complaint alleges in substance that complainants buy large quantities of gasoline in tank cars at points beyond the State of Florida at the prevailing market price of 8% to 12y2 cents per gallon, and have the same shipped to them in interstate .commerce to their respective places of business in the State of Florida, to be used and consumed in their respective businesses.

Complainants first contend that the tax is a direct property tax, and as such is void because not based upon value nor imposed according to principles of equality and uniformity.

To support that contention, complainants rely largely upon Dawson v. Kentucky Distilleries, 255 U. S. 288, 65 L. Ed. 638. In that case the statute purported to impose upon persons in the business of manufacturing, owning, or storing whiskey, a “license” tax upon every gallon of whiskey “either withdrawn from a bonded warehouse or transported in bond from Kentucky to a point outside that State. ’ ’ The court held that the tax so imposed was a diréct *869 property tax, because its incidents were inconsistent with the essentials of an excise. The court carefully pointed out that because of the incidents prescribed for the operation of that tax, it “is not one imposed upon the business of owning, storing and removing whiskey from bond,” or “upon the business or occupation of the warehouseman,” because the tax might become payable although the whiskey had not been stored for any appreciable time. It may be conceded, in passing, as true of the tax here under consideration that it is not made to depend upon the length of time the gasoline remains in storage. In the Kentucky Distilleries case, however, the court was influenced in its decision that that tax was not a storage tax by the circumstance that the Kentucky statute was so framed that “a particular lot of whiskey may pass through a dozen bonded warehouses, without one of them being obliged to pay the tax. ’ ’ The court further said: “ So long as the whiskey is stored in bond within the State, it is free from tax. One. may own and store the whiskey for years in the hope of selling it at a profit, and yet be free from any obligation ever to pay this tax, if, before it is removed from bond within the State, the whiskey is sold to another, or if, while so owned, it is destroyed or forfeited to the government.” That vital element is not. found in the tax here under consideration. Here, if the storage continues for twenty-four hours after the property loses its interstate character, the tax attaches. As pointed out by the lower court with reference to the tax involved in the Kentucky Distilleries case: ‘ ‘ The thing really taxed is the act of the owner in taking his property out of storage into his own possession” for use. * * * “The whole value of the whiskey depends upon the owner’s right to get it from the place where the law compelled him to put it and to tax the right is to tax the value.” Frieberg v. Dawson, 274 Fed. 420. The essential difference between the *870 Kentucky tax and the tax now under consideration is that the present act of storing the commodity, which is a species of “use,” and not its future withdrawal, which is merely a change in the form of possession not amounting to a taxable “use,” is made the criterion of our tax.

This tax is repeatedly referred to in the Act as a license tax, although that fact is not conclusive. It is the substantial effect and operation of the tax, and not its mere designation that controls. Its classification is to be determined by its characteristics, not by its designation. See Amos v. Mathews, 126 So. R. 308; McCray v. U. S., 195 U. S. 27, 49 L. Ed. 78; St. Louis S. W. R. Co. v. Arkansas, 235 U. S. 288; 65 L. Ed. 638.

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 699, 100 Fla. 863, 1930 Fla. LEXIS 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerome-h-sheip-co-v-amos-fla-1930.