Knight & Wall Co. v. State Revenue Commission

23 Fla. Supp. 179
CourtCircuit Court of the 2nd Judicial Circuit of Florida, Leon County
DecidedJune 23, 1964
DocketNo. 19119; No. 19157; No. 19205
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Fla. Supp. 179 (Knight & Wall Co. v. State Revenue Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 2nd Judicial Circuit of Florida, Leon County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight & Wall Co. v. State Revenue Commission, 23 Fla. Supp. 179 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

HUGH M. TAYLOR, Circuit Judge.

Final decree: Each of the above styled cases attacks the constitutional validity of chapter 63-527, Laws of Florida, and/or its application to transactions customarily engaged in by the respective plaintiffs.

Each case is brought and maintained as a separate action. The court has heard final arguments in each case and has prepared this order which will be signed and filed as a final decree in each case. This is done in order to avoid the necessity of repetition, because a consideration of all the cases presents more clearly the reasoning of the court, and because a single decree will facilitate the application of the court’s rulings to the practical enforcement of the statute.

The constitutional validity of the statute as a whole has been discussed in detail in the order entered December 20, 1963, in case no. 19119, and what was there said, to the extent applicable, is adopted as an order in each of the other cases, no. 19157 and no. 19205.

Each of the plaintiffs is engaged in the business of selling at wholesale items of personal property which the state revenue commission has determined to be subject to the tax imposed by chapter 63-527.

Before discussing the numerous items with respect to which adjudication of taxability is required, the court will construe a phrase which counsel for some of the plaintiffs feel renders the statute invalid because of vagueness. The phrase is “and similar, related, or like items,” as used in subsection 3 of section 3. Counsel view the use of this language as an attempt to vest legislative power in the state revenue commission. However, when these words are examined in their setting they have a very definite and proper meaning and do not in any sense constitute a delegation of legislative power.

The tax imposed by the statute is upon the sale of “fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving equipment.” There would be no constitutional objection to the tax had the legislature provided no more specific definition of the subject of the tax, [182]*182but subsection 3 of section 3 is incorporated in the statute for the purpose of guiding the state revenue commission, the courts, and citizens in construing and applying the statute. The first part of this subsection defines fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving equipment as including “any device, implement, tool, article or object customarily or primarily used, operated, or consumed by participants in the course of and in the furtherance of the recreational pursuit of fishing . . . hunting . . . camping . . . swimming ... or diving. . . .” This part of the definition is a restriction upon the broadest possible construction of the phrase “fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving equipment.” It will be observed that the phrase as used in the statute is to be limited to “recreational” pursuit of these activities. It will also be observed that the tax is to be limited to articles customarily or primarily used, operated, or consumed by participants in the stated activities.

After thus limiting the scope of the statute, the legislature saw fit to specifically enumerate certain items that must be considered as being within the definition and certain items that are specifically excluded from the definition. Having enumerated items to be included in the definition, the legislature employed the phrase “and similar, related, or like items” to make it clear that the enumerated items were more illustrative than exclusive and were specifically mentioned as a means of clarifying the legislative intent without attempting a completely exhaustive tabulation of every article embraced within the definition of the class taxed.

The phrase “similar, related, or like items” does not in any sense constitute an enlargement of the basic definition. It is a qualification of the specific enumeration of items included within that definition.

The following basic principles must control in the application of the statute to the sale of specific articles.

The tax imposed is upon the sale at wholesale of fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving equipment. The statute defines fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving equipment as “any device, implement, tool, article or object customarily used, operated or consumed by participants in the course of and in the furtherance of the recreational pursuit of” fishing, hunting, camping, swimming and diving.

The court construes this definition as meaning that the tax is imposed with respect to the sale at wholesale of articles of a specific class when that class of articles is usually and customarily devoted to one of the named activities or is primarily devoted to one of such activities.

[183]*183It would be an unreasonable construction to say that the sale of all knives of a particular type should be taxed merely because some knives of that type are customarily used in such activities. And, of course, the wholesale dealer cannot be expected to know, in advance, the use which a retail purchaser will make of any particular piece of merchandise. As used in the definition, the word “customarily” should be considered as meaning that the specific restricted class of articles to which an item of property belongs is customarily or habitually or generally used by the ultimate consumer for one of the enumerated purposes.

As used in the statute the word “primarily” has essentially the same meaning. It relates to the specific types of property which in the hands of those who purchase them are used, for the most part, in the pursuit of one of the enumerated activities.

Obviously there are many items of property which are frequently used in one of the enumerated activities although only a minority in number of the articles of that class which are manufactured are used in such activities. For example, there is in evidence a knife of a type that is sometimes called a butcher knife, sometimes called a hunting knife, sometimes called a kitchen knife. It is equally adapted to the cutting of meat in a butcher shop, the cutting of meat or other things in a kitchen or the scaling of fish and the cleaning of game. It is customary for campers to use knives of this general type, but that does not mean that such knives are customarily used in camping. It is only when the customary use of the class of articles is in one of the enumerated activities that it comes within the language or the intent of the statute.

Another article offered in evidence is a tackle box, quite obviously designed and most often used as an instrumentality for the storage, carrying and protection of fishing equipment. It has various compartments designed to accommodate artifical lures, hooks, floats, weights, etc., with space adapted for larger instruments such as hook extractors, pliers, etc. A tackle box is sometimes used by landscape artists who find that the size and shape of the compartments adapt them to the holding of tubes of paint and the space that fishermen use for hook extractors, pliers, etc. may be used for the storage of canvas and brushes. The occasional use of a tackle box for purposes other than fishing does not alter the fact that tackle boxes as a class of property are both customarily and primarily used in fishing.

It frequently happens that a manufactured article is of such a nature that in the form in which it is customarily sold at wholesale it has not been completely dedicated to any specific use or specific class of usage. Until so dedicated and by a clear [184]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Palmer v. Great Northern Ry. Co.
170 P.2d 768 (Montana Supreme Court, 1946)
Warren v. Pope
64 So. 2d 564 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Fla. Supp. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-wall-co-v-state-revenue-commission-flacirct2leo-1964.