Loverin v. Tansil

118 Tenn. 717
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 118 Tenn. 717 (Loverin v. Tansil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loverin v. Tansil, 118 Tenn. 717 (Tenn. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant, a commercial corporation created and organized under the laws of the State of Illinois; with its domicile, chief office, and place of business in the city of Chicago, and engaged in selling merchandise directly to consumers through its agents in this and other States, filed this bill in the chancery court of Weakley county against E. E. Tansil and others, officers of Weak-ley county and the town of Sharon, to enjoin the collection of privilege taxes imposed by those municipali[719]*719ties upon all merchants conducting a retail business within their respective boundaries.

The contention of the complainant is that the business conducted by it in Sharon and Weakley county is interstate commerce and within the protection of the commerce clause of the constitution of the United States. If this contention is supported by the facts, the tax cannot be legally collected. If the business conducted is commerce within the State, complainant must pay the tax as other merchants doing business in Sharon and Weakley county.

Complainant’s method of doing business in the several States other than that of its domicile is as follows:

A representative or salesman goes into a community and solicits orders from the inhabitants for merchandise, to be paid for on delivery at some place in the community if found as represented. The orders obtained are reduced to writing in duplicate, and contain a list of the articles desired by a customer and the prices to be paid for them; one copy being given to the customer, and the other retained by the salesman. These orders generally call for several different articles, and in many instances several customers order articles of the same kind and in the same quantities. When the canvass of the community is completed, the salesman classifies the merchandise called for in the several individual orders obtained, ascertains the number or quantity of each article, and sends to his employer one general order covering the aggregate number or quantity of articles [720]*720of each class. In other words, this general order contains a requisition for the gross number or quantity of each article for which he has obtained orders; thus, if he has sold ten dozen packages of soda to two or more customers, the general order calls for the ten dozen packages as a whole, without regard to the number of customers by whom they are desired. The names of the customers for whom the merchandise is intended, or the particular number or quantity of an article ordered by any one customer, is not communicated by the salesman to complainant, and is unknown to it. The goods thus ordered from Chicago áre there packed in large boxes and barrels to suit the convenience of complainant, and shipped by á common carrier to its order, to a point designated by the salesman, to whom the bill of lading is sent, so that he may obtain possession. No separation of articles of like kind, or appropriation of them to particular persons, is made in Chicago. The shipment is in bulk, and the selection of the articles or packages to be delivered to the several customers is left to the salesman.

When the boxes and barrels containing the aggregate order arrive at the place for delivery, the salesman receives and opens them at some convenient place, and separates and arranges the goods for delivery, by placing all articles of a kind together.

When a customer appears, the written order given by him is examined, and the articles therein called for are taken out of the several piles of merchandise and [721]*721delivered to Iiim. When all the goods are delivered, the money received by the salesman is remitted to his employer at the home office in Chicago. No goods are to be ordered by the salesman unless he has procured individual orders for them, and all goods ordered and shipped, but not accepted, are returned or given away.

This was the manner in which complainant did business in Sharon and Weakley county. The orders obtained in Sharon were for family groceries, and aggregated about three hundred dollars.

We are of the opinion that this was commerce within the State, and not interstate commerce. The boxes and barrels in which this merchandise was packed by complainant and delivered to the carrier in Chicago, to be transported to Sharon, Tennessee, there to be delivered to its salesman, were original packages within the meaning of the commerce clause of the constitution of the United States, and when complainant’s salesman broke them, and classified and assorted the contents, they became commingled with and a part of the common mass of the property of-the State, and were subject to its police regulations and revenue laws. The several small packages of different articles contained in the boxes and barrels were not of such a character as are ordinarily and according to the usages of trade and commerce prepared and delivered by dealers to carriers for transportation. They were not put up or consigned for any particular customer to fulfill a contract or sale which the [722]*722agent Rad made. Complainant did not then know who had ordered the several articles, nor to whom they would be delivered. The articles or packages were not marked with the names of any one, and those of the same kind conld not be distinguished from each other. They were consigned and delivered at Sharon in bulk. When they were received by the salesman no segregation of any articles or packages from others of like kind, and no appropriation of any particular article or package to any particular customer, had been made.'

No sale was consummated' until the original packages in which the merchandise was shipped were broken, their contents classified, and segregation and appropriation made; the whole remaining the property of complainant until then. These facts clearly establish that complainant was engaged in the business of a retail merchant in Sharon and Weakley county, and in our opinion rendered it liable for the privilege taxes imposed upon merchants, which the defendants were attempting to collect by proper proceedings. We do not deem it necessary to indulge in an elaborate discussion of the adjudged cases upon the subject of interstate commerce, but will content ourselves with referring to a few, which we think fully sustain our conclusion in this one. They are Austin v. State, 101 Tenn., 563, 48 S. W., 305, 50 L. R. A., 478, 70 Am. St. Rep., 703; Kimmell v. State, 104 Tenn., 184, 56 S. W., 854; Croy v. Obion County, 104 Tenn., 525, 58 S. W., 235, 51 L. R. A., 254, 78 Am. Rep., 931; Austin v. Tenn., 179 U. S., 343, 21 [723]*723Sap. Ct., 132, 45 L. Ed., 224; Cook v. Marshall County, 196, U. S., 261, 25 Sup. Ct., 233, 49 L. Ed., 471; and May v. New Orleans, 178 U. S., 496, 20 Sup. Ct., 976.

Tie material facts of the case last cited (May v. New Orleans) are substantially the same as those of this, and the conclusions of the court upon them are, we think, decisive of it.

The system of doing business adopted by the complainant is a thinly veiled scheme, under the guise of interstate commerce, to evade the revenue laws of the several States and obtain an unfair and unjust advantage over local dealers in competition in the sale of goods and merchandise.

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Bluebook (online)
118 Tenn. 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loverin-v-tansil-tenn-1907.