Marion Bottling Co. v. Town of Galax

81 S.E.2d 624, 195 Va. 1115, 1954 Va. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 3, 1954
DocketRecord No. 4200
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 S.E.2d 624 (Marion Bottling Co. v. Town of Galax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marion Bottling Co. v. Town of Galax, 81 S.E.2d 624, 195 Va. 1115, 1954 Va. LEXIS 190 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Marion Bottling Company, Incorporated, applied to the court below for relief from certain local license taxes (Code § 58-1145) assessed against it by the town of Galax. From an order denying relief it obtained this appeal and here contends that the town had no authority to levy the taxes.

The facts are stipulated to be as follows:

“1. Marion Bottling Company, Inc., is a bottler of soft drink beverages with its bottling plant located at Marion, Virginia, and owns and operates a warehouse in the Town of Galax, Virginia. Bottled beverages are transported in large shipments from the Marion plant to the Galax warehouse, stored there, then delivered to independent retailers and dealers on delivery trucks owned and operated over more or less regular routes by Marion Bottling Company, Inc.

“2. Bottled beverages are not offered for sale at the warehouse in Galax; there is no regular attendant in charge or any telephone installation at the warehouse. Unloading incoming shipments, storage and loading trucks for sale and delivery to independent dealers are the only operations carried on at the warehouse and it is open only at such times. Orders are received and filled on the regular delivery routes; no sales are made to consumers at any time and the bottling company does not own or operate any retail store.

“3. The Town of Galax assessed Marion Bottling Company, Inc., with a Selling to Dealers License for 1948 and Distributing House License for 1949 under Section 32 of its License Code.”

[1117]*1117Section 32 of the Galax License Code is in these words:

“Distributing Houses: For every distributing house or place in the Town of Galax (other than the house or place of manufacture) operated by any person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of a merchant in said town for the purpose of distributing goods, wares and merchandise to retail stores, a separate license shall be required, and the goods, wares and merchandise distributed through such distributing house or place shall be regarded as purchases for the purpose of measuring the license tax, which tax shall be the same as the license tax imposed on a wholesale merchant.”

The appellant contends that this ordinance is illegal and unenforceable because of the provisions of the following State statutes:

By § 58-400 of the Code the appellant is declared to be a manufacturer and is taxed on its capital pursuant to § 58-418.

Section 58-316 of the Code, as amended by Acts 1950, chapter 458, page 893, provides that a manufacturer taxable on capital by the State may sell and deliver at the same time to licensed dealers or retailers, but not to consumers, anywhere in the State, the goods manufactured by him, without the payment of any license tax of any land for such privilege to the State or to any city, town or county, “except as in this section provided.”

The exception is that if a manufacturer sells the goods manufactured by him at a definite place or store other than the place of manufacture, to other persons for resale, or to institutional, commercial or industrial users, then he must take out a wholesale merchant’s license. Section 58-317 provides that the amount of the license tax shall be governed by the cost of manufacture, as well as by purchases made from others.

The Galax ordinance is patterned after § 58-319 of the Code, which provides for a separate State license tax on a distributing house or place operated by a merchant in this [1118]*1118State for the purpose of distributing goods among his retail stores, the tax to be the same as that imposed on a wholesale merchant. A like ordinance was considered and the origin and purpose of the State statute were stated in Great Atlantic &c. Tea Co. v. City of Richmond, 183 Va. 931, 33 S. E. (2d) 795.

Unless prohibited by § 58-316, the town of Galax very clearly had the right to enact its license ordinance on distributing houses under § 58-266.1 of the Code, which authorizes a city or town to levy a license tax on whatever the State requires a license for; and also under the broader provisions of § 47 and amended § 51 of its charter, Acts 1922, ch. 101, pp. 140, 148; Acts 1936, ch. 51, p. 78, authorizing the town to impose, within constitutional limitations, a license tax on any business or thing done in the town, whether a State license is required therefor or not, unless such imposition is forbidden by general law. See also City of Norfolk v. Norfolk Landmark Co., 95 Va. 564, 28 S. E. 959; Fallon Florist v. City of Roanoke, 190 Va. 564, 58 S. E. (2d) 316.

Section 58-316, as applied to the stipulated facts of this case, permits the appellant to sell and deliver at the same time from its factory its products to licensed dealers or retailers in the town of Galax or anywhere else in the State without payment to the town of Galax of any license tax of any kind for that privilege. If it sells at a definite place or store in Galax, it would have to take out a State wholesale license, and Galax could also require a license for that business.

According to the stipulated facts, appellant has no such definite place or store in Galax. It does own and operate a warehouse in Galax but does not offer its products for sale there. The only business done at the warehouse consists of unloading the products transported there from Marion, storing those products in the warehouse, and then loading them into trucks for sale and delivery from the trucks to dealers on the regular delivery routes.

[1119]*1119The first question, therefore, is whether this warehouse operation is exempt from the payment of any license tax thereon to the town by virtue of the provision of § 58-316 to the effect that the appellant may “sell and deliver [its products] at the same time” anywhere in the State without the payment of any license tax for that privilege to the State or any of its political subdivisions.

In Home Brewing Co. v. City of Richmond, 181 Va. 793, 797-8, 27 S. E. (2d) 188, 190-1, we held that the fact that the Brewing Company paid a State tax on capital and also a city property tax did not exempt it from the payment of a city license tax for the privilege of manufacturing soft drinks, for the reason that the provision of the statute (now § 58-316) exempting from taxation the privilege of selling did not exempt from taxation the privilege of manufacturing and bottling. “To sell and deliver is entirely different from manufacturing and bottling soft drinks.”

In Commonwealth v. Bibee Grocery Co., 153 Va. 935, 151 S. E. 293, the provision for a license tax on distributing houses, then part of § 188 of the Tax Code, now § 58-319, supra, was attacked as unconstitutional. There the appellee operated seven retail grocery stores in Lynchburg and vicinity. It leased a warehouse in the city from which it distributed goods for sale in its retail stores. No goods were sold from the warehouse which was maintained solely as a distributing point. The appellee refused to apply for a license for the operation of this distributing house. We held the section imposing the license to be valid and enforceable and in the course of the opinion said this:

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.E.2d 624, 195 Va. 1115, 1954 Va. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-bottling-co-v-town-of-galax-va-1954.