Martin, Etc. v. F. H. Bee Shows, Inc.

113 S.W.2d 448, 271 Ky. 822, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 4, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 448 (Martin, Etc. v. F. H. Bee Shows, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin, Etc. v. F. H. Bee Shows, Inc., 113 S.W.2d 448, 271 Ky. 822, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 61 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

The General Assembly of Kentucky at its third extraordinary session in 1936 enacted chapter 15 of the published acts of that session, and which became effective June 9, 1936. It is now sections 4281Í-1 to and including section 4281f-22 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes. The purpose of the act was to levy an excise tax on the price of admissions to places of amusement and entertainment. The part of the act, naming the objects, fixing- the rate of taxation and imposing the levy, is contained in four paragraphs of section 2 of the act, now section 4281f-2, as found in our published statutes supra. Those paragraphs will be designated by us as “(a),” “(b),” “(c),” and “(d),” although such designations do not appear in the act and we make them herein for convenience. As contained in the act they are:

(a) “If the admission charge is eleven cents (11c) to eighteen cents (18c) inclusive, the rate shall be one cent (lc); if the admission charge is nineteen cents (19c) to twenty-eight cents (28c) inclusive, the rate shall be two cents (2c); if the admission charge is twenty-nine cents (29c) to thirty-eight cents (38c) inclusive, the rate shall be three cents (3c); if the rate *824 is in excess of thirty-eight cents' (38c) the rate shall be three cents (3c) plus one cent (lc) additional for each five cents (5c) or fractional part thereof. Provided that admission charges of less than eleven cents (lie) shall not be subject to tax hereunder.”

(b) “In the case of places of amusement and/or entertainment at which food or drink is served and professional entertainers are employed, the charge for admission shall be deemed to be twenty-five per cent (25%) of the total charge made or the amount of the cover charge, if any, whichever is greater.”'

(c) “In the case of all amusements and/or -entertainments, the charge for admission shall be deemed to be the total charge imposed and if there is a charge for seating, or for special facilities within the place of amusement and/or entertainment, the charge for admission shall be deemed to include both the charge for general admission and the charge for the special seating or other facilities provided in the places of amusement and/or entertainment.”

(d) “Nothing in this Act shall be construed to impose a tax upon admissions to athletic contests, plays, and other forms of amusement and/or entertainment, at least seventy-five per cent (75%) of the gross proceeds of which admissions are to be used exclusively for charitable, religious, and/or educational purposes within this State.”

The appellee and plaintiff below, the F. H.. Bee Shows, Incorporated,, is a corporation authorized to and engaged in conducting itinerant street carnival shows at various places throughout the country for periods of about one week at each place. It has an enclosed area of ground within which are located various contrivances for amusement and various independent tent shows for entertainment, as well as concessions for the sale of soft drinks and some edibles consisting mainly of popcorn and sandwiches and stands for other purposes. None of them, according to the pleadings and’ proof in this case, belonged to the F. H. Bee Shows, except an amusement contrivance within the enclosure called the “Loupa-Plane.” The charge for entrance into the grounds is 10 cents per person, and no charge is made for patronizing any of the amusements within the *825 grounds or for admission into any of the tent shows therein, or for any drinks, or edibles sold therein ex-needing 10 cents, except for the Loupa-Plane, for which a charge of 25 cents is made. The independent owners and operators of the various concessions within the carnival grounds pay to plaintiff, the F. H. Bee Shows, an agreed percentage of their receipts, but the amount taken in from the Loupa-Plane belongs entirely to plaintiff, and it has made report to the State Tax Commission of the amount derived therefrom -and paid the tax thereon in accordance with the requirement of the statute.

Other portions of the statute look to its proper enforcement, among which is the requirement of monthly reports which, as applied to a carnival operated in the way and manner indicated, becomes considerably complicated if the Tax Commission’s interpretation of the statute is correct, and to avoid that complication— and which the Tax Commission says was by agreement with a number of carnival companies other than plaintiff herein — it promulgated a rule or regulation by which a carnival company should pay as the approximate amount of the tax demanded 10 per cent, of its gross receipts from all sources. Pursuant thereto, it demanded of plaintiff for the month of May, 1937, $353.78 — being 10 per cent of $3,537.80, the total amount of its receipts from all sources during that month. It protested that it owed no taxes, under a proper interpretation of the act, except the amount arising from the charge for patronizing its Loupa-Plane, and which it agreed to and did pay. The Tax Commission, however, insisted that a correct interpretation of paragraph (c), supra, of the statute entitled it to demand and collect from plaintiff upon a total admission fee made up of the 10 cents charged for admission into the grounds, plus the charge for patronizing any of the amusement contrivances, or any of the entertainment shows in separate tents, or any of the drinking or food stands located within the carnival grounds, and, when such additions are made, the admission charges would exceed 10 cents and become taxable under the act according to the amount thus produced.

On the other hand, plaintiff contended that, aside from the fact that it owned none of the independent *826 shows or amusement contrivances within its enclosure (except its Loupa-Plane upon which the tax was paid), and conceding that it owned all of them, it nevertheless was and is not liable for any of the tax demanded, since no charge or admission fee for any of them exceeded 10 cents, nor did its charge for entrance into the grounds exceed that amount. Therefore, since each charge or admission fee was “less than eleven (11 cents),” none' of them was subject to the tax, and it disputed the interpretative right of adding any. of the inside charges to the gate charge so as to increase the admission fee to an amount that would make it taxable under the act, as is contended for by the Tax Commission.

After the demand of it by the Tax Commission to pay the 10 per cent, assessment supra of $353.78, it paid that amount under written protest, and later filed this declaratory judgment action in the Franklin circuit court against the Tax Commission, its chairman and its members, seeking a judicial interpretation of the statute and a corresponding declaration of its rights thereunder, and for judgment declaring its right to recover the $353.78 paid by it under protest. Defendants’ general demurrer filed to .the petition was overruled by the court, and their answer set forth their interpretation of the act as outlined supra. They denied plaintiff’s right to recover the $353.78 paid by it under protest, and also averred that the tax due from it under the statute — according to defendants’ interpretation thereof — would amount to more than the protested payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 448, 271 Ky. 822, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-etc-v-f-h-bee-shows-inc-kyctapphigh-1938.