Mid-Valley Pipeline Company v. King

431 S.W.2d 277, 221 Tenn. 724, 25 McCanless 724, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 509, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 532
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 431 S.W.2d 277 (Mid-Valley Pipeline Company v. King) 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
Mid-Valley Pipeline Company v. King, 431 S.W.2d 277, 221 Tenn. 724, 25 McCanless 724, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 509, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 532 (Tenn. 1968).

Opinion

*726 Mr. Justice Chattin

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Three cases filed by Mid-Valley Pipeline Company against the Commissioner of Revenue were consolidated for trial. The suits sought recovery of franchise and excise taxes paid under protest for the years 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1966. By a supplemental bill to the original bill filed to recover the taxes for the years 1963 and 1964, Mid-Valley sought recovery of penalties paid subsequent to payment of the taxes for those years.

Complainant, Mid-Valley, alleged it was a common carrier engaged in the transportation of crude oil in continuous flow by means of a single pipeline extending from points south of the southern border to receiving points beyond the northern border of Tennessee.

*727 It was further alleged complainant was engaged solely in interstate commerce in this State; and that it was not engaged in any local activities within the State which were sufficiently separate from its interstate operations to be made the subject of franchise or excise taxes.

It was then alleged the imposition of franchise and excise taxes upon complainant pursuant to Chapters 27 and 29 of Title 67, T.C.A., would constitute a violation of the due process and commerce clauses of the Constitution of the United States.

In the supplemental bill, complainant alleged the penalties were illegally exacted because the taxes and interest thereon, upon which the penalties were assessed, were paid prior to expiration of a lawfully granted extension of time.

The Chancellor heard the matters upon the bills, answers of defendants, the deposition of John E. Triece, Assistant Secretary and Manager, Tax and Insurance Department of Mid-Valley, and certain exhibits to his testimony.

The Chancellor held the suit seeking a recovery of franchise and excise taxes should be dismissed upon authority of Texas Gas Transmission Corporation v. Atkins, 205 Tenn. 495, 327 S.W.2d 305 (1959) and Memphis Natural Gas Company v. Stone, 335 U.S. 80, 68 S.Ct. 1475, 92 L.Ed. 1832, (1948). He found, however, complainant was entitled to recover the penalties paid on the 1963 and 1964 taxes. We affirm the decree of the Chancellor.

Both parties prayed and were granted an appeal to this Court. However, defendants have not filed an assignment of error and brief in support thereof. Consequently, *728 we must treat defendants’ appeal as having been abandoned. Rule 15(2), Rules of the Supreme Court.

Complainant has assigned four assignments of error which present the question of whether Tennessee may constitutionally exact franchise and excise taxes from complainant under Chapters 27 and 29 of Title 67, T.C.A., for the years involved during which complainant was engaged solely in the business of transporting through Tennessee crude oil from and to points outside of the State.

The facts, as found by the Chancellor, are undisputed. Complainant is an Ohio corporation with its principal office in Longview, Texas, and is engaged in the business of transporting crude oil through a pipeline from points in Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas to points in Kentucky and Ohio.

The total length of the pipeline is 1,007.6 miles of which 153.7 miles is in Tennessee. The pipeline enters Tennessee near the midpoint of the Mississippi-Tennessee boundary line and exits on the Kentucky-Tennessee boundary at a point north of Clarksville. Its operations are under the jurisdiction of the interstate commerce commission.

Complainant owns properties in Tennessee consisting of a right-of-way across the State, fifty feet in width; several parcels of land upon which two pumping stations and seven microwave towers are located; two station wagon automobiles and miscellaneous equipment for right-of-way maintenance and fire fighting. It has contracts with two Tennessee Electric Membership Cooperatives for furnishing power to operate complainant’s pumping stations.

*729 Complainant has four employees who reside in this State. Two of the employees are pumping station foremen and two are communication technicians. One pumping-station foreman lives in Hornsby and the other in Denver with their respective families. Each is furnished a Company owned house in which to live situated on Company owned property upon which the pumping stations stand.

One of the communication technicians resides in Jackson and the other in Clarksville. Each is furnished a station wagon. The technician living at Jackson maintains four microwave towers and the one residing in Clarksville maintains three towers.

The pumping stations are controlled from a central control room in Longview, Texas. This control room monitors the entire pipeline system electronically by receiving signals from the microwave towers along the pipeline. Incidental maintenance work for the pumping stations and right-of-way in Tennessee is provided by Company employees who reside in Oxford, Mississippi, and brought into the State when their services are needed. Incidental technicians are also brought into this State when needed.

Complainant, a foreign corporation, has not qualified to do business in this State. However, it has carried on its business activities within the State in corporate form, suing and being sued in its corporate name, contracting for services and acquiring title to property in its corporate capacity.

Complainant neither accepts, stores, delivers, nor sells oil in Tennessee.

The Tax Commissioner assessed the excise and franchise taxes under T.C.A. Sections 67-2701 et seq., and *730 T.C.A. Sections 67-2901 et seq., respectively. Section 27-■2701 authorizes the levy of an excise tax on corporate earnings, equal to five per cent of the net earnings from business done within the State. Section 67-2904authorizes a corporate franchise tax, “of fifteen {15‡) cents on the One Hundred Dollars ($100.00), or major fraction thereof, of the issued and- outstanding stock, surplus and undivided profits,” of each taxable corporation during each taxable year.

By Chapters 185 and 183, Public Acts of 1955, the Legislature amended respectively the excise and franchise tax statutes by adding to each the following:

“Every such taxable entity organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of this or any other state, territory or country, or organized and existing without any specific statutory authority, now or hereafter doing business within this State, without domesticating or qualifying to do business in this State, or while its charter is forfeited, revoked or suspended, shall as a recompense for the protection of its local activities and as compensation for the benefit it receives from doing business in Tennessee, pay the tax imposed by this Chapter.”

Complainant is.

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Bluebook (online)
431 S.W.2d 277, 221 Tenn. 724, 25 McCanless 724, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 509, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-valley-pipeline-company-v-king-tenn-1968.