Midland Oil Co. v. State

10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 635, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedJune 13, 1939
DocketNo. 3344
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 635 (Midland Oil Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midland Oil Co. v. State, 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 635, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 47 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Linscott

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Midland Oil Company, an Illinois Corporation, filed its complaint with the clerk of this court on January 14, 1939, alleging that it was engaged in the business of distributing and retailing motor fuel in the City of Chicago and State of Illinois; that it is equipped to do that business and is associated in business with the Sterling Fuel Oil Corporation also licensed to do business in the State of Illinois, and that all tax payments set forth in the bill of particulars were made by the Sterling Fuel Oil Corporation on behalf of the claimant.

Claimant quotes Section 6 of the Motor Fuel Tax Law and avers that there is no prohibition in the Motor Fuel Tax Law against the extending of credit by a distributor and retailer, to the user of motor fuel, and that it is the custom and usage and always has been the custom and usage in the motor fuel trade, for the distributor and retailer of motor fuel to extend credit to the user thereof, and that in accordance with the custom and usage of the trade, the claimant did extend credit to many accounts to whom it sold motor fuel for use, and caused to be paid to the State of Illinois, through, the Sterling* Fuel Oil Corporation, three cents per gallon on the gallonage sold to the accounts to whom credit had been extended.

It is also averred that in the case of many of the accounts to whom credit was extended, claimant failed to collect the amount of the purchase price of the motor fuel sold to these accounts and failed to collect the motor fuel tax paid over by claimant in advance to the State of Illinois, and that many of these accounts have either gone out of business, become insolvent or bankrupt as appears from the bill of particulars attached to the complaint.

It is also averred that claimant made every possible reasonable effort and availed itself of every possible legal recourse in attempting to collect to the extent of, in one case, contesting* the sale of business in the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois. The bill of particulars sets forth the dates of the sales, the names of the delinquent customers and the amounts of the indebtedness.

It is also averred that the claimant was acting as the agent of the State of Illinois in collecting motor fuel tax, and exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to collect the motor fuel tax from the accounts listed in the bill of particulars, but despite the diligence used in attempting to collect such accounts, it was unable to do so. The accounts date back to June 15, 1933 and there were several during the year 1933.

The total amount claimed is the sum of $4,313.63.

Shortly after the above named claim was filed, the Attorney General filed a motion to dismiss and bar the claim, and as grounds for the motion says that the complaint does not set forth a claim which the State of Illinois, as a sovereign commonwealth, should discharge and pay for the reason that there is no provision of law which entitles a licensed motor fuel distributor and retailer to a refund of motor fuel tax remitted by it on sales of gasoline used in motor vehicles upon the public highways where such distributor and retailer made said sales on credit and was unable thereafter to collect from the vendees.

The Attorney General refers to Section 2 of the Motor Fuel Tax Act (1929) (Chap. 120, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937), which imposes a tax of three cents per gallon on motor fuel used in motor vehicles operated upon the public highways. Beference is also made to Section 3 of the same Act which requires that each distributor of motor fuel be licensed by the Department of Finance and give bond. Section 4 is set forth in considerable detail, and is to the effect that

“Every person holding a valid unrevoked license to act as a distributor of motor fuel shall, between the first and twentieth days of each calendar month, make return, under oath, to the Department, showing an itemized statement of the number of invoiced gallons of motor fuel purchased, acquired or received, the amount produced, refined, compounded, manufactured, blended, sold, distributed, and/or used by him during the preceding calendar month, the amount lost or destroyed, and the amount on hand at the close of business for such month; and in the case of a sale to another licensed distributor, as hereinafter provided in Section 6, the amount of motor fuel so sold, the name, address and license number of such purchasing distributor."

The Attorney General also makes reference to Section 6, which provides in part, as follows:

“Each distributor who sells any motor fuel for any purpose shall (except as hereinafter provided) collect from the purchaser at the time of such sale, three cents per gallon on all motor fuel sold, and at the time of making .his return, the distributor shall pay to the Department, the amount so collected, (less the deduction hereinafter provided) and shall also pay to the Department three cents per gallon on all motor fuel used by him during the period covered by the return.”

Claimant’s counsel argue, in opposition to the position of the Attorney General,- that claimant’s complaint sets forth a claim which the State of Illinois should discharge and pay even though there is no specific provision of law upon which the claim for refund is based, and argue that said claim for refund is based upon Sub-division 4 of Section 6 of the Court of Claims Law, which provides that the Court of Claims shall have power:

“to hear and determine all claims and demands, legal and equitable, liquidated and unliquidated, ex contractu and ex delicto, which the State as a sovereign commonwealth should in equity and good conscience discharge and pay.”

The equity and good conscience law is relied upon by claimant here.

This court had before it the same doctrine in the case of Crabtree vs. State of Illinois, 7 C. C. R., page 207. We there held that:

“The provisions of paragraph 4 of Section 6 of Court of Claims Act with reference to equity and good conscience merely defines the jurisdiction of the court and does not create a new liability against the State nor increase or enlarge any existing liability and limits jiirisdiction of court to claims under which State would be liable in law or equity, if it were suable, and where claimant fails to bring himself within the provisions of a law giving him the right to an award, he cannot invoke the' principles of equity and good conscience to secure one.”

Counsel for claimant refers to the case of People vs. Kopman, 358 Ill., page 479, and quotes therefrom as follows:

“The tax was delivered into the hands of the defendant as the agent of the State. The money was ‘delivered’ to him in the sense that word is used in Section 74 of the Criminal Code.”

and in commenting thereon, claimant argues that this decision makes it clear that the distributors’ duty to' turn over to the State tax money collected by the distributor is absolute, but this decision under the “duty to collect” in no way excludes the reasonable extending of credit. The Supreme Court of Illinois in the Kopman case did use the language referred to by claimant, and went further.

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Related

Beck v. Department of Revenue
460 N.E.2d 24 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 635, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-oil-co-v-state-ilclaimsct-1939.