Midwest Dairy Products Corp. v. Crenshaw

95 S.W.2d 313, 170 Tenn. 361, 6 Beeler 361, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 143
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 313 (Midwest Dairy Products Corp. v. Crenshaw) 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
Midwest Dairy Products Corp. v. Crenshaw, 95 S.W.2d 313, 170 Tenn. 361, 6 Beeler 361, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 143 (Tenn. 1936).

Opinion

*363 Mr. Justice DeHayen

delivered the opinion of the Court.

1. This is a suit brought under the Declaratory Judgments Act (Code 1932, see. 8835 et seq.) seeking a construction of the privilege tax provisions of chapter 115, Public Acts 1933. Under section 1 of said act, the carrying on or engaging in the business of the sale, storage, manufacture, or distribution of beer, or other beverages of like alcoholic content, as authorized by chapter 69, Public Acts 1933, or by any other acts, is declared to be a privilege, and there is levied on every such privilege for general state purposes certain specified annual taxes; the following provisions only being pertinent to the questions made in this cause:

“I. In Counties or Cities of 100,000 population or over: . . .
“ (d) Each brewer on each brewery and/or each agent or distributor or wholesale for any such brewer .. $300.00
“II. In Counties or Cities of less than 100,000 population : .
“(d) Each brewer on each brewery and/or each agent or distributor at wholesale for any such brewer . .$150.00
“ ‘Provided, that any agent or distributor of beer at wholesale for a brewer who pays the brewer’s tax as above set out and the tax imposed by Chapter 69 of the Acts of 1933 shall pay only one-fourth of the tax levied in paragraphs (d), Sections 1 and II hereof.’
“ ‘Provided, further, that any agent or distributor of beer at wholesale for a brewer who pays the brewer’s tax as above set out and the tax imposed by Chapter 69 of the Acts of 1933, when such agent or distributor pays the tax as set out in the proviso next above in the County *364 or City where he has his situs or principal place of business, such agent or distributor shall not he liable for any other State tax in any other County or City in which he does business but shall be liable for a County and municipal tax in such additional County or City for an amount not to exceed $10.00 to any such County and/or City.’
“And, provided, further, that a warehouseman having an established place of business who merely stores for the agent distributor or owner paying the taxes provided by this Act shall not be liable for any tax hereunder.
“Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, That each County and municipality of the State is hereby authorized to levy a like privilege tax on the privileges enumerated in Section 1 of this Act but not to exceed the amounts levied for State purposes in Section 1.”

It is further provided in the act that when said tax is levied by any county or city of the state, the same shall be in lieu of. all other taxes that any county or city may levy or collect on the privilege herein defined; but shall not be in lieu of those imposed by chapter 69, Public Acts 1933, nor in lieu of any other privilege taxes payable by any person engaged in any of the businesses declared a privilege and taxed under any general revenue act of the state. The act then provides:

“The tax herein levied shall be enforced and collected in the same manner as other privilege taxes under any general revenue law of the State.” Section 3.

2. The complainant, Midwest Dairy Products Corporation, is ‘a Tennessee corporation engaged in the wholesale distribution of beer, with its situs or principal place of business at Jackson, Madison county, Tennessee, and *365 also maintains a permanent plant, branch, or point of distribution at Dyersburg, Dyer county, Tennessee, and another such plant at Memphis, Shelby county, Tennessee. The beer distributed by the corporation is manufactured outside the state of Tennessee and imported into Tennessee by said corporation to its principal plant, and also to its two branch plants, and is distributed from all its said plants at wholesale within the surrounding-territory.

Complainant distributes beer for six breweries, all being outside the state of Tennessee, but four of the six breweries have qualified under the laws of Tennessee as foreign corporations, and have paid the “Brewers’ tax” as levied by the act here under consideration, while two of the six breweries have not qualified as foreign corporations, nor paid said “brewers’ tax. ’ ’

Complainant has paid to the state of Tennessee, the county of Madison, and the city of Jackson $150, each, or a total of $450', as the full tax required of wholesale distributors of beer in counties of that population, and no exemption whatever was allowed at that point.

Complainant sought to pay to Shelby county and the city of Memphis the minimum tax of $10 to each, upon the theory that it had paid the full tax as a wholesale distributor of beer at the sihis of its principal place of business at Jackson, Madison county, Tennessee. The city and the county demanded the payment of the full tax of $300, each, for the operation of complainant’s business at Memphis. Complainant paid, under protest, as a wholesale beer distributor in Shelby county, the sum of $300 to the state and $300 to the county, together with $81.25 penalties and costs upon a distress warrant is *366 sued by the clerk of the county court, and has sued to recover the same. To stay the collection of this tax by the city of Memphis, complainant filed an injunction bill upon which a stop order was granted pending the final hearing of the two cases.

In view of the fact that the above-mentioned litigation related alone to complainant’s liability for privilege taxes as a wholesale beer distributor in Memphis and Shelby county, it filed an original bill for a declaratory judgment construing the beer privilege tax statute, chapter 115, Public Acts 1933, and determining and fixing its liability for privilege taxes thereunder in the various counties of the state in which it maintains permanent branch plants, or in which it delivers and sells beer at wholesale from trucks.

Complainant contends: (1) That having paid the tax levied by section 1, par. (d) of subds. 1 and 2 of said act at Jackson, Madison county, it is entitled to the exemptions set forth in the proviso following said sections; (2) that inasmuch as a part of the brewers for which complainant is a distributor of beer at wholesale have themselves paid the brewers’ tax levied by section 1, par. (d) of subds. 1 and 2 of said act, and having itself paid said tax at its principal place of business, it is liable for no other state tax, and is liable in all other counties than Madison, and in all other cities than Jackson, for a tax not to exceed $10 to any other county or city.

In other words, it is complainant’s insistence that representing several brewers who have themselves paid the brewers’ tax, it is liable only for a tax of $37.50 to the city of Jackson, county of Madison, and state of Tennessee, respectively, to be paid at Jackson, and need *367 pay a maximum of $10' tax only to any other city or county in which it operates.

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193 S.E. 605 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 313, 170 Tenn. 361, 6 Beeler 361, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midwest-dairy-products-corp-v-crenshaw-tenn-1936.