Mississippi River Fuel Corp. v. Smith

164 S.W.2d 370, 350 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 1, 1942
DocketNos. 37831, 37832.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 370 (Mississippi River Fuel Corp. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi River Fuel Corp. v. Smith, 164 S.W.2d 370, 350 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 548 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Action under our declaratory judgment act (Sec. 1126 et seq., R.S. 1939, 1 Ann. Stat. (1929), Sec. 1097a et seq., p. 1388 et seq.) to determine whether certain natural gas sales by plaintiff, Mississippi River Fuel Corporation, are subject to our sales tax law (Sec. 11407 et seq., R.S. 1939, 12 Ann. Stat., Sec. 10164b et seq., p. 8118 et seq.). Resistance to the tax is on the ground that the gas sold is transported interstate by pipe line, and that under *Page 8 the facts, the sales involved are not subject to a sales tax. Also, it is contended that Sec. 11409, R.S. 1939, exempts the gas sales from the sales tax. The amount of taxes involved is in excess of $7500, hence the Supreme Court has jurisdiction of the appeal.

Petition was filed by plaintiff, Mississippi River Fuel Corporation, June 15, 1940, against the State Auditor, Smith, and 20 industrial customers of plaintiff fuel company. The Scullin Steel Company and Laclede-Christy Clay Products Company were made defendants in the petition, but on their separate motions they were made parties plaintiff instead of parties defendant. Pending final disposition of the cause, agreements were made whereby the taxes claimed were paid, under protest, to the State Auditor, and a temporary injunction issued enjoining him from paying over to the State Treasurer.

The trial court found that it was the duty of plaintiff, Mississippi River Fuel Corporation, to collect the taxes in question from the named customers and pay same over to the State Auditor. The Mississippi River Fuel Corporation and 10 of the customers appealed. The appeal of the Mississippi River Fuel Company is No. 37831, appeal of the others is No. 37832.

We shall refer to plaintiff, Mississippi River Fuel Corporation, as the Gas Company, and to defendant, Smith, as the State Auditor. The Gas Company is a Delaware corporation, authorized to do business in this state. It operates a 22 inch pipe line from Perryville, Louisiana, through Arkansas and into Missouri, and to what is called Meramec Junction, north of the Meramec river in St. Louis County. [372] The Gas Company purchases, in Louisiana, its gas from producers and delivery is made at Perryville, Louisiana. At the point of delivery, the gas is compressed under a pressure of 400 pounds to the square inch, and then it is passed through coolers and into the 22 inch pipe line. The pressure decreases as the gas flows north in the pipe line, and between Perryville, Louisiana, and Meramec Junction the gas passes through eight compressors where the pressure is restored to 400 pounds. The eighth compressor station north of Perryville is known as the 12 mile station, and is about 12 miles south of Fredericktown, Missouri. The Gas Company has no storage tanks. It keeps up with the amount of gas it will need to supply its customers and purchases, as needed, from producers in the Louisiana field. The pipe line from Perryville to Meramec Junction is about 450 miles in length, and it requires about 24 hours for gas to flow from Perryville to the Junction. The volume content of the pipe line between these two points is about 100,000,000 cubic feet at an average pressure of 250 pounds to the square inch.

At Meramec Junction the 22 inch pipe line is divided into two separate lines; one is called the Missouri line and the other the Illinois line. Upon each of these lines and near the point of take off is an automatic valve called a regulator which controls the flow of gas into the branch line, and at the junction the pressure is substantially *Page 9 reduced before the gas is sent out into the branch lines. The Missouri line extends generally north, from the Junction, and supplies the Gas Company's customers in the south St. Louis area. The Illinois line extends east, under the Mississippi River, to East St. Louis and Alton, Illinois, and then a section of that line extends west, under the Mississippi River, and into north St. Louis, and supplies the Gas Company's customers in the north St. Louis area.

The Missouri line was described by George M. Parker, the Gas Company's manager, as follows: "Off the 22 inch line two 8 inch lines are extended to a manifold (a single pipe into which a number of pipes feed) and then a 20 inch line, reducing to a 16 inch line and finally to a 10 inch line at its terminus in St. Louis."

Parker described the Illinois line as follows: "The 22 inch line comes into the area (the Junction) just north of the Meramec River and from there three 8 inch lines are extended eastward to a manifold and from there it is extended to four 10 inch lines under the Mississippi River and into another manifold and then another 22 inch line proceeds to East St. Louis and Alton. When the line extends northward from East St. Louis it ends up at Alton a 16 inch line . . . A section of the line, or a 10 inch, comes across the river again into north St. Louis."

The manner of getting gas to a customer is correctly described in the State Auditor's brief as follows: "Adjacent to the Missouri branch line . . . are located a number of Mississippi River Fuel industrial consumers. At that point on the Missouri branch line, adjacent to the industrial consumers, a lateral line, in the form of a supply line, is taken off and goes on to the property of the consumer. Located on the lateral line on the property of the consumer are regulator houses wherein are located regulators. The function of these regulators is to permit only that amount of gas to pass through as is necessary to meet the demands of the individual consumer at a given time. This function of controlling the passage into the consumer's distribution system is brought about by controlling the pressure of the gas on the customer's side of the regulator. Located immediately after the regulators controlling the passage of gas into the customer's plant are located meters for the purpose of metering the gas delivered to the customer. At the outlet of this meter deliveryof the gas takes place." The manner of delivery in north St. Louis is the same.

The tax is claimed on the sale of gas to some industrial customers in Missouri, south of Meramec Junction. The manner of delivery to these is described in the Auditor's brief as follows:

"In regard to that phase of plaintiff's operation in the distribution and sale of gas to industrial consumers located on the main transmission line south of the Meramec Junction, each delivery is effected by a small lateral line taking off from the main transmission line. Within a few feet of the transmission line, regulators are placed upon *Page 10 the lateral line to control the passage of gas into said lateral line. These regulators effect a substantial reduction in pressure from the main transmission line to the lateral line and permit only that amount of gas to pass into the lateral line as is[373] necessary to make available an adequate supply of gas for industrial use. The lateral line then runs over to the industrial consumer's plant, ranging from a few hundred feet to several miles. On the property of the consumer there is again located upon the lateral line a regulator which permits only that amount of gas to pass through as is necessary to maintain an adequate pressure in the distribution system of the customer to assure a sufficient quantity of gas to meet the aggregate consumption requirements of the individual consumer. This regulator effects a substantial reduction in pressure between the customer's side of the regulator and that side of the regulator nearest the transmission line. The points of delivery to the respective customers are the meters located immediately after the last regulator located on the lateral supply line."

Subsection (c) of Sec. 11408, R.S. 1939, 12 Ann. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 370, 350 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-river-fuel-corp-v-smith-mo-1942.