Montana Ass'n of Tobacco & Candy Distributors v. State Board of Equalization

476 P.2d 775, 156 Mont. 108, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 301
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1970
Docket11851
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 476 P.2d 775 (Montana Ass'n of Tobacco & Candy Distributors v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana Ass'n of Tobacco & Candy Distributors v. State Board of Equalization, 476 P.2d 775, 156 Mont. 108, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 301 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This case involves the legality of a formula used by the State Board of Equalization in calculating the wholesale and retail costs of cigarettes under the Montana Cigarette Sales Act. The district court of Lewis and Clark County entered judgment upholding two Board orders continuing the use of this formula following 1969 legislative amendments to the state cigarette tax statutes. Plaintiff trade association appeals from this judgment.

Plaintiff and appellant is the Montana Association of Tobacco and Candy Distributors, a trade association representing cigarette wholesalers. Defendant and respondent is the State Board of Equalization of the State of Montana, hereafter .called the Board.

*110 A brief background to the present controversy will illuminate the issue involved in this appeal. The Montana Cigarette Sales Act, codified as sections 51-301 through 51-314, R.C.M. 1947, was originally enacted by the legislature in 1965. Broadly speaking, it prohibits the sale of cigarettes below cost both in the wholesale and retail trade as a means of protecting and stabilizing state cigarette tax revenues. The Act provides for a determination of the cost of cigarettes to the wholesaler, which is defined as the basic cost of cigarettes to him plus his cost of doing business and cartage costs. The cost of cigarettes to the retailer is wholesale cost plus 10%. The sale of cigarettes by either wholesalers or retailers below cost as so established is prohibited.

The Board is given the duty of enforcing the Act, together with “the power to adopt, amend and repeal rules and regulations necessary to enforce and administer the provisions of this act.” Following passage of the Act and pursuant thereto, the Board established the following formula for calculation of the cost of cigarettes to wholesalers and retailers respectively:

1. Manufacturer’s base cost.

2. United States tax.

3. Montana tax (80 cents less allowance of 4 cents to wholesaler for collecting state tax under section 84-5608=76 cents).

4. Add items 1, 2, and 3=basic cost.

5. Add to item 4, 5% of basic cost which is statutorily prescribed minimum wholesale cost of doing business (which includes the 4 cent allowance under section 84-5608) =cash and .carry cost.

6. Multiply item 4 by .75%=cartage cost.
7. Add items 5 and 6=minimum wholesale cost to retailer.
8. Item 7 plus 10%=minimum retail cost to consumer.

Item 3 of this formula is the focus of the present dispute. The Montana tax on cigarettes is set forth in section 84-5606, *111 R.C.M.1947. The total state tax presently amounts to 80 cents per carton consisting of the basic tax of 50 cents, an additional tax of 20 cents for retirement of veterans’ honorarium bonds, and an additional tax of 10 cents for retirement of long-range building program bonds. Section 84-5608, R.C.M.1947, prior to its repeal by the 1969 legislature, provided that licensed distributors and dealers could purchase the tax stamps or insignia at a discount of 8% of their face value but that such discount applied only to the basic tax.

The 1969 legislature amended the cigarette tax statutes in Title 84 but did not amend the Cigarette Sales Act in Title 51 upon which the foregoing Board formula is based. Insofar as these 1969 amendments to the tax statutes are pertinent to the present controversy, they are three in number. One amendment repealed the 8% purchase discount on tax stamps or insignia to distributors under section 84-5608 and substituted a provision entitling licensed wholesalers and retailers to purchase tax insignia “at full face value less eight per cent (8%) of the face value, upon payment therefor, as defrayment of the costs of affixing insignia and precollecting such tax on behalf of the state of Montana.” Section 84-5606.12, R.C.M.1947.

A second amendment defined “full face value of insignia” to mean “the total amount of the tax levied under this Act.” Section 84-5606.2(e). R.C.M.1947.

A third amendmmit provided that the tax referred to was the cigarette tax imposed by section 84-5606 and “the full face value of the insignia or tax shall be added to the cost of the cigarettes and recovered from the- ultimate consumer or user.” Section 84-5606.10, R.C.M.1947.

Following these amendments, plaintiff trade association, on behalf of its cigarette wholesaler members, filed a petition with the Board requesting it to redetermine the wholesale and retail cost of cigarettes. Thereafter on June 25, 1969, the Board entered its order denying the petition and, in effect, *112 continuing the use of its existing formula for calculating the wholesale and retail costs of cigarettes.

A petition for rehearing was filed with the Board by plaintiff trade association, a rehearing was granted by the Board, and on July 31, 1969 the Board entered an order again denying the petition and reaffirming its original order of June 25.

Plaintiff trade association appealed the Board orders of June 25 and July 31 to the district court of Lewis and Clark County where the matter was submitted upon the record of the hearings before the Board and upon briefs. The district court entered judgment in favor of the Board upholding its orders. Plaintiff trade association now appeals from this district court judgment.

The underlying issue upon appeal concerns the effect of the 1969 amendments of the cigarette tax statute (section 84-5606 et seq.) upon the calculation of the cost of cigarettes under the Montana Cigarette Sales Act (section 51-301 et. seq.). Specifically the issue is whether the full 80 cent face value of the tax insignia for a carton of cigarettes or only the 76 cent price that the wholesaler pays for such tax insignia constitutes the Montana tax under item 3 of the Board’s formula for calculating the cost of cigarettes in the wholesale trade.

At the outset a brief explanation of this 4 cent differential will serve to clarify its computation. Although the total Montana cigarette tax is 80 cents per carton, 30 cents of this tax is for retirement of veterans’ honorarium and long-range building program bonds to which the 8% discount or defrayment allowed cigarette wholesalers in purchasing tax insignia does not apply. As 8°/o of the remaining 50 cent portion of the tax amounts to 4 cents, this constitutes the differential between the 80 cent full value of the tax insignia and the 76 cent cost thereof to the wholesaler.

The basic position of the Board in this appeal is that the 1969 amendment of the cigarette tax statute providing a 4 *113 cent discount on defrayment to cigarette wholesalers in purchasing tax insignia is already included in the existing Board formula under item 5 as a cost of doing business.

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Bluebook (online)
476 P.2d 775, 156 Mont. 108, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-assn-of-tobacco-candy-distributors-v-state-board-of-mont-1970.