Montgomery Ward & Co. v. State

175 S.W.2d 218, 141 Tex. 626, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 378
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1943
DocketNo. 8123.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 218 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. State, 175 S.W.2d 218, 141 Tex. 626, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 378 (Tex. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

This action was brought by the State of Texas, respondent, to recover additional chain store taxes alleged to be owing by petitioner, Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc., because of its operation in this state of mail order offices. The courts below rendered judgment in favor of respondent for the amount of taxes sued for, the Court of Civil Appeals affirming the trial court’s judgment. 169 S. W. (2d) 997.

The only question involved is whether petitioner’s mail order offices are stores within the meaning of the Texas Chain Store Tax Statute (codified as article lllld .of Vernon’s Annotated Penal Code of Texas).

The facts were agreed to and stipulated by the parties. The Court of Civil Appeals incorporated in its opinion somewhat *628 at length the agreed facts purporting to show the character of business done at the mail order offices. An abbreviated statement of the stipulations (deemed sufficient for present purposes) is as follows:

“V. * * * Each of such ‘mail order offices’ consisted of a room or building facing a street in the business section of a town, which room or building was rented by Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated, * * * by a lease contract giving Montgomery Ward & Cb. * * * control theréof, and in each of which * * * there were several of the regular ‘Montgomery Ward & Co. * * * Mail Order Catalogs’. * * * Such catalogs inform the customers that orders must be sent to the company’s mail order house at Fort Worth, Texas, for acceptance, and that the merchandise ordered will be shipped from there * * *. Also stationed in each of said mail order offices was one or more employees of said company. No merchandise of any kind was ever stocked for sale in any of said mail order offices. * * *

“VI. During all of the times in question afore-mentioned custqmers came in to each of said mail order offices and ordered merchandise through such catalogs from the company’s Fort Worth * * * mail order house. The sales resulting from such orders were made in the following manners:

“In all cases of customer’s ordering merchandise through an order office, the customer may make out an order * * r. All orders received through the company’s * * * mail order offices are forwarded to the company’s mail order house at Fort Worth, * * *, where they are accepted or rejected, and, if accepted, the merchandise ordered is segregated and appropriated to the customer’s orders, and the merchandise is shipped in accordance with the customer’s instructions contained in their orders. * * *.

“The sales resulting from such orders may be (1) cash sales, (2) c.o.d. sales, or (3) credit sales. If it is to be a cash sale, the customer will deposit with the company’s employee at the order office the purchase price, plus transportation charges. If it is to be a credit sale, the customer will deposit with the employee at the order office a down payment. * * * If it is- to be a c.o.d. sale, no money is deposited * * * at the order office. On c.o.d. sales payment is made by the customer to the carrier or post office if shipment of the merchandise is made direct to the customer; ór, if the customer has requested that the merchandisebe sent to him in care of th order office, the purchase price plus the transportation charges are collected from the customer *629 at the time the customer calls for his merchandise at the order office.

“Merchandise sold as a result of orders received at said order offices may be shipped (1) direct to the customer or (2) to the customer in care, of the order office through which the order was received, as requested by the customer. * * *

“Customers requesting that the merchandise be shipped direct to them, as well as customer’s requesting that the merchandise be sent to them in care of the order office through which the order was received, may open their packages and .examine the merchandise. All customers who are not satisfied with the merchandise may return it to the mail order house. The customers who open their packages at said mail order offices, and who were not satisfied with the merchandise ordered, did not take the merchandise, but left it at the' mail order office and the company’s employee returned it to the mail order house. If said customers had previously paid such amount due on such merchandise, their money was refunded to them. All of the company’s catalogs including those kept in the order office, contain the following written guarantee under which such returns of merchandise are permitted:

“ We guarantee complete satisfaction or your money back. What ever you may buy from us must please you in every way— or you may return it at our expense and we will either exchange it for what you want or refund all you paid, including any trans-. portation charges paid by you.’ * *

The chain store tax statute, insofar as applicable here, provides that “every * * * corporation, * * * operating * * * one or more stores * * * within this state, under the same general management, * * * shall pay the license fees * * * prescribed for the privilege of * * * operating * * * such stores * * and defines the term “store” as used in the act to mean “any store * * or * * * mercantile establishment * * * not specifically exempted within this act * * *, operated * * * by * * * the same *- * * corporation, * * * in which goods, wares or merchandise of any kind are sold * *

The" state contended, and the Court of Civil Appeals held, that the company’s offices as operated in carrying on its mail order business in the state, are “stores” as that term is defined by the taxing statute, and hence within the coverage of the statute. The company admitted in its brief that if under its plan of conducting its mail order business the sale of the goods *630 occurred at the order office the state’s suit was well founded. It argued that since a sale is a transaction in which title is transferred from 'Seller to buyer, and that since in this case there is no doubt that title is so transferred during every sale, the fact as to when title passed is an essential inquiry. It admitted that if title did not pass until the goods were given to the customer at the order office then the sale was made there; but contended that under the stipulated facts as to the manner of carrying on its mail order business, title to the goods passed from the company to the buyer when the goods were appropriated to the custpmer’s contract at the Ft. Worth order house and delivered to the carrier for shipment to him.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 218, 141 Tex. 626, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-state-tex-1943.