Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway

281 U.S. 146, 50 S. Ct. 310, 74 L. Ed. 775, 1930 U.S. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 14, 1930
Docket440
StatusPublished
Cited by158 cases

This text of 281 U.S. 146 (Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway, 281 U.S. 146, 50 S. Ct. 310, 74 L. Ed. 775, 1930 U.S. LEXIS 724 (1930).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Ohio Oil Company brought this suit in the District Court to enjoin the enforcement of a statute of Louisiana (Act 5 of 1928) imposing a severance tax upon the production of oil. The statute as applied to the complainant was attacked as a violation both of the constitution of Louisiana and of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. It was alleged that the laws of the State afforded no remedy for the recovery of taxes illegally exacted. On appeal from an order denying an interlocutory injunction, this Court decided that the questions presented could not be resolved satisfactorily upon the affidavits submitted, and directed that an injunction should be granted pendente lite on stated terms. 279 U. S. 813. Trial was had before the District Court, as specially constituted under the applicable statute, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill. 34 Fed. (2d) 47. The complainant appeals.

In the year 1921, the constitution of Louisiana was amended so as to provide that natural resources severed from the soil or water might be classified for the purpose of taxation and that taxes might be “ predicated upon *151 either the quantity or value of the product at the time and place where it is severed ” (Const. Art. X, Sec. 21). 1 By Act 140 of 1922, section 2, natural resources were divided into two classes, and taxes were levied on oil and gas at three per cent, of the gross market value of the total production, and on all other natural resources at two per cent, of the gross market value. The Supreme Court of Louisiana, sustaining this tax on oil and natural gas, held that it was not a property tax but was an excise tax upon the privilege of severing, although it was measured by the value of the property severed. This decision was affirmed here. Gulf Refining Company v. McFarland, 154 La. Ann. 251; 264 U. S. 573.

In 1928, the legislature of Louisiana enacted the statute now in question which amended the prior act so as to tax various natural resources on the basis of the quantity severed. Under this amendment taxes on oil were classified according to gravity and ran from four cents a barrel of 42 gallons on oil of 28 degrees gravity and below, to eleven cents a barrel on oil above 43 degrees gravity (Act 5 of 1928). 2

*152 The business of the complainant in Louisiana is that of producing and selling oil and not of refining it. The production of the complainant is in the following fields: Haynesville, in the parish of Claiborne; Cotton Valley, in the parish of Webster; Pine Island, in the parish of Caddo; Urania, in the parish of La Salle. All these fields are in North Louisiana. The bulk of the complainant’s production is in the Haynesville, Cotton Valley and Pine Island fields. Its production in these fields from January to June, 1928, inclusive, amounted to 723,192 barrels out of its total production in Louisiana of 762,139 barrels; and from August, 1928, to March, 1929, inclusive, to 690,397 barrels out of its total production of 705,301 barrels; the remainder was Urania production.

Gravity as used in the statute, and in oil price quotations, is not specific gravity,.but what is called Baumé gravity, under’ which the lighter the oil the higher the gravity. The record shows that, generally speaking, crude petroleums are divided into three classes — paraffine base, asphalt base, and mixed base, the last being a combination of paraffine and asphalt base. The higher gravity oils usually have a paraffine base, while the lower gravity oils usually have an asphalt base. All three of these classes are found in Louisiana. In North Louisiana *153 there are paraffine base, asphalt base and mixed base crudes, the oils generally having paraffine base, while in South Louisiana the oil produced is mostly asphalt base.

The process of refining oil is distillation. The evidence is that paraffine base oil in that manner yields gasoline, kerosene, gas oil, some lubricating oil and wax. Gasoline comes off first and is the most valuable component of such oil. Asphalt base oil usually yields a very small amount of gasoline by distillation, the first product ordinarily being gas oil, then lubricating oil, and the residuum, asphalt. The gas oil may- be subjected to the cracking process and gasoline may be obtained in that way. The value of asphalt base oil is largely for the manufacture of lubricating oil, and the value for this purpose is determined by viscosity and sulphur content, not by gravity. The coastal oils of South Louisiana are divided into “A” and “ B ” grades, “ Grade A” being the oils that are useful in the production of lubricating oil, and the other oils being classed as Grade B.” While gravity is not the determining factor, it appears from the testimony that “ Grade A” oils must be less than 25 degrees gravity.

Asphalt base oils are produced in North Louisiana in the fields of Pine Island, Urania, Hosston and Bellevue. The last three named are suitable for making lubricating oil, but the Pine Island heavy oil does not have that value. The evidence is that the Urania, Hosston and Bellevue oils, used for that purpose, are practically the same as the coastal “ Grade A” oils-.

Gravity is said to be an index of relative value of oils only in the same pool or district, and oils of different gravity are produced in the same fields and from the same tracts of land and sometimes from the same sand. But it appears that, with respect to paraffine base oils, the higher the gravity, the greater is the gasoline content, *154 which as between these oils is largely determinative of price. Gravity in such cases is a rough and familiar method of approximating the gasoline content, and in many fields price quotations of crude oil above 28 degrees are graduated according to gravity.

Crude oil as it comes from the wells is run into tanks from which the purchaser sells to pipe lines, the well-recognized market prices being the prices posted by the pipe line companies buying the oil. The complainant states that the oil produced in its Haynesville field was from 33 to 36 degrees gravity; in its Cotton Valley field, one class -was between 28 and 31 degrees gravity and another above 43 degrees gravity; in its Pine Island field, its production was from 37 to 41 degrees gravity. The complainant purchased no crude oil except that, in the Haynesville field, it bought some of the royalty oil of the lessors under its leases. The complainant’s cashier testified at the trial that complainant’s “purchases and sales in each field in which it operates are made on a gravity basis.”

This testimony is not understood to include the Urania field in which the complainant was not operating at the time but had been operating until shortly before.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Town of St. John v. State Board of Tax Commissioners
690 N.E.2d 370 (Indiana Tax Court, 1997)
White v. Reynolds Metals Co.
558 So. 2d 373 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1989)
United Illuminating Co. v. City of New Haven
427 A.2d 830 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1980)
Snow v. City of Memphis
527 S.W.2d 55 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1975)
Lublin v. Brown
362 A.2d 769 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1975)
Kohler v. Tugwell
292 F. Supp. 978 (E.D. Louisiana, 1969)
Commonwealth v. Life Assurance Co.
214 A.2d 209 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1965)
Lane Construction Corp. v. Comptroller of the Treasury
178 A.2d 904 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1962)
Wiramal Corp. v. Director of Division of Taxation
175 A.2d 631 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1961)
Lockwood v. Commissioner of Revenue
98 N.W.2d 753 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1959)
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1952
Ludwig v. Harston
197 P.2d 252 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1948)
Herman v. M. C.C. of Baltimore
55 A.2d 491 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1947)
Toomer v. Witsell
73 F. Supp. 371 (E.D. South Carolina, 1947)
Schmitt v. Nord
27 N.W.2d 910 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1947)
Texas Company v. Cohn
112 P.2d 522 (Washington Supreme Court, 1941)
C. Thomas Stores Sales System, Inc. v. Spaeth
297 N.W. 9 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)
State v. Inland Empire Refineries, Inc.
101 P.2d 975 (Washington Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 U.S. 146, 50 S. Ct. 310, 74 L. Ed. 775, 1930 U.S. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-oil-co-v-conway-scotus-1930.