Ohio Oil Co. v. McFarland

28 F.2d 441, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1505
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 17, 1928
DocketNo. 19129
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 F.2d 441 (Ohio Oil Co. v. McFarland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana 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. McFarland, 28 F.2d 441, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1505 (E.D. La. 1928).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Complainant, a citizen of the state of Ohio, attacks the validity of Act No. 5 of the Legislature of Louisiana, passed at its 1928 session, levying severance taxes upon natural resources, in so far as the same applies to crude oil or petroleum. The supervisor of public accounts, who is charged by the act with the duty of collecting the taxes, is made party defendant.

Complainant alleges that said act discriminates against and denies to.it equal protection under the law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to • the federal Constitution, for the following reasons:

“(a) Because the burden laid by said act upon the production of oil by your complainant from the fields in which it operates in the state of Louisiana is grossly in excess of that laid upon and paid by producers of oil in other fields in the state of Louisiana.
“(b) Because the burden laid by the said act upon the production of oil by other persons and corporations engaged in identically the same occupation, and under the same circumstances, is made by said act to vary according to arbitrary standards, so that the occupation of complainant is subjected by said act to a burden of taxation more than twice [443]*443■as great as that of other persons engaged in identically the same occupation.
“(c) Because the standard fixed in said • act, levying the severance tax according to the gravity of the product severed, results in ■gross and unreasonable discrimination, in that such standard entirely ignores the market value of the oil produced, which varies •widely in the different oil fields of the state ■of Louisiana; the net result thereof being to impose upon the oil produced by complainant a burden grossly excessive and discriminatory as compared with that laid by the ■statute upon oil produced from other fields in the state of Louisiana.
“(d) Because the attempted classification of oil for the purpose of taxation in the said statute, to wit, that of gravity, is wholly arbitrary, has no reasonable relation whatever to any ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the value of oil produced in the various fields of the state of Louisiana, and results in grossly discriminatory treatment as against complainant with respect to other persons similarly circumstanced.
“(e) That said Act No. 5 of 1928 discriminates arbitrarily in favor of producers of oil in South Louisiana and against producers of oil in North Louisiana; that the burden imposed by it upon the business of complainant and other producers of oil in North Louisiana is grossly excessive and discriminatory, as compared with the burden imposed by it upon the production of oil in South Louisiana; and
“(f) That said act is based upon discrimination of a most unusual character, which particularly operates against this complainant, in that under the said statute it is compelled to pay a tax in respect of oil produced by it, the burden of which is grossly in excess of that paid by other producers of oil of identically the same gravity.”

Complainant further charges that the said act is void, for the reason that “it does not purport to levy a severance tax predicated upon either the quantity or the value of the product át the time of the severance, and therefore violates section 21 of article 10 of the Constitution of the state of Louisiana.”

Respondent has moved to dismiss, upon the ground (a) that this court is without jurisdiction ration® materias; (b) the suit is premature; and (e) the bill does not disclose a cause or right of action.

At the same time respondent answered, admitting formal allegations, but denying the charges of discrimination, as well as the material allegations of fact upon which the conclusions of law are based. He further admitted that he would proceed to collect the taxes due under the act, which will aecrue for the first quarter ending September 1st, and that the complainant is required to make its return thereon within 30 days following, or by October 1, 1928.

In direct contradiction to the allegations of the bill respondent avers:

“That while the said state of Louisiana is not required to particularly respect classifications on basis of value, that, however, as a rule, to which there is slight, if any, exception, the gravity of oil severed from the soil is almost wholly controlling on the question of its value.”

As an example, there is copied from the Oil Weekly, the posted prices for oil in the Homer, Haynesville, Caddo, Eldorado, De Soto, Crichton, and Cotton Yalley oil fields of the state of Louisiana, as of May 25,1928, which are prices offered by the said plaintiff company, et al., as of May 25,1928, to wit:

Below 28 gravity..................... $ .91
28 to 28.9 gravity......................96
29 to 29.9 gravity..................... 1.01
30 to 30.9 gravity..................... 1.06
31 to 31.9 gravity..................... 1.11
32 to 32.9 gravity..................... 1.16.
33 to 33.9 gravity..................... 1.19
34 to 34.9 gravity..................... 1.22
35 to 35.9 gravity..................... 1.25
36 to 36.9 gravity..................... 1.28
37 to 37.9 gravity..................... 1.31
38 to 38.9 gravity..................... 1.34
39 to 39.9 gravity..................... 1.37
49 to 49.9 gravity..................... 1.40
(s/b 40 to 40.9)
41 to 41.9 gravity..................... 1.43
42 to 42.9 gravity..................... 1.46
43 to 43.9 gravity..................... 1.49
44 to 44.9 gravity..................... 1.52
45 to 45.9 gravity..................... 1.55
46 to 46.9 gravity..................... 1.58
47 to 47.9 gravity..................... 1.61
48 to 48.9 gravity..................... 1.64
49 to 49.9 gravity..................... 1.67
50 to 50.9 gravity..................... 1.70
51 to 51.9 gravity..................... 1.73
52 and above......................... 1.76

Motion to Dismiss.

Nothing has been submitted to sustain the contention that the court is without jurisdiction of the subject-matter. It appears beyond question that the amount involved will exceed $3,000, and the bill assails the validity of the sections of the statute in question under the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution. There is also diversity of citizenship, complainant being a citizen of Ohio and respondent of this state. We therefore see no basis for this contention.

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Related

Flynn, Welch & Yates, Inc. v. State Tax Commission
28 P.2d 889 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1934)
Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway
34 F.2d 47 (E.D. Louisiana, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
28 F.2d 441, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-oil-co-v-mcfarland-laed-1928.