Pan American Petroleum Corp. v. Gully

175 So. 185, 179 Miss. 847, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 29
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1937
DocketNo. 32397.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 So. 185 (Pan American Petroleum Corp. v. Gully) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pan American Petroleum Corp. v. Gully, 175 So. 185, 179 Miss. 847, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 29 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*855 Cook J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On November 27, 1931, W. J. Miller, State Tax Collector, instituted this suit by filing a bill of complaint in the chancery court of Adams county against the Pan American Petroleum Corporation, appellant herein, seeking to recover from it unpaid taxes on gasoline received in the state of Mississippi for sale or use on the streets and highways thereof, amounting to $150,000; and this appeal is from a decree awarding a recovery of $72,722.30 for the period between April 26, 1928, and November 27, 1931.

The bill of complaint sought recovery on general charges that the appellant had shipped into and received in the state large quantities of gasoline for sale or use on the streets and highways which were subject to an excise tax, which it had not reported to the auditor of public accounts as required by law, and upon which it had not paid the excise tax required by law, and prayed for a discovery of the amount of gasoline shipped into the state by appellant, or received by it during each of the six years next preceding the filing’ of the suit, and a recovery of the alleged excise tax on the gasoline alleged to have been unreported.

On January 2, 1932, the said W. J. Miller, State Tax Collector, also filed a suit in the circuit court of the First judicial district of Hinds - county against the said Pan American Petroleum Corporation, also seeking in a general demand to recover unpaid excise taxes alleged to be due by said corporation upon gasoline purchased and received by it, less 3 per cent, allowed for evaporation or spillage, and less such excise tax as has been previously paid upon gasoline which, under the law, was immune from the imposition of such tax, which it had failed to report to the state auditor, and on which it had failed to pay the tax required by law, amounting to $23,380.16.

After the expiration of the term of office of W. J. Miller *856 as state tax collector, Ms successor, J. B. Gully, revived each of the above-mentioned suits, and thereafter the declaration in the Hinds county suit was amended so as to demand recovery for all unpaid excise taxes on all gasoline sold or received in the state of Mississippi by the appellant on and prior to the 1st day of June, 1932, aggregating $79,465.64. This cause proceeded to final judgment on December 22, 1932, the judgment reading as follows:

“Comes, J. B. Gully, State Tax Collector, Plaintiff, by Attorneys, and Pan American Petroleum Corporation. Defendant, by attorneys and submit this cause to the Court for final adjudication, without a jury, in vacation by consent, upon the pleadings and the evidence, all of which were heard and considered by the Court, and the Court finds for the plaintiff for the sum of Eight Thousand Two Hundred Sixty-eight Dollars, twenty-seven cents ($8,268.27), for excise tax on gasoline received and/or sold in Mississippi to Levee Contractors and/or subcontractors, and any agency of the United States of America prior to June 1, 1932, and in full of all claims and demands of the plaintiff against the defendant, as set forth in the original and all amended declarations in this cause.
“But the parties hereto consent that the question of the Claim of the State Tax Collector for the three per cent differential and the tax thereon which is in suit in the Chancery Court of Adams County, Mississippi, is not included herein and the same is not here adjudicated.
“It is therefore considered by the Court that the Plaintiff, J. B. Gully, State Tax Collector for the use and benefit of the State of Mississippi have and recover of and from the Pan American Petroleum Corporation, defendant, the sum of Eight Thousand Two Hundred Sixty Eight Dollars, Twenty Seven Cents ($8,268.27) and all costs of court herein expended for all of which execution may issue.
*857 “This judgment shall be entered by the Clerk of this Court on the Minutes of the Circuit Court in Vacation.”

To the Adams county suit, the case now at bar, the appellant filed an answer denying the general allegations of the bill, and incorporated therein a. special plea alleging that since April 26,1928, the excise tax imposed upon distributors of gasoline was measured only by the number of gallons received in the state for sale or use on the streets and highways of the state, less deductions, allowances, and exceptions allowed by law; that gasoline is a liquid product which has no fixed volume, but is subject to expansion and contraction in accordance with its temperature, such expansion and contraction being according to a fixed and determinable formula of .0006 in volume for each Fahrenheit degree of increased heat at atmospheric pressure, which is recognized and established by the United States Bureau of Standards in the petroleum industry; that by means of such formula it is possible to reduce any given gallonage of gasoline at a given temperature and at atmospheric pressure, to the amount of such gas by volume at sixty degrees Fahrenheit as a standard of measurement.

The plea further averred that it is and has been for many years the established trade practice in the petroleum industry in the United States to use the temperature of sixty degrees Fahrenheit as the standard temperature ; that for a long period of time gasoline had been sold and handled in the petroleum industry upon a standard basis of gallonage reduced to sixty degrees Fahrenheit regardless of what the actual gross gallonage at some other temperature might be; that said practice is established and recognized by the United States Bureau of Standards; that such Bureau of Standards recognizes that a volume of 231 cubic inches at sixty degrees Fahrenheit constitutes a gallon, and that this fact was known to the Legislature of this state when it enacted chapter 198, Laws of 1928 (repealed and re-enacted by Laws 1928, *858 Ex. Sess. e. 21), measuring the excise tax imposed by the gallonage received in the state. That from and after the passage of the said act of April 26,1928, the gasoline tax department of the state auditor’s office uniformly construed and applied the said gasoline tax statute as requiring the payment of the excise tax based upon the net gallonage, that is to say, based upon the gallonage reduced to the standard of sixty degrees Fahrenheit, and that by the adoption of the Code of 1930, the Legislature re-enacted said statute (Code 1930, section 4786 et seq.), thereby ratifying’ and adopting the uniform construction theretofore placed upon said statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 So. 185, 179 Miss. 847, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pan-american-petroleum-corp-v-gully-miss-1937.