Realco Services, Inc. v. Halperin

355 A.2d 743, 1976 Me. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 7, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 355 A.2d 743 (Realco Services, Inc. v. Halperin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Realco Services, Inc. v. Halperin, 355 A.2d 743, 1976 Me. LEXIS 428 (Me. 1976).

Opinion

ARCHIBALD, Justice.

On report on an agreed statement of facts.

The plaintiff’s complaint prayed for a declaratory judgment that the defendant *744 was not authorized by the provisions of 36 M.R.S.A. § 1752(21) to assess a use tax on certain of the plaintiff’s tangible personal property. On the facts of this case we conclude that the tax assessment was not authorized.

FACTS

Realeo Services, Inc. (Realeo), is a foreign corporation with no established place of business in the State of Maine. It operates what is known as the National Railroad Trailer Pool (Pool), with which most of the major railroads in the United States and Canada are affiliated by contract. Realeo purchases from the manufacturer a type of trailer, commonly known as a “piggyback” trailer, which can be loaded on a railroad flat car and moved into the stream of commerce, thus providing long haul transportation for shippers or receivers who do not ordinarily utilize railroad siding terminals. These trailers are not designed for general “over the road” usage but may be moved from a siding by motor carriers for the limited purpose of pick-up and delivery.

The various railroads affiliated with the Pool execute membership agreements under the terms of which their rights and obligations are carefully delineated. Both the Bangor and Aroostook and Maine Central Railroads became members of the Pool in 1962.

Under the terms of the pooling agreement Realeo orders and purchases the trailers from the manufacturer and arranges for the railroad nearest the manufacturer to pick up the trailers, thereupon placing them in circulation for the benefit of all members of the Pool. Once in the hands of a railroad Realeo ceases to exercise any further control over the movement of a given trailer unless and until it is ultimately returned to it at one of its so-called Geographic Pool Points, the nearest one to Maine being in Newark, New Jersey. Realeo is paid a daily rental by the railroad having possession of a trailer at 11:59 p. m.

In addition to the pooling arrangement, participating railroads may enter into a subscription agreement, thus ensuring that an adequate supply of trailers is available to meet the demand. Under this arrangement each trailer is leased to a subscribing railroad and bears its markings. However, the railroad on whose line such a trailer happens to be at 11:59 p. m. of any given day is responsible for the rental regardless of the name that may appear on the trailer, the lessee railroad being responsible for daily rentals only when a trailer is on its line at 11:59 p. m. The agreement further provides that when an empty trailer comes into the possession of a railroad it becomes incumbent upon that railroad to route the trailer in the direction of the subscribing railroad, but any intervening railroad has the right to utilize the services of that particular trailer if it needs it at any point prior to its arrival on the line of the subscribing railroad. If the subscribing railroad has no further use for the trailer it may avoid daily rental by routing it to the Geographic Pool Point, although neither the Maine Central Railroad nor the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad has so returned any of the trailers here involved.

The Maine Central Railroad entered into such a lease in 1966 and the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad in 1968. Of the 250 trailers assigned to the Maine railroads, 210 found their way into the State of Maine within seventy-three days of the initial delivery from the manufacturer. Having once arrived in Maine, however, all of these were rerouted into the flow of interstate commerce within a short time and have remained in the flow of interstate commerce ever since, gravitating toward Maine when not in use but available to any member railroad in whose possession they came while thus en route.

The affidavits attached to the agreed statement establish that neither railroad has any motor carrier authority from the Interstate Commerce Commission or the Maine Public Utilities Commission to haul “piggyback” trailers “over the road” except *745 for specifically authorized pick-up and delivery. In fact, as these affidavits make clear, none of the trailers leased to either railroad was ever used for intrastate transportation.

Based on the purchase price of the 210 trailers the State Tax Assessor, on July 10, 1970, and by amendment on July 14, 1972, assessed against Realeo a use tax in the sum of $54,329.91 plus interest of $6,-997.84.

LEGAL CONCLUSION

Although Realeo has argued that the tax was assessed in violation of the State Tax Assessor’s administrative interpretation of the relevant statute and, additionally, has argued that the tax was unconstitutional because it imposed an impermissible burden on interstate commerce, our analysis makes it unnecessary to reach either of these issues. Our conclusion that the defendant lacked authority to assess this particular tax is reached by considering the plaintiff’s initial position, namely:

“Piggyback trailers used exclusively in interstate commerce and which pursuant thereto enter Maine temporarily from time to time are not encompassed in the statutory levy of a use tax upon the full purchase price of property producing rental income, when the statute specifically limits the levy to property ‘located in this State/” (Emphasis supplied.)

Maine adopted a sales and use tax in 1951. P.L.1951, ch. 250, defined the word “use” as follows:

“ ‘Use’ includes the exercise in this state of any right or power over tangible personal property incident to its ownership when purchased by the user at retail sale.”

By P.L.1965, ch. 361, the 102nd Legislature added the following to the above definition,

“including the derivation of income, whether received in money or in the form of other benefits, by a lessor from the rental of tangible personal property located in this State.” (Emphasis supplied.) 36 M.R.S.A. § 1752(21).

Since admittedly Realeo owned the piggyback trailers and was a lessor thereof to both Maine railroads by virtue of the subscription agreements, it thus becomes critical in determining the validity of the use tax assessment to decide whether Realeo exercised such right or power over these trailers as would bring its “use” within the statutory definition of that term.

This is the first occasion we have had to construe the 1965 amendment. In order that we may determine the legislative purpose in adopting the amendment, 1 it is appropriate to consider the relevant cases decided between 1951 and 1965. In so doing we merely adopt the well recognized canon of statutory construction that a legislature, in enacting a particular statute, would be guided by the past decisions of the highest court in its state. Webber v. Granville Chase Company, 117 Me. 150, 103 A. 13 (1918); see also Wakem, Receiver v. Town of Van Buren, 137 Me. 127, 15 A.2d 873 (1940); Sacknoff v. Sacknoff, 131 Me. 280, 161 A. 669 (1932).

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355 A.2d 743, 1976 Me. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realco-services-inc-v-halperin-me-1976.