Reeves v. Brown-Forman Distillers Corporation

157 S.W.2d 297, 288 Ky. 677, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 19, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 S.W.2d 297 (Reeves v. Brown-Forman Distillers Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reeves v. Brown-Forman Distillers Corporation, 157 S.W.2d 297, 288 Ky. 677, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 189 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

This appeal was filed in this court on December 15, of this year. It is from a judgment of the Franklin circuit court rendered on December 12th of the same year, and the question involved is of such extreme emergency as to absolutely -require an immediate determination, which should not be postponed beyond the approaching adjournment of this term on December 19th. Therefore, haste on our part is demanded so that the involved question might be' determined in time to ward off and avert possible obstructive consequences following delay. Incidentally our time for preparing this opinion (this being Wednesday, December 17th, and the court adjourning on the 19th)- — with other official duties requiring our attention — is also brief and hurried action is imposed upon us. In the circumstances we, in disposing of the question involved, will not attempt to discuss collateral issues in which respective counsel engage in their briefs, nor will we employ the usual elaboration in demonstrating the correctness of our views ordinarily employed in our opinions — all because of the brief time within which our task must be performed.

The legal question at issue is this: The United States Government is now engaged in a war, with a lot of bandits at the head of its enemy countries, who seek to destroy civilization and all of the individual liberties of mankind and, particularly, those guaranteed to the citizens of this country under our Bill of Rights. No more worthy undertaking is or could be imagined than is the burden thus thrown upon our Federal Government and its allies. Hence, in preparation for the discharge of that task the United States has acquired a plant at Charlestown, Indiana, for the purpose of manufacturing ammunition to be employed in its war, consisting chiefly of powder. An absolutely necessary article for the manufacture of powder is a high percentage of alcohol. The United States Government has, through the operation of federal statutes heretofore enacted, become the owner of vast quantities of corn out of which *679 the alcohol that it needs for the manufacturing of powder must be made. Plaintiff and appellee, BrownForman Distillers Corporation, was created under the laws of the state of Delaware, but its principal place of business and its chief office is located in the city of Louisville, Kentucky. The purpose of its organization- — • and the business in which it is engaged — is that of distilling alcoholic liquor, which is done mainly if not entirely within this commonwealth at its plant located in that city. Some time in October, 1941, the United States began negotiations with plaintiff whereby it might procure the services of plaintiff’s distilling plant in Louisville in converting its corn to which it had title into 190 proof ethyl or industrial alcohol to be used by it in the manufacture of powder at its various plants engaged in that business, but chiefly the one at Charlestown, Indiana.

Such negotiations culminated in a written contract between plaintiff and the Government on November 19, 1941, which was duly signed and executed by the proper representatives of each party thereto. It prescribed for the conversion of something like 245,000 bushels of the Government’s corn into ethyl or industrial alcohol needed by the Government, with stipulations that title to the corn (the article to be converted) would continue to remain in the Government, and that the title to the alcohol after the act of processing conversion was complete would likewise vest and remain in the Government, even without being delivered into the transporting carriage vehicle, which the contract also specifies. The compensation for the use of plaintiff’s plant in making the necessary processing required by the Government, including the use of its servants, agents and necessary facilities, was agreed to be 15c per gallon of alcohol so produced. But a stipulation was also inserted to the effect that if plaintiff should be compelled to pay any excise tax, or other charges legally demandable from it by the Commonwealth of Kentucky, as the active agent in performing such conversion, then “the Government shall reimburse the contractor for the amount of such taxes as he shall be required to pay. ’ ’ However, neither party to the contract admitted the existence of the right of the Commonwealth to collect any such charges or taxes in the circumstances, since, if done, the exactions would, in effect as well as actually, be and constitute tax obligations imposed by the state on a governmental ac *680 tivity which, all parties agree — as well as all courts— may not be done, and which exemption from state taxation statutes is always and everywhere impliedly inserted by construction whether expressly done in the statute itself or not.

This declaratory judgment action was filed by the plaintiff in the Franklin circuit court against the defendants and appellants to obtain a judicial declaration as to whether or not the state in the circumstances could demand and collect from either the plaintiff or the Government the gallonage tax imposed by Section 4214a-13 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, or any other charge which other sections might impose upon the privilege of distilling spirituous alcoholic liquor. The petition set out (but in more detail) the facts we have stated. Defendants demurred thereto which the trial court overruled. They declined to plead further and the cause was submitted on the allegations of the petition, followed by a judgment that none of the levying statutes of the Commonwealth was “applicable to the production of alcohol for the United States Government under the contract between the plaintiff and the Government, dated November 19, 1941.” As a consequence of that conclusion defendants were enjoined from imposing or collecting any such obligations arising from the converting of the Government’s corn into the extremely necessitous and emergency article of alcohol, which was stipulated in the contract should be done within 90 days from the effective date of the contract. Complaining of that judgment defendants prosecute this appeal.

The question for determination is a more or less confused, as well as narrow, one in view of the complications arising from metaphysical and technical reasoning of some of the courts before which it was presented, plus their apparent disposition to apply an extremely literal interpretation of the statutes and contracts (creating the shadow and ignoring the substance) involved in the cases with which they were dealing. Such cases, so far as we have been able to ascertain, involved an excise sales tax prevailing in the jurisdiction where the sale of the commodity taxed was the thing or the transaction upon which the burden was placed. The latest case from the Supreme Court of the United States is that of Alabama v. King & Boozer, 62 S. Ct. 43, 44, 86 *681 L. Ed. ... (but not yet published in the U. S. Reports), which was decided on November 10, 1941. That case, like other prior ones, involved a sales tax prevailing in the state of Alabama. The Government entered into a contract for the construction of an army camp on the “cost-plus-a-fixed-fee” plan. It was provided that its contractor should himself buy the material, but the Government had the right of inspection and rejection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W.2d 297, 288 Ky. 677, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-brown-forman-distillers-corporation-kyctapphigh-1941.