Roosevelt Oil Co. v. Secretary of State

64 N.W.2d 582, 339 Mich. 679
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1954
DocketDocket 26, Calendar 45,456
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 64 N.W.2d 582 (Roosevelt Oil Co. v. Secretary of State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roosevelt Oil Co. v. Secretary of State, 64 N.W.2d 582, 339 Mich. 679 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Btjtzel, C. J.

Plaintiff Roosevelt Oil & Refining-Corporation is a successor in interest to coplaintiff Roosevelt Oil Company through merger. Both were active during the first 7 months of 1948, the taxable period in question. They are joined as plaintiffs without objection on the part of the appellants. For convenience we shall refer to them as a single entity, herein designated as the appellee or the refinery.

Appellee has operated a large oil refinery at Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, since 1930. Among the products produced from crude petroleum are gasoline, naphtha, kerosene and the various grades of fuel oils. In addition to refining crude petroleum, the refinery also further processes unfinished or partially-refined gasoline purchased from other refineries for the purpose of producing a salable product. The designation of this purchased and unfinished or partially-refined gasoline as “gasoline” constitutes one of the points of controversy in the case, as claimed by appellants. Small quantities of high-quality gasoline, some of which are purchased, are mixed and blended with the refined fluid to form the finished, salable product.

For the past 18 years the refinery has filed monthly reports on the forms furnished by the gasoline tax *682 division of the secretary of State’s office. These reports have been audited, examined and duly approved by the gasoline tax division as being in full compliance with the gasoline tax act, PA 1927, No 150, as amended (CL 1948, § 207.101 et seq. [Stat Ann 1950 Rev § 7.291 et seq.]) referred to herein as the gasoline tax act. It is undisputed that up to the period in question the tax division’s theory of tax liability was based upon sales and shipments from the refinery. A letter dated September 23, 1948, from the director of the gasoline tax division informed the refinery that an audit of the refinery’s operations for the period January 1,1948, to July 31, 1948, disclosed a tax liability of $64,273.59 (without the addition of interest and penalties). Conferences between representatives of the refinery and the tax division followed. Subsequently the refinery employed Ernst & Ernst, a firm of accountants, to review the asserted basis of liability. Since no agreement as to the liability could be reached and the tax division threatened to proceed with its claim, the refinery filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court for the county of Ingham seeking a review of the matter pursuant to the statute (CL 1948, § 207.116 [Stat Ann 1950 Rev § 7.306]).

The defendants are Frederick M. Alger, Jr., secretary of State of the State of Michigan, and his successor, Owen J. Cleary, and Harold E. Bradshaw, director of the gasoline tax division of the State of Michigan. For brevity, we shall refer to them as appellants.

The trial judge ruled that the gasoline tax was imposed on gasoline sold or stored for purposes of sale and that under the tax division’s theory of liability the examination or audit conducted by the accountants emplojmd by the refinery was proper and correct, notwithstanding the tax division’s audit. He, therefore, permanently enjoined the tax division of *683 the secretary of State’s office from collecting any amounts claimed as owing by the appellee under the gasoline tax act for the period January 1, 1948, to July 31, 1948.

The basic operation of the refinery may he briefly described as follows: Crude petroleum is heated to approximately 650 degrees Fahrenheit and split into various components in a fractionating tower or crude tower; the overhead from that tower constitutes a gasoline-kerosene mixture which is taken through condensers and receivers to a surge-storage tank, designated as tank 11, where the purchased unfinished gasoline may also he received for further refining; the contents of tank 11 constitute the feed to the second stage wherein the material is heated to 700 to 1050 degrees Fahrenheit, passed through catalytic chambers, and fed into a fractionating tower designated as tower No 1; during 6 of the 7 months in question, prior to the installation of a stabilizer unit, the overhead from tower No 1 was temporarily stored in 2 tanks and was ultimately piped into 1 of the 4 tanks called finishing tanks and numbered 6, 7, 8 and 41; the bottom product from tower No 1 constitutes the feed to the third stage of the refinery, called the “naphtha unit,” which consists of 5 fractionating towers arranged in series, the bottom product from the preceding tower constituting the charge to the next; the “naphtha unit” may he adapted to produce either gasoline or any one of the naphthas depending upon the market conditions and orders of the company; the overhead product of these towers is piped to the finishing tanks or the naphtha tanks depending upon the product being produced at the time; mechanical agitation takes place in the finishing tanks for the purpose of homogeneously blending tetraethyl lead or other additives with the gasoline produced in the refinery; the gasoline produced after blending is *684 piped from the finishing tanks to the loading rack, or temporarily stored in 3 small tanks, to allow for production fluctuations, pending distribution. The total production charged to the refinery during the period January 1, 1948, to July 31, 1948, was 27,645, 201 gallons.

In April, 1948, investigations instituted by appellee and conducted by the State police in cooperation with a private investigator employed by the refinery disclosed that large quantities of gasoline were being stolen. These thefts occurred essentially in 2 ways: (1) deliberate overloading of trucks leaving the refinery with the connivance of some dishonest refinery employees, and (2) short deliveries, the refinery actually receiving less gasoline than the purchase invoices disclosed. These thefts were called to the attention of the tax division by the appellee and apparently were at least one of the motivating reasons for the institution of a new theory of gasoline tax liability for refineries under the gasoline tax act.

Prior to the present action, the refinery paid its gasoline tax as computed on forms furnished by the tax division. This monthly form reported 3 basic items of information: (1) withdrawals for distribution, (2) sales upon which taxes were collected, and (3) sales to other licensed distributors from whom the tax would be collected, the sum of the last 2 items constituting the first. Accompanying this tax form a schedule, designated as C-2, was submitted. This schedule required detailed information which included the following: Beginning inventory, production and purchases as the gallonage to be accounted for; and ending inventory, transfers to other products, and losses as deductions which, with the sum of withdrawals, balanced the schedule. For 5 of the 7 months in question the refinery set forth large losses on this schedule as a balancing item to *685 reconcile the gallonage to be accounted for with the total deductions and withdrawals. It is claimed by appellee that the C-2 schedule accompanying the tax form was submitted for statistical and cross-checking purposes only and was not used in computing the tax. That such information was not used in computing the tax is evident since under the then basis of liability, approved by the appellants, the tax could be computed solely from withdrawal records.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.W.2d 582, 339 Mich. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roosevelt-oil-co-v-secretary-of-state-mich-1954.