Santa Rita Oil & Gas Co. v. State Board of Equalization

54 P.2d 117, 101 Mont. 268, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 9
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1936
DocketNo. 7,504.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 P.2d 117 (Santa Rita Oil & Gas Co. v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santa Rita Oil & Gas Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 54 P.2d 117, 101 Mont. 268, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, the owner of a producing oil and gas lease on certain lands within the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, brought this original proceeding to secure an injunction against the State Board of Equalization and the individual members thereof in their official capacity, to enjoin them from collecting the “corporation license tax,” the “operators’ net proceeds tax,” the “gross production tax,” and the “royalty owners’ net proceeds tax” arising out of the production and recovery of oil from the leased lands and premises.

Plaintiff in its complaint alleges its corporate capacity and the official capacity of the defendants. Myrtle Billideaux Hardy, an Indian of the Blackfeet Reservation, was the owner of an allotment under a certain “trust patent” granted by the United States of America on February 28, 1918, subject to the laws of the United States. On August 8, 1932, pursuant to such laws and the regulations of the Department of the Interior, and for a good and valuable consideration, the allottee, as lessor, executed and delivered to one P. T. Sweeney an oil and gas lease describing the lands included in her allotment. By the terms of this lease it extended for a period of ten years from and after its approval by the Secretary of the Interior, and for as long thereafter as oil and gas are produced therefrom in paying quantities. The lease was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on November 15, 1932. Thereafter Sweeney, the lessee, for a good and valuable consideration, assigned the lease by an instrument in writing unto the plaintiff, and all of his right, title and interest therein, which assignment was on November 8, 1935, approved by the Secretary of the Interior as required by law, and in pursuance to the rules and regulations of the Department of the Interior. Pursuant to the *271 terms of the lease plaintiff proceeded to develop the lands therein described, and on or about May 1, 1934, completed a well on these lands, producing oil in paying quantities, and since that date this well, or others located on the lands, have been producing oil in paying quantities. It is asserted in the complaint that plaintiff, in accepting the lease and proceeding with the development of the lands in question, was acting as, and now is, an instrumentality and agent of the United States of America, and therefore the state of Montana is without power to enforce, as against the plaintiff, any of the enumerated taxes. The plaintiff alleges the nature of, and-the statutory authority for, each of the taxes, and that the defendants are attempting and threatening to assess, levy and collect these taxes, all of which are said to be based on oil and gas produced by it as an instrumentality and agent of the United States, and that, unless restrained, they will continue to attempt to compute, assess, levy and collect taxes on the crude oil produced from these lands. The complaint contains other allegations necessary to invoke the original jurisdiction of this court.

The Texas Company has by leave of court filed a complaint in intervention, containing allegations similar to those found in the complaint of plaintiff, but with reference to another tract of land within the same reservation, on which it holds a lease from another allottee. The Blackfeet Tribe has likewise, by leave of court, filed a complaint in intervention on behalf of the tribe and the individual allottees similarly situated to the allottee in the lease described in plaintiff’s complaint.

The defendant board has filed separate demurrers to all of these complaints, on the ground that they fail to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. In its brief filed subsequent to oral argument on these demurrers, it is asserted that this court is without jurisdiction to entertain the complaint of the Blackfeet Tribe and it, the tribe, without capacity to sue. This argument presents a serious question. (United States v. Candelaria, 271 U. S. 432, 46 Sup. Ct. 561, 70 L. Ed. 1023.) However, the plaintiff has raised the question of the *272 validity of the net proceeds royalty tax, which is the only concern of the Blackfeet Tribe, as disclosed by its complaint in intervention and brief in support thereof; and in view of the fact that under the law, as we will presently demonstrate, the plaintiff is obliged, if the tax is valid, to pay this tax on behalf of the royalty owner, it becomes necessary for us to consider the identical question presented by this complaint in intervention, whether the complaint is properly before us or not. Accordingly, we will refrain from expressing an opinion on these questions, but will proceed to consider the case as though the complaint in intervention was improperly filed and the brief of the tribe before us as one filed by amicus curiae.

The Corporation License Tax Law provides, sections 2296 to 2304, inclusive, Revised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 166, Laws 1933, for a tax “of two (2) per centum upon the total net income received by such corporation in the preceding fiscal year from all sources within the State of Montana,” etc. (Sec. 2296, as amended by Laws 1933, Chap. 166, see. 1.) Certain corporations are without the provisions of the Act, none of which are here involved. It contains numerous provisions with reference to the manner of computing the tax, providing for deductions, etc., not here important.

Section 2398, as amended by Chapter 67 of the Laws of 1923, section 1, provides in part as follows: “Every person engaging in or carrying on the business of producing, within this state, petroleum, or other mineral or crude oil, or engaging in or carrying on the business of owning, controlling, managing, leasing or operating within this state any well or wells from which any merchantable or marketable petroleum or other mineral or crude oil is extracted or produced, sufficient in quantity to justify the marketing of the same, must, for the year 1923, and each year thereafter, when engaged in or carrying on any such business in this state, pay to the state treasurer, for the exclusive use and benefit of the State of Montana, a license tax for engaging in and carrying on such business in an amount equal to two per centum of the total gross value of all petroleum *273 and other mineral or crude oil produced by such person within this state during such year.” We will refer to this hereafter in the opinion as the “gross production tax.”

Section 2089, Revised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 188 of the Laws of 1935, section 1, provides: “Every person, partnership, corporation, or association, engaged in mining s # from or upon any mine whatsoever containing * * * petroleum, natural gas, or other valuable mineral or mineral deposits must on or before the thirty-first day of March in each year make out a statement of the gross yield of the above named metals or minerals from each mine owned or worked by such * * * corporation. ’ ’ The statement is to be made by proper officers to the defendant board and is to contain the various matters enumerated in the section.

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Bluebook (online)
54 P.2d 117, 101 Mont. 268, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santa-rita-oil-gas-co-v-state-board-of-equalization-mont-1936.