Sheppard v. Musser

89 S.W.2d 222
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1935
DocketNo. 13379.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 222 (Sheppard v. Musser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheppard v. Musser, 89 S.W.2d 222 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

BROWN, Justice.

This is an appeal by George H. Sheppard, state comptroller of public accounts of the state of Texas, and his official deputies and W. R. Parker, district attorney of Tarrant county, from an order of the district court of Tarrant county restraining them from collecting taxes claimed by them to be due the state of Texas by Glenn W. Musser, plaintiff in the trial court, in accordance with the provisions of the act of the Forty-Fourth Legislature, which became effective May 11, 1935 (see Acts of Regular Session, c. 241, p. 575 [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 7047c — 1, 7047cc — 1, 7047cc — 2, Vernon’s Ann.P.C. art. 131c— 1]), commonly known as the Cigarette Act. Plaintiff’s petition and defendants’ answer thereto denying the equities of plaintiff’s bill of complaint were duly verified,’ and the temporary writ of injunction was granted upon consideration of those pleadings and upon evidence introduced.

Plaintiff’s first amended petition, on which he based his application for the writ, embodies these allegations:

“Your petitioner would respectfully show to the court that he is engaged exclusively *223 and solély in the business of interstate commerce; that he is the owner of and operates a wholesale tobacco business known as the Texas Tobacco Company, and is engaged principally in the sale of cigarettes. That the said business, as hereinbefore alleged, is situated and located in the City of Ardmore in the State of Oklahoma, where his offices, warehouses, and vaults are located, and that he has been issued by the State of Oklahoma, a permit authorizing him to engage in the tobacco business. He would aver that such business as aforesaid is wholly interstate and is conducted in substantially the following manner: He makes his purchase of commodities in wholesale quantities from various manufacturers in the United States, which commodities are shipped in interstate commerce to him at his place of business in Ardmore, Oklahoma, and which goods are ‘there stored in his warehouse and vault until subsequently sold in interstate commerce, the sales being made principally to citizens of and persons residing in the State of Texas. That in the State of Texas, he has in his employ approximately forty solicitors and salesmen who solicit orders o'f the citizens of Texas, and other persons in Texas, and that when the said orders are taken by the solicitors and salesmen each order is forwarded to the petitioner’s place of business in Ardmore, Oklahoma, and there passed on and accepted or rejected by your petitioner and/or his agents. Where orders are accepted the cigarettes corresponding to the amount indicated in each order are taken from the sfoclc in Ardmore, Oklahoma, and each order is separately packed, or the cartons composing each order are tied in a separate package, whereupon the cigarettes are then transported from Ardmore, Oklahoma, to the respective salesmen and solicitors of the petitioner who are located in the State of Texas, and the said salesmen and solicitors deliver the respective orders in the original packages, to the respective purchasers, collect the purchase price and remit to your petitioner, in instances where delivery cannot be accomplished, the cigarettes are returned in interstate commerce to the petitioner, at his place of business in Ardmore, .Oklahoma.

“Your petitioner would further aver and show that notwithstanding the fact that the trades and sales of the petitioner were and are wholly those of interstate commerce, and all interstate shipments, and are therefore not subject to the requirements of the said cigarette tax law above referred to, the said George H. Sheppard, in his official capacity as Comptroller of the Public Accounts, acting through his servants, agents and employees, and through rangers of Texas designated to act in' his department, have sought and are now seeking to make the provisions of this Act apply to your petitioner, and have annoyed and harassed and are now annoying and harassing this petitioner in the conduct of his business, and are seeking to cripple, destroy and devastate, and are crippling, destroying and devastating the business of your petitioner by seizing and confiscating his commodities, and have threatened' to and will, unless enjoined, seize the conveyances upon which the same are transported, well knowing that the said commodities have been sold and shipped in interstate commerce, and that the same is in no legal sense liable to the payment of the said tax or to seizure and confiscation.”

Then follow allegations of seizure and confiscation by defendants Sheppard and his deputies at different times and places of cigarettes which had been shipped into the state for delivery to plaintiff’s customers in accordance with his alleged method of transacting business.

It is thus apparent that the trial court granted the writ of injunction because of the 'conclusions reached that the sales made by plaintiff were interstate transactions, and therefore were not subject to control by the Cigarette Act.

The validity of the Cigarette Tax Law, passed by the Forty-Fourth Legislature at its regular session — chapter 241, Acts 1935 —is before us. If the law is sound, the appellee is entitled to only that protection which, as a matter of common right, should be thrown1 around his lawful interstate transactions.

The majority are of the opinion that the act attempts to make the consumption of an article of commerce a sale, .and that this cannot lawfully be done.

If the state of Texas has the right to levy and collect a sales tax on any personal property that is bartered and sold, it necessarily follows that the sale must be made within the borders of the state. Otherwise, rights heretofore guaranteed under the interstate commerce laws of the United States, can be entirely destroyed, by any state, through the juggling of words, and the provisions of the federal law protecting commerce in interstate transactions *224 would become “as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal.”

Let us analyze the provisions of the statute before us and see how it attempts to juggle words to effect its purpose.

Subdivision “h” of “section 1” (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 7047c — 1, § 1(h) defines a “First Sale” as folows: “‘First Sale’ shall mean and include the first sale or distribution of cigarettes in intrastate commerce, •or the first use or consumption of cigarettes within this State.”

No one can quarrel with the first portion of the definition. The first sale and ■distribution, in intrastate commerce, undoubtedly covers commercial transactions had and done wholly within the borders of Texas, but the additional words, “or the first use or consumption of cigarettes within this State,” means no more nor less than that the state of Texas attempts to levy and collect a tax on all cigarettes that are used or consumed in this state, regardless of the lawful manner in which the right to use or consume them may have been acquired.

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Related

House of Tobacco, Inc. v. Calvert
394 S.W.2d 654 (Texas Supreme Court, 1965)
Sheppard v. Musser
92 S.W.2d 219 (Texas Supreme Court, 1936)
Gorman v. State
93 S.W.2d 1145 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-musser-texapp-1935.