Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation

339 P.2d 341, 184 Kan. 713, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 16, 1959
Docket41,323
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 339 P.2d 341 (Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation, 339 P.2d 341, 184 Kan. 713, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 360 (kan 1959).

Opinion

*714 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Jackson, J.:

This action was begun by the appellant, a Delaware corporation, to recover taxes paid under protest and assesséd pursuant to G. S. 1949, 79-701 et seq. upon certain corporate stock owned by appellant. The case was tried to the court, which made extensive findings of fact, and held that the intangible tax under G. S. 1949, 79-3108 et seq. was validly assessed upon appellant’s property. Appellant has appealed from that decision.

This is the second appeal in this case. In the former appeal, in Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. State Commission of Revenue & Taxation, 181 Kan. 310, 311 P. 2d 342, it was held that the venue of the action was correct; that the state of Kansas was immune from suit and should be dismissed as a party defendant, and that the plaintiff’s petition was sufficient as against a demurrer. Any further information concerning the former appeal is readily available in the opinion of the court in the former appeal.

However, before leaving the former appeal one contention of the plaintiff concerning the former decision may be answered. In several places in the present record and briefs, which together amount to some eight hundred pages, plaintiff contends that the former opinion is in some manner determinative of its rights on this appeal, and that the trial court therefore erred in its decision. It would appear that such contention is untenable. A short answer is that the former- demurrer admitted the facts alleged in the petition, while the trial court’s present decision is based upon the facts shown at the trial of the case. There may be other reasons why plaintiff’s contention is not valid, but the foregoing will suffice.

In the caption of this appeal, it will be noted that there have been certain substitutions among the appellees who were defendants below. The reasons therefor are readily apparent, are immaterial to the questions now before the court, and need not be set out. The parties for the sake of brevity will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants.

As already noted, the district court at the close of the trial made extensive findings of fact. These findings are of importance and are set out, or in some instances summarized, in an appendix which follows this opinion.

In a general way, it may be said that the trial court concluded that plaintiff carried on its business from its home office in Kansas and in effect operated pipe lines in three different ways for the *715 transportation of petroleum and petroleum products. Plaintiff has wholly owned pipe lines, pipe lines which it operates in conjunction with other pipe line companies in a rather unusual co-operative manner called undivided interest lines, and also holds stock in corporations which own pipe lines. The other stockholders in these corporations are other oil pipe line companies. It is this stock in the jointly owned pipe line companies which is the basis of the present action. The court found the stock company lines had a definite part in plaintiff’s over-all business and had a taxable situs at plaintiff’s home office in Kansas.

Rased upon these findings the trial court made the following, conclusions of law:

“Conclusions of Law
“1. The headquarters, principal place of business, corporate seat of government, and the commercial domicile of Sinclair Pipe Line Company at all times pertinent hereto was Independence, Kansas.
“2. The Court concludes that the ownership of the various shares of stock, involved in this action formed an integral part of plaintiff’s business.
“3. The Court therefore concludes that such shares of stock had a tax. situs within the State of Kansas, and that the decision of the State Commission of Revenue and Taxation, subjecting the ownership of such shares of stock to the Kansas intangible tax was lawful and proper.
• “4. The Court, therefore, concludes that judgment should be entered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff herein, and that plaintiff should be adjudged to pay the costs of the action.”

It would seem the ultimate question to be decided upon this: appeal is whether the findings of the trial court support the conclusions of law made.

Plaintiff objects at considerable length to many of the findings of the trial court, but when these objections are refined, it seems that at least one of the chief complaints is that defendants were allowed to use the annual reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation, the parent holding company of the plaintiff, made under the signature of the president of the parent company, to cross-examine the executive officers of the plaintiff, and that these reports were admitted as exhibits. The facts about these reports are set forth in Finding 14 (appendix), and see also Findings 12 and 13. It is noted that plaintiff issues no published annual reports to stockholders, all of its stock being held by Sinclair Oil Corporation, but that the parent corporation regularly reports to its stockholders as to the condition of its subsidiaries including plaintiff. It will also be noted in the brief that the only actual objection urged against *716 the use of these exhibits is that it was improper cross-examination. It does not appear in the record that this line of questioning was not' proper cross-examination. The trial court did at one point suggest that perhaps defendants wished to make the witness their own. Perhaps, in effect, this was done. At any rate, the exhibits themselves were in the end introduced into evidence without further objection. It would seem the objection of the plaintiff really in its most favorable light comes, down to a mere objection as to the order of proof, which is a matter of the discretion of the trial court, see Cunningham v. Cunningham, 178 Kan. 97, at p. 103, 283 P. 2d 405, and cases cited. It seems clear that there was no reversible error on the part of the trial court in considering the annual reports of the Sinclair Oil Corporation, and in allowing the use of such reports in cross-examination of plaintiff’s executives.

Another objection is that the trial court excluded as irrelevant the offer of reports made to the Interstate Commerce Commission and tax returns made by plaintiff for income tax purposes. Plaintiff’s brief has failed to show that this exclusion constituted error since none of the reports are shown to have had bearing on the tax situs of the corporate stock involved in this action.

Running through all of plaintiff’s objections, we feel it unnecessary to take any other objection up particularly, is a claim that the trial court erred in disregarding the corporate entities of the various corporations involved. It would almost appear that plaintiff is not really disputing any of the facts — all of the facts were shown by the testimony of its own officers and the reports issued as to plaintiff’s condition by its parent corporation — plaintiff is only saying the court should have taken a narrower view of the picture.

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Bluebook (online)
339 P.2d 341, 184 Kan. 713, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinclair-pipe-line-co-v-state-commission-of-revenue-taxation-kan-1959.