Smoky Mountain Canteen Co. v. Kizer

247 S.W.2d 69, 193 Tenn. 598, 29 Beeler 598, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 329
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 247 S.W.2d 69 (Smoky Mountain Canteen Co. v. Kizer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smoky Mountain Canteen Co. v. Kizer, 247 S.W.2d 69, 193 Tenn. 598, 29 Beeler 598, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 329 (Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question for our decision in this case is whether or not the appellant is liable for Sales Tax as applied by Chapter 3 of the Public Acts of 1947, 1932 Code Supplement, 1328.22-1328.39, Retailers Sales Tax Statute.

The suit was brought by the appellant for refund of Sales Taxes paid by it under protest. The Chancellor held the tax legally collected and dismissed the bill. As a result this appeal has been duly perfected, briefs filed and argument heard.

The appellant is a Tennessee corporation engaged in the automatic vending machine business. It operates candy, soft drink, chewing gum and peanut vending machines wherein these products are dispensed to the purchaser by way of machine at a cost to the purchaser of 5‡ in case of candy and soft drinks and 1‡ in the case *601 of chewing gnm and peanuts. One purchasing these products inserts a coin in the machine and pulls the lever or turns the crank and the product is delivered by the machine. There are no personnel involved in selling or delivering this product to the customer. No device has been discovered where the burden of this tax could be passed on to the consumer when the goods are sold by way of these vending machines. The Commissioner realizing this fact adopted a practice, in this instance, of permitting the operators of these machines to pay the tax on the basis of the wholesale cost of the merchandise so vended, instead of on the retail selling price thereof.

Even with this practice followed the appellee concedes that the appellant is in an unfavorable position when compared to most businesses affected by this taxing statute. The ordinary merchant making sales from a store has a practical opportunity to shift the burden of the tax to the consumer while the appellant does not have such an opportunity. The !State, though, says that it is not responsible for the appellant’s mode of doing business and that it is not required to take special cognizance of this mode of doing business in framing a uniform and general taxing statute. The State’s position is that if such a distinction is to be made that the Legislature could have very easily made such special provisions for sales through vending machines.

Our Statute is a flat two per cent statute to be computed upon the gross sales and to include every retail sale. The statute contains no bracket system within itself but it does contemplate that the Commissioner set up a bracket system which he has done. The obvious reason for setting up this bracket system is that on small sales by retailers there is no medium of exchange where by this two per cent could be collected from the purchaser *602 on these sales. As a result of this the bracket system eliminates in the ordinary sale by the retailer a tax to the- consumer or purchaser on the first fourteen cents but the retailer may and does collect one cent from fifteen cents to sixty-five cents and this is graduated up. In this way the ordinary retailer of merchandise when computing his tax on his gross sales collects two per cent on the total sales from the consumer or purchaser. In many if not most instances this two per cent, due to the fact that an overage is collected from fourteen cents up of the two per cent, and as a result of this, in the average instance, more than two per cent is collected. Under the Act this overage must be paid to the Commissioner.

The appellant makes two questions: (1) That the Legislature intended that a seller of candy, soft drinks, chewing gum, etc., through vending machines for five cents or one cent that there be no tax on these small sales because the tax could not be passed on to the consumer and (2) That if the Legislature did intend for the tax to apply to these sales that then the Act so applying is unconstitutional under the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. Const. Tenn. art. 1, Section 8; Const. U. S. Amend. 14.

The Tennessee Sales Tax is a levy upon the vendor. It is a tax upon the privilege of selling at retail, leasing or renting tangible personal property. The doing of any of these acts is declared to be a taxable privilege and the 'Sales Tax Act levies a tax thereon, the measure of which is on the gross proceeds derived by the retailer from the sale at retail, the lease or rental of tangible personalty. Section 3 of the Sales Tax Act, Code Section 1328.24, reads in part as follows:

“* * * it is hereby declared * * * that every person is exercising a taxable privilege who engages in *603 the business of selling tangible personal property at retail in this State * * *. For the exercise of said privilege, a tax is levied as follows:
“(a) At the rate of two percent (2%) of the sales price of each item or article of tangible personal property when sold at retail in this State; the tax to be computed on gross sales for the purpose of remitting the amount of tax due the State, and to include each and every retail sale. * * *”

The legislators, in their wisdom, knew that through some means the retailer would ultimately find some way to pass this tax on to the consumer and as a result of knowing this they made a provision for the burden of this tax to be passed on to the ultimate consumer. This provision for the shifting of the tax, however, does not and cannot alter the fact that “it is a privilege tax levied upon the merchant. ” Hooten v. Carson, 186 Tenn. 282, 209 S. W. (2d) 273, 275.

Clearly the appellant is engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property at retail. This bqing true, there could be no doubt that the appellant is exercising one of the privileges made taxable by the Act. It seems to us therefore under the Act that the appellant could be taxed at the rate of two per cent on the gross proceeds derived by it from its business. As heretofore said though the Commissioner realized the hardship of this and in a way attempted to adjust this hardship to some extent.

Under Section 2(c)(3), Code, Section 1328.23-(c)(3), the term gross sales is defined to mean “the sum total of all retail sales of tangible personal property * * *, without any deduction whatsoever of any kind or character, except as provided in this act.”

*604 It seems to ns therefore that the Legislature clearly intended to tax the gross sales except as to those things which are in the Act specifically exempted. These specific exemptions are included in Section 6 of the Act, Code, Section 1328.27. This list of exemptions does not include sales of small denominations or sales on which the vendor is unable to collect the tax from his customer.

It is the contention of the appellant that it should not be required to pay this tax when it is unable to pass the tax on to its customers under the bracket system as used for the purpose of shifting the tax.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W.2d 69, 193 Tenn. 598, 29 Beeler 598, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smoky-mountain-canteen-co-v-kizer-tenn-1952.