Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. State

190 S.W.2d 132, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 807
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1945
DocketNo. 9515.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 132 (Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. State) 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
Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. State, 190 S.W.2d 132, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 807 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

McClendon, chief justice.

Chain store tax case involving the construction or application and the validity of the proviso in the 1941 amendment to R.C.S. Art. 7060, Acts 47th Leg. p. 269, Ch. 184, Art. V. § 1, styled Omnibus Tax Law, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Art. 7060, which proviso reads: “And provided further that utilities paying an occupation tax under this Article shall not hereafter be required to pay the license fee imposed in Article 5a, House Bill No. 18, Chapter 400, Acts of Forty-fourth Legislature, for the privilege of selling gas and electric appliances and parts for the repairs thereof, in towns of three thousand (3,000) or less in population according to the next preceding Federal Census.”

The suit was brought by the State against SW (Southwestern Gas & Electric Company) for an unpaid balance of chain store taxes for the years 1941, 1942 and 1943. The SW is a member of the chain involved in the Central case (Central Power & Light Co. et al. v. State, Tex.Civ.App., 165 S.W. 2d 920, error refused and appeal dismissed “for the want of a substantial federal question” by the U. S. Supreme Court, 319 U.S. 727, 63 S.Ct. 1033, 87 L.Ed. 1691); and the *134 tax involved is the SW’s allocated portion of the entire tax assertedly due by the three members of the chain predicated upon the entire number of stores operated by them in the respective years, less the taxes paid by them for those years; which latter were based only upon their total number of stores located in towns of more than 3,000 population according to the 1940 Federal Census. The case was tried to the court upon agreed stipulation, under which the only ultimate issue presented is whether the above-quoted proviso of the 1941 amendment was effective (as against its asserted construction or application and its asserted invalidity) to relieve or exempt the members of the chain from including therein their stores located in towns of 3,000 population or less according to such census. The trial court rendered judgment for the State (upon what specific ground of ineffectiveness of the proviso in this regard is not shown), and the SW has appealed.

In the main the State urges three contentions in support of the trial court’s judgment:

1. Our holding in the Central case was to the effect that the tax levied in Sec. 5 of the Chain Store Tax Law, Chap. 400, p. 1589, 1st CS 44th Leg., 1935, Vernon’s Ann. P.C. Art. lllld, § 5, included the same subject matter as that levied in Sec. 5a; therefore Sec. 5a was supererogatory, ineffective and a nullity as levying a tax. The quoted proviso in the 1941 amendment by its express terms related only to the purported tax levied in Sec. (Art.) 5a, which Section in fact levied no tax, and had no effect upon the tax levied by Sec. 5, but left that tax in effect to the full extent as it existed. before the 1941 amendment of Art. 7060.

The quoted proviso in the 1941 amendment to Art. 7060 was violative of:

2. Art. Ill, Sec. 36, Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St., as being an “amendment by reference.” And

3. Art. VIII, Sec. 2, Texas Constitution, as being discriminatory.

We will consider these contentions in the order named.

The Chain Store Tax Law as finally passed contained two tax levying sections (5 and 5a), each of which (purportedly) levied an identical tax upon the subjects designated respectively in the two sections. Sec. 5 was general and all-inclusive (save only as to six designated exceptions), embracing every character of business coming within the general meaning of “store” as defined in the Act. Sec. 5a was specific, embracing only businesses conducted by gas and electric utilities in the sale of “equipment or appliances operated and/or used” in connection with gas or electricity. The fourth designated exception in Sec. 5 was of “any business now paying an occupation tax measured by gross receipts.” Sec. 5a, after providing in substance that invalidity thereof in whole or in part should not operate to invalidate Sec. 5, concluded with this paragraph: “This Section shall be construed as a limitation upon the exception in Section 5 hereof of businesses now paying an occupation tax measured by gross receipts.”

It is quite manifest that there was no intention to impose both a tax levied by Sec. 5 and one levied by Sec. 5a upon a single business. Nor has that construction of the Act ever been urged. That would have been a flagrant example of double taxation, at least from every practical viewpoint. It follows, of course, that the businesses as to which Sec. 5a applied (assuming its validity and assuming — which we do not — that two separate taxes were levied) were not included in Sec. 5 and vice versa. In other words, giving effect to the entire Act, and indulging the above presumptions, two separate taxes of identical amounts were intended to be levied upon two separate classes of -businesses, each of which was excluded from the tax levied against the other. This also would follow from the general rule that a specific provision will control over a general one, regardless of the otherwise proper construction of the latter. Which means, as applied to the situation at bar, that Sec. 5a levies a tax upon the specified class of businesses named therein, thereby excluding such class from the class or classes designated in Sec. 5, regardless of whether, in the absence of Sec. 5a, the class designated therein would be included in the classes designated in Sec. 5. This is made clear, if need be, by the last paragraph of Sec. 5a, above quoted. We are not here concerned with what construction the Legislature may have placed upon the fourth exception in Sec. 5, although it is quite plain from the last paragraph of Sec. 5a that that section was to operate as a limitation upon exception 4 of Sec. 5.

The Attorney General’s department, in several opinions, held that two separate *135 taxes are levied upon two separate classes of businesses, one under Sec. 5, the other under Sec. 5a. This result, however, appears to have been predicated upon the conclusion that the utilities designated in Sec. 5a were included in exception 4 of Sec. 5, and were therefore not subject to Sec. 5 tax, but were taxed under Sec. 5a.

The three utility corporations involved in the Central case had, apparently without question, paid the tax from its inception (1936) to and including 1940; based, however, upon the theory that each corporation operated a separate chain. About the latter year the Comptroller demanded an additional tax for the years 1936-1940, upon the theory that the three corporations constituted a single chain, and upon refusal of such demand the Central suit was brought. It is not necessary to advert to the several contentions of the defendants in the Central case, under which they contested the State’s contention that they constituted a single chain; practically all of which had been adjudicated adversely to them in Safeway Stores, Inc., of Texas v. Sheppard, Tex.Civ.App., 158 S.W.2d 319, and Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. State, Tex.Civ.App., 158 S.W.2d 336 (error refused in each). Additionally, the defendants urged for the first time that they were not liable for any tax whatever under the Act, upon the theory that they were exempt under the fourth exception of Sec. 5, and that Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 132, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-gas-electric-co-v-state-texapp-1945.