Standard Oil Co. v. City of Selma

112 So. 532, 216 Ala. 108, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 21, 1927
Docket2 Div. 911.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 112 So. 532 (Standard Oil Co. v. City of Selma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. v. City of Selma, 112 So. 532, 216 Ala. 108, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 57 (Ala. 1927).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The ordinance under which appellant was convicted and fined, so far as it need be stated here, is as follows:

“Section 1. * * * The word ‘distributor’ and the word ‘seller’ shall include every person, as the word ‘person’ is above defined, who shall engage in selling gasoline, within the corporate limits of the city of Selma, or of shipping, transporting or delivering gasoline as herein defined at or from its storage point or place of business in the city of Selma to any point within the city of Selma or to any point within the police jurisdiction of the city of Selma.
“Section 2. Every distributor or seller as above defined shall pay a license tax to the city of Selma, and a license is hereby fixed and created, which license tax shall be a sum and amount equal to 1 cent on each and every gal-' Ion of gasoline sold or delivered in the corporate limits of the city of Selma or shipped, transported, or delivered by a distributor or seller at or from its storage point or place of business in the city of Selma to any point within the police jurisdiction of the city of Selma.”

As stated in brief of counsel for appellant, the principal point presented by the appeal is whether or not this ordinance, in attempting to fix a license tax of 1 cent per gallon on gasoline shipped, transported, or delivered from within the corporate limits of Selma to points outside the corporate limits, but within the police jurisdiction, is in conflict with section 2173 of the Code of Alabama 192-3, which reads as follows:

“No municipality of this state shall assess or collect any privilege or license tax, or fee, from any person, firm, or corporation for carrying on any business, trade or profession, when the conduct and operation of such business, trade or pi-ofession is wholly outside the corporate limits of such municipality.”

Another contention is that this ordinance is not authorized by section 2154 of the Code *110 of 1923, -which is the only source of authority for the imposition of license taxes of this character.

Appellant contends also that the ordinance is discriminatory and unfair and unreasonable in its operation upon its business, and is in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution.

In the case of Standard C. & O. Co. v. City of Troy, 201 Ala. 89, 77 So. 383, L. R. A. 1918C, 522, decided in December, 1917, this court held that a municipality could levy a license tax, under its police power, on a manufacturing plant located beyond the territorial limits of the city, but within the area of its police jurisdiction. No doubt section 2173 of the Code was enacted for the purpose of neutralizing the decision in the Troy Case.

But we do not see how that section can be construed as an inhibition upon the taxation of a business whose plant or managing office is located within the corporate limits of the tax-imposing city, and whose business, or that phase of it which is taxed, and is properly taxable, is conducted from its plant or office so'located. The tax is forbidden only “when the conduct and operation of such business, trade or profession is wholly outside the corporate limits of such municipality.” (Italics ours.) “Conduct and operation,” as here intended, cannot be restricted to the mere completion of sales or of deliveries outside the city limits, because the completion of those acts is only a part of the conduct and operation of the business, an essential part of which may be, as in the instant case, the storing and keeping of goods within the city limits, the receipt of orders therein, and the shipping out of such goods from their place of storage. This intendment of the statute is, we think, made unmistakably plain by the use of the word “wholly,” meaning that the inhibition laid on the taxing power of municipalities does not apply to any business any phase or feature of which is conducted within the corporate limits.

We conclude that the ordinance in question is not offensive to section 2173 of the Code, and cannot be avoided on that ground.

Section 2154 of the Code authorizes municipal corporations “to license any exhibition, trade, business, vocation, occupation, or profession not prohibited by the Constitution or laws of the state, which may be engaged in or carried on in the city or town; to fix the amount of licenses, the time for which they are to run not exceeding one year, and provide a penalty for doing business without a license, and to charge a fee of not exceeding 50 cents for issuing each license; to require sworn statements as to the amount of capital invested, or value of goods or stocks, or amounts of sales or receipts where the amount of the license is made to depend upon the amount of capital invested, or value of goods or stocks or amount of sales or receipts.”

The argument is that the ordinance is not within authorized municipal action because it bases the license imposed, not upon “the amount of capital invested, or value of goods or stocks or amounts of sales or receipts,” but upon the amount of gasoline “shipped, transported or delivered at or from its storage-point or place of business in the city of Selma.” But, manifestly, the statute does not limit the mode for determining the amount of the tax to the bases above quoted, though doubtless the power of the city to require sworn statements from the person or corporation taxed is limited to those particular features of the business. Rather does the statute assume the power of the city to adopt a mode for fixing the amount of the tax which is based upon some feature of the business, indicative of its magnitude or volume, without undertaking to restrict the modes that may be adopted.

The license tax here complained of is imposed upon every person- who sells gasoline within the corporate limits of Selma, or - who, having a storage point or place of business in Selma, ships, transports or delivers it from such place to any point within the police jurisdiction of Selma outside of the city limits. Very clearly the appellant corporation, with its business office and gasoline-stocks located, stored and operated mthin the city, was subject to a license tax regardless of the territory to which it shipped such-stocks, either on account of sales made from its city office, or for sale or storage at other localities. This license might, with legal' propriety, have been measured and determined by the number of gallons of gasoline handled by appellant at its Selma storage plapt or through its Selma office. Birmingham v. Goldstein, 151 Ala. 473, 44 So. 113, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 568, 125 Am. St. Rep. 33; Republic I. & S. Co. v. State, 204 Ala. 469, 86 So. 65; Woco Pep Co. v. City of Montgomery, 213 Ala. 452, 105 So. 214 (3). This being so, it is not apparent why the gallonage basis may not be limited to the number of gallons, taken from a storage point within the city, which may be sold within, or transported to, a restricted territory. The only effect of such a restriction is to reduce the amount of the tax; and, being in fact comparatively beneficial, it is difficult to see how it can be injuriously or unjustly discriminatory.

This tax is not a license tax for doing business in the police limits of Selma, but only for conducting a business

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 532, 216 Ala. 108, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-city-of-selma-ala-1927.