Standard Oil Co. v. Commonwealth ex rel. Allphin

311 S.W.2d 372
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 13, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 311 S.W.2d 372 (Standard Oil Co. v. Commonwealth ex rel. Allphin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky 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. Commonwealth ex rel. Allphin, 311 S.W.2d 372 (Ky. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

MILLIKEN, Judge.

The primary issue on this appeal ' is whether this State can constitutionally levy an ad valorem tax upon the accounts and notes receivable and bank deposits of the appellant, Standard Oil Company, a Kentucky corporation, which intangibles admittedly have a business situs in other States.

The appellant, Standard Oil Company, has its home office in Louisville, Kentucky, and is engaged in the business of marketing petroleum products in five States — Kentucky, Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi and Florida. It has no refinery and no production, and its business consists of buying and selling petroleum products. It buys these products from supply points in Louisiana, a few Western States and in Venezuela. All of the products move in interstate or foreign commerce from the supply points to the States of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida and Kentucky. The products to be sold in ■ Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida are shipped directly to those States and are never within the State of Kentucky. Only those products to be sold in Kentucky come into this State.

The business ,in each of the States mentioned is conducted by a division manager located in each of the States, together with a large force of assistants, clerks, secretaries, salesmen, tank wagon drivers, etc. For instance, the division office in Mississippi .has 340 employees; there were 909, employees in Florida; 498 in Alabama; / and 750 employees in Georgia. Separate books of accounts receivable and notes are entered and listed in each of the respective States. Collections are made in each of the States and the collections, whether from cash sales, accounts receivable or notes, are deposited in local banks in,..eac-h'-‘of the -States. All expenses of operation, salaries, taxes, etc., are paid out of deposits in local banks, the division manager and other authorized personnel in his office drawing checks upon bank deposits within the respective States for all of the aforesaid business purposes. No one in the home office of the taxpayer at Louisville has the authority to or does draw checks on bank accounts in other States. If there is any balance at periodic i intervals not necessary for the conduct . [ of the business in each of the four South- < 1 ern States, it is checked out by the division j manager and forwarded to the home office in Louisville where it is received, deposited J in Kentucky banks and taxes paid thereon | to the State of Kentucky.

We conclude that in these circumstances, the taxpayer’s accounts receivable and notes have a commercial, legal and taxable situs in each of the four Southern States, and the attorneys for the Commonwealth apparently concede that such is the case by their motion for summary judgment on the ground that there is no issue of fact in the case.

It is also a fact that the State of Florida during all the years in controversy, 1946 to 1952, has required this taxpayer to pay taxes to the State of Florida on its accounts and notes there, and the [374]*374State of Georgia, since the year 1949, has required it to do likewise to Georgia. The States of Alabama and Mississippi do not tax such intangibles, but, of course, may pass laws taxing them at any time.

Accordingly, the taxpayer points out that the bank deposits, accounts receivable and notes due it and collected in the States of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi and Florida and used in the operation of the business there have no taxable situs in the State of Kentucky, and that if the Statutes of Kentucky should be so construed as to tax them in this State, it would violate the Commerce Clause of the Constitution of the United ^TafSS“a5"CSfístituting a burden on interstate and foreign commerce; that it would also violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States in that it would deprive the taxpayer of its property without due process of law and deny it the equal protection of the law; that it would discriminate against this taxpayer, a Kentucky corporation, in favor of foreign corporations doing business in this State, and would thereby also violate Section 202 of the Kentucky Constitution.

The pertinent portion of our statute, KRS 132.190, involved declares:

“The property subject to taxation, unless exempted by the Constitution, shall be as follows: * * *
“(b) All intangible personal property of individuals residing in this state and of corporations organized under the laws of this state, wherever located.”

The question of whether Kentucky could constitutionally levy an ad valorem property tax on the intangible property of a resident where the intangibles had a business situs in another State was answered in the negative in 1936 by this Court in Commonwealth v. Madden’s Ex’r, 265 Ky. 684, 97 S.W.2d 561, 107 A.L.R. 1379. There we held that securities owned by" Mr. Madden, but wholly used in an investment partnership of which he was a member in New York City, were not things apart from the partnership itself and hence were not taxable in Kentucky on the theory of “mobilia sequuntur personam” — that movables follow the person. Our opinion; was based upon one written earlier that year (1936) by Chief Justice Hughes in: Wheeling Steel Corporation v. Fox, 298 U.S., 193, 56 S.Ct. 773, 80' L.Ed 1143, in which the Supreme Court applied the same rule to\intangibles having a business situs in a s\ate which governed the taxation of tangible, personal property and real estate located in .a State —that there was no jurisdiction to tax unless the property was in the taxing State, and the usual rule governing intangibles— that they follow the person — was not applicable where the intangibles clearly had a business situs outside the taxing State. In the Wheeling case, Chief Justice Hughes wrote for a unanimous Court:

“This appeal presents the question of the validity of an ad valorem property tax laid by West Virginia upon accounts receivable and bank deposits of appellant, Wheeling Steel Corporation, organized under the laws of Delaware * * *.
“The tax is not a privilege or occupational tax. It is not a tax on net income. * * * It is an ad valorem property tax. We have held that it is essential to the validity of such' a tax, under the due process clause, that the property shall be within the territorial jurisdiction of the taxing state. This rule receives its most familiar illustration in the case of land. The rule has been extended to tangible - -personal property which is thus subject to taxation exclusively in the- . state where it is permanently, Jocated, regardless of the domicile of the , owner. * * * We have said that the application to the states of the rule of due process arises from the fact 'that their spheres of activity are enforced and protected by the-Constitution, and therefore it is im[375]*375possible for one state to reach out and tax property in another without violating the Constitution.’ * * * When we deal with intangible property, such as credits and choses in action generally, we encounter the difficulty that by reason .of the absence of physical characteristics they have no situs in the physical sense, but have the situs attributable to them in legal conception. Accordingly we have held that a state may properly apply the rule of mobilia sequuntur personam and treat them as localized at the owner’s domicile for purposes of taxation.

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311 S.W.2d 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-commonwealth-ex-rel-allphin-kyctapp-1957.