State Ex Rel. East Coast Lumber & Supply Co. v. Lee

172 So. 722, 127 Fla. 112
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 16, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 So. 722 (State Ex Rel. East Coast Lumber & Supply Co. v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. East Coast Lumber & Supply Co. v. Lee, 172 So. 722, 127 Fla. 112 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

Whitfield, P. J.

The alternative writ of mandamus herein issued by this court against the State Comptroller as respondent, alleges that the relator, the East Coast Lumber & Supply Company, owns and operates ten lumber yards in this State; that the character of the business done by relator in said lumber yards is a retail and wholesale lumber business, that relator’s retail lumber business, together with the retail sale of other building materials made at and in said lumber yards, was on December 1, 1936, held by the Supreme Court of Florida to be subject to Chapter 16848, Laws of Florida, 1935; that relator has since June 25, 1935, and until December 1, 1936, been contesting and litigating the constitutionality of said Chapter 16848, Laws of Florida, 1935, in stated suits-and proceedings.

It appears that the constitutionality of Chapter 16848, in so far as it imposes a flat tax per annum per store and a tax of one-half of one per cent upon gross receipts of each store, was adjudicated by the Supreme Court of Florida on November 26, 1935, and on rehearing, February 25, 1936; State, ex rel. Lane Drug Stores, Inc., v. Simpson, 122 Fla. 582, 639, 166 So. 227, 249. The applicability of said provisions of Chapter 16848 to stores like the relator’s was adjudicated by the Supreme Court of Florida, December 1, 1936, Mason Lumber Co. v. Lee, 126 Fla. 371, 171 So. 332.

It is further alleged that on December 2, 1936, relator’s counsel wrote the respondent State Comptroller, advising that relator and others named in the litigdtion, were ready to pay their taxes as determined by the court:

“That by letter of December 5, 1936, the * * * Comp *114 troller replied advising among other things: ‘The penalty of two per cent per month on all delinquent taxes is now in effect artd such penalty must be paid in connection with all settlements- made.’
“That the penalty of two per cent, per month so demanded is that defined by Section 7 (b) of said Chain Store Act, but applicable only when there has been a delinquency in payment without reasonable cause. That afterwards, on to-wit, the 17th day of December, 1936, the next day after the mandate of said Supreme Court was returned to said Circuit Court, petitioner, together with others named as plaintiffs in said Circuit Court suit, after notice to respondent’s counsel, petitioned said Circuit Court for leave to file amendments to their bill of complaint in said cause, setting, up their efforts to obtain decision as to their liability, if any, under said Act, and the result of said Supreme Court decision of December first, their willingness to pay'in accordance with, that decision, their tender to the respondent Comptroller, as. aforesaid, and his demand for two per cent per month penalty, and praying that the respondent 'Comptroller be required to accept payments without such penalty added, together with all proper applications for permits, applications for licenses, and returns of gross receipts taxes on forms duly prescribed by said Comptroller. That said application for amendments was opposed by counsel for respondent, and on Saturday, December 19, 1936, the Judge of said Circuit Court denied leave to file such amendments, and held that the relief prayed for thereby constituted a new suit, not within his jurisdiction when opposed by said Comptroller.”
“That prior to the making of said order of December 19, 1936, this petitioner, by his counsel, on to-wit, December 18, 1936, forwarded to the respondent this petitioner’s *115 check for $2,000.00 as flat sum taxes from July 1, 1936, to July 1, 1937, on said ten lumber yards; also check of ■ this petitioner for $601.33, to cover gross receipts tax since February 25, 1936, to November 30, 1936, inclusive, on retail sales of lumber and other personal property made in and at seven of said retail lumber yards. That on to-wit, December 19, 1936, this petitioner, by his counsel, forwarded to the respondent Comptroller, a further check for $969.07, as gross receipts tax for the same period covering all retail sales of lumber or other personal property, made at and in the three remaining lumber yards owned and operated by petitioner as aforesaid. That prior to the filing of said suit in said Circuit Court of Duval County, and during the period of uncertainty as to whether any further proceedings would be had, after the rendition of said order of the Circuit Court of Leon County, Florida, dated March 30, 1936, as aforesaid, petitioner paid the respondent Comptroller $2,000.00 flat sum taxes to cover the license year on said ten lumber yards for the year beginning July 1, 1935, and at the same time filed with said Comptroller applications for permits, together with 50 cents for each yard, and obtained permits as contemplated by Section 3 of said Act, and still holds the same. That along with the three checks above mentioned, remitted on December 18th and 19th, 1936, respectively, petitioner’s counsel forwarded to the respondent Comptroller ten applications for retailer’s licenses for the current license year, duly prepared on forms prescribed by the respondent Comptroller. That along with said checks petitioner’s counsel also forwarded proper gross receipts tax returns covering each of said lumber yards and for each monthly period beginning with February 26th and ending November 30th, 1936. That petitioner has filed all papers and paid all moneys to the respondent Comptroller *116 to entitle it to have a license issued for the current license year, beginning July 1, 1936, for each of its ten lumber yards located as aforesaid. Nevertheless the respondent Comptroller has refused, and still refuses to issue the same, claiming that he is entitled to receive from petitioner the additional sum of two per cent per month penalty upon the $2,000.00 flat sum tax now payable for the license year beginning July 1, 1936, and two per cent per month upon the gross receipts tax- as finally determined by this Court, calculated as of the 15th of each month, beginning with April 15, 1936.
“That petitioner has not been delinquent in the matter of paying what it was liable for under said Act. On the contrary, it has been diligently attempting to find out whether it was subject to said Act, and, if so, to what extent, and has resorted to the sundry judicial proceedings aforesaid for that purpose. That the first contest to which petitioner was a party, as aforesaid, resulted in the decisions by the Supreme Court of Florida the latter part of November, 1935, holding all of the gross receipts tax prescribed by said Act in excess of one-half of one per cent void. That the further decision rendered by the Circuit Court of Leon County, Florida, on March 30, 1936, as aforesaid, affirmed by the petitions of the respondent Comptroller, and the orders of said Supreme Court on April 23, and April 25, 1936, had the effect of eliminating practically eight months of the one-half of one per cent, gross receipts tax — that .« to say, all that accrued up to and including February 25, 1936. That the further contest made by this petitioner and other lumber-yard operators in said Circuit Court in and for Duval County, Florida, as aforesaid, resulted in the elimination of all the gross receipts tax upon sales made to building contractors, as aforesaid. That this petitioner, *117

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 722, 127 Fla. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-east-coast-lumber-supply-co-v-lee-fla-1937.