State Ex Rel. Fontenot v. Standard Dredging Corp.

43 So. 2d 909, 216 La. 509, 1949 La. LEXIS 1066
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 9, 1949
DocketNo. 38784.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 909 (State Ex Rel. Fontenot v. Standard Dredging Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Fontenot v. Standard Dredging Corp., 43 So. 2d 909, 216 La. 509, 1949 La. LEXIS 1066 (La. 1949).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The State of Louisiana is appealing from a judgment dismissing its suit against the Standard Dredging Corporation wherein it seeks to recover taxes accrued through 1945 in the total sum of $11,701.35, with interest and penalties, claimed as being due the State of Louisiana under the provisions of Act No. 25 of the Second Extra Session of 1935, as amended, commonly known as the power tax statute.

This suit, when originally instituted in December, 1940, was to recover taxes alleged to be due the State at that time in the amounts of $150, additional taxes for the year 1939, and $1,012.50, taxes for the fiscal year ending July 31, 1940, with interest, penalty and attorney’s fees. Defendant filed certain exceptions, and because of repeated continuances the trial on the merits was delayed. In December, 1945, in order to avoid a multiplicity of suits, a supplemental petition was filed claiming taxes which had accrued through 1945.

The defendant, a New York corporation with its principal office and place of business in New York City but qualified to do business in Louisiana, is a contractor engaged in deepening, widening, improving, extending and clearing navigable waterways, .and for many years has been pursuing this business in the State of Louisiana under license as contractor issued pursuant to the provisions of Section 24 of Act No. 15 of the Third Extra Session of the Louisiana Legislature for the year 1934, commonly known as the general occupational license tax statute. In the conduct of its business defendant uses dredges-which are licensed by the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation of the Department of Commerce of the United States to engage in the coasting trade. These dredges are operated by mechanical power produced by their machinery, and the tax here sought to be imposed is based on the power generated by the engines of defendant’s dredges in the conduct of its business while the dredges were on waters within the territorial limits of the State of Louisiana, under the authority of Sec. 3, Act No. 25 of the Second Extra Session of 1935, as amended, Act No. 5 of 1935, 4th Ex.Sess., § 1, the pertinent part of which provides:

"In addition to all other taxes of every kind imposed by law, every person, firm, corporation or association of persons engaged in the State of Louisiana in any business or occupation which person, firm, corporation or association of persons uses in the conduct of such business or occupation at any time, electrical or mechanical power of more than ten horsepower and does not procure all the power required in the conduct of such business or occupation from a person, firm, corporation or association of *513 persons subject to the tax imposed by Section 1 or Section 2 of this Act, shall be subject to the payment of an excise, license or privilege tax of Fifty Cents (50¡í) per annum for each horsepower of capacity of the machinery or apparatus, known as the ‘prime mover’ or ‘prime movers,’ operated by such person, firm, corporation or association of persons, for the purpose of producing power for use in the conduct of such business or occupation; * * (Emphasis supplied.)

It is the contention of the defendant, in which it was sustained by the lower court, that the imposition of this license tax constitutes double taxation. Defendant argues that it has paid to the State an occupational license tax on the basis of gross receipts of its business as contractor for the years during which the power tax is claimed, and the generation of the mechanical power is a necessary part of its business as contractor; and that therefore the power tax as applied to it, already licensed as a contractor, is void under Article X, Section 8 of the Louisiana Constitution, and under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, as dual taxation. Further, defendant contends that the tax, as applied to defendant’s vessels, invades the admiralty and commerce jurisdictions of the United States, in a field in which Congress, by providing for the enrolling and licensing of such vessels, has exercised exclusive control, and deprived the states of any authority further to license or tax the operation of such vessels, or the means of their operation, in the exercise of their federal licenses.

The jurisprudence of Louisiana with reference to power tax statutes implies an adverse answer to defendant’s first contention. See State ex rel. Porterie v. H. L. Hunt, 182 La. 1073, 162 So. 777, 103 A.L.R. 1; State v. Interstate Natural Gas Co., Inc., 200 La. 52, 7 So.2d 612; State v. Triangle Drilling Co., Inc., 214 La. 273, 37 So.2d 598.

Article X, Section 8 of the Louisiana Constitution provides that license taxes may be levied on such classes of persons, associations of persons and corporations pursuing any business or occupation as the Legislature may deem proper (with certain exceptions), and provides that such license taxes may be classified, graduated or progressive; however, there is no limitation as to the number or kind of license taxes which may be imposed under this provision of the Constitution and one person may avail himself of one or more different privileges, for each of which he may be required to pay a tax or license fee. The requirement frequently made essential to the existence of double taxation in the unconstitutional sense, namely, that both impositions must be against the same taxable subject, is here lacking, for in the case of the occupational license, the tax is imposed for the privilege of engaging in the business of contractor in the State, whereas in the case of the power tax, the levy is *515 based on the use of electrical or mechanical power in the conduct of a business, measured by the horsepower of capacity of the machinery used in the production of the power. It follows that although the defendant has paid the occupational license tax, there is no infringement of his constitutional rights because of liability for a specific license tax upon the use of a particular agency necessary to be employed in the conduct of his business. See 21 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 787; City of St. Louis v. Weitzel, 130 Mo. 600, 31 S.W. 1045; Harder’s Fireproof Storage & Van Co. v. City of Chicago, 235 Ill. 58, 85 N.E. 245, 14 Ann.Cas. 536; Macon Sash, Door & Lumber Co. v. City of Macon, 96 Ga. 23, 23 S.E. 120; Browne v. City of Mobile, 122 Ala. 159, 25 So. 223.

The authorities relied on by the defendant in support of its argument that this tax constitutes double taxation, namely, Williams v. Garignes, 30 La.Ann. 1094, Walker v. City of New Orleans, 31 La.Ann. 828, and State v. City Savings Bank & Trust Co., 170 La. 426, 127 So. 890, are not controlling here. As was very aptly pointed out by this court in the case of Lionel's Cigar Store v. McFarland, 162 La. 956, 969, 111 So. 341, 346, wherein the holdings in the first two cases were reviewed: “In Williams v. Garignes, Tax Collector, the court merely construed the statute requiring a license tax ‘from each keeper of a livery stable or yard, or -livery and sale stable, with stalls for horses or mules, ' twenty-five dollars; for every public hack twenty-five dollars,’ as meaning that either a livery stable keeper or a public hack driver was liable for the $25 license tax, but that neither was liable for two such license taxes. In Walker v.

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 909, 216 La. 509, 1949 La. LEXIS 1066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fontenot-v-standard-dredging-corp-la-1949.