State Ex Rel. People's Motorbus Co. v. Blaine

58 S.W.2d 975, 332 Mo. 582, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 504
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 975 (State Ex Rel. People's Motorbus Co. v. Blaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. People's Motorbus Co. v. Blaine, 58 S.W.2d 975, 332 Mo. 582, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 504 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*585 FRANK, J.

Original proceedings in prohibition to prohibit respondent, James G. Blaine, Judge of City Court No. 1 of the city of St. Louis, from proceeding with the trial of a cause pending in said court, wherein the relator, The People’s Motorbus Company, is charged with storing gasoline and other motor fuel on which a storage tax is levied by 'Ordinance 39354 of said city, and refusing to tile with the comptroller of said city a sworn statement of the amount of gasoline and other motor fuel so stored, as provided in said ordinance.

Relator seeks to prohibit respondent, judge, from proceeding further with said cause on the ground that the ordinance upon which the charge is based is void.

The pertirient provisions of the ordinance read as follows:

“Section 1157F. No person, firm' or corporation shall store gasoline or other motor fuel in quantities in excess of ten gallons without first having obtained a license therefor from the license collector.
“Section 1157G. Every person, firm or corporation defined in Section 1157F, shall pay the license collector a quarterly annual fee on the 16th day of January, April, July and October of each year for the period of three months, ending respectively on the last days of the preceding December, March, June and September, the amount of said quarterly license to be determined at a sum equal to one cent for every gallon of gasoline, or other motor fuel stored by such person, *586 firm or corporation during the preceding period of three months and ending as aforesaid, provided, however, that if a license fee of one cent per gallon upon the storing, sale or transportation, shall have been paid by a previous storer, vender or transporter, such payment shall be sufficient, the intention being that the fee shall be paid but once.
“Section 1157H. Every person, firm or corporation storing gasoline, as defined in section 1157F, shall keep an accurate record of all receipts of gasoline and other motor fuel, showing the number of gallons received and on or before the fifteenth day of each of the months last aforesaid, shall file with the Comptroller of the City of St. Louis, a sworn statement of the number of gallons of gasoline or other motor fuel oil stored . . . ”

Sections 1157 I and J provide penalties for refusal to pay the license fee or make the sworn statement' provided in the sections of the ordinance above quoted.

Sections 1153 and 1154 of the ordinance provides that every person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of selling and transporting gasoline or motor fuel shall obtain a license from the city, and pay a quarterly license fee equal to one cent for every gallon sold by such person, firm or corporation. Section 1157-a provides that no person, firm or corporation shall engage in the business of selling gasline or motor fuel without first obtaining a license so to do, but providing that this section of the ordinance shall not apply to the sale of any gasoline on which the seller or any other person, firm or corporation is required to pay a license sales tax of one cent per gallon by Sections 1153 and 1154. Other parts of the ordinance provide penalties for failure to comply with above provisions.

The facts alleged in the pleadings show that relator, The People’s Motorbus Company, is engaged in the business of transporting passengers for hire from place to place over the streets of the city of St. Louis by means of large motorbusses. In the prosecution of its business it consumes large quantities of gasoline and other motor fuel. This gasoline is purchased by relator in interstate commerce in carload lots and is unloaded and stored in underground tanks in the city of St. Louis and is thereafter removed from said tanks at such times and in such quantities as relator needs for the operation of its busses in the prosecution of its transportation business. None of it is sold or delivered to any other person, firm or corporation. Other corporations in the city of St. Louis purchase, store and use gasoline in their business in a manner similar to that followed by relator. In addition to the gasoline storage tax the city imposes upon relator (1) a property tax on the value of all property it owns, including gasoline on hand and in storage on the date fixed for the assessment, (2) a license fee of twenty-five dollars for each motor bus oper *587 ated by it, (3) automobile city license tax on each bus operated, based on the horsepower of the bus, and (4) a tax of three per cent of relator’s total receipts from the transportation of passengers.

Relator challenges the validity of the gasoline storage tax.

Paragraph I of Section 1 of Article I of the charter, of the city of St. Louis provides that the city shall have power “to assess, levy and collect taxes for all general and special purposes on all siibjects or objects of taxation.” There can be no question but what this language of the charter is sufficiently broad to authorize the city to levy any kind of tax which is not inhibited by some other provision of the charter or by some constitutional or statutory provision. The charter of the city must be consistent with and subject to the Constitution and laws of the State. [Ex parte Siemens v. Shreeve, 317 Mo. 736, 296 S. W. 415.]

It will be observed that the ordinances of the city levy a tax of one cent per gallon on the privilege of selling gasoline, and a like tax on the privilege of storing gasoline, with the provisions that the payment 'of a sales tax exonerates from liability for the storage tax. The practical operation and effect of the ordinances levying both the sale and storage tax is to impose a tax on the use of gasoline in the city. It is apparent that gasoline bought in large quantities in interstate commerce and stored in the city for the owner’s future use would not be subject to the sales tax because no sale of such gasoline takes place in the city. If the city was powerless to levy a storage tax on such gasoline, the owners thereof, although using the gasoline in the city, would escape payment' of their portion of the revenue ‘ ‘ designed to be derived from the use of gasoline” in the city. Concerning the practical operation and effect of a statute levying a tax on the privilege of selling gasoline, where it is not complemented by a statute levying a tax on the privilege of storing gasoline, the Supreme Court of Florida in the case of Jerome H. Sheip Co. v. Amos, 130 So. 699, said:

“The tax imposed upon that privilege is impotent when gasoline is purchased in interstate commerce and stored in this State by the owner for his own future use. Since there is no sale which the State could tax, gasoline so purchased and stored, though mingled with the common mass of property in this State, and though enjoying the protection afforded by the laws of this State, would escape payment of its portion of the public revenues designed to be derived from the use of gasoline in this State.” (Italics ours.)

The statutes of Florida also levied a tax on the privilege of storing gasoline. In upholding the statute levying the storage tax, the court held that such statute was complementary to the statute levying the sales tax in effectuating the State’s public policy as to the

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58 S.W.2d 975, 332 Mo. 582, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-peoples-motorbus-co-v-blaine-mo-1933.