State Ex Rel. Pfost v. Boise City

66 P.2d 1016, 57 Idaho 507, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 73
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1937
DocketNo. 6380.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 1016 (State Ex Rel. Pfost v. Boise City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pfost v. Boise City, 66 P.2d 1016, 57 Idaho 507, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 73 (Idaho 1937).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

Boise City purchased at Linnton, Oregon, imported and used 10,066 gallons of gasoline in motor ve *509 hides operated by Boise City allegedly “upon the public highways and streets within the State of Idaho” upon which it refused to pay the State the tax of $.05 per gallon as demanded by appellant under chapter 46, 1933 Session Laws, page 60, on the ground that it was not a “dealer” as defined in said chapter, and therefore not subject to the provisions thereof, and that the legislature did not intend by the act to have the word “dealer” apply to a municipality, on which theory the trial court sustained a general demurrer to appellant’s complaint.

The State concedes in its brief that section 2 of the act requiring a permit and the payment of, in effect a license fee of $5 therefor, does not apply to the city as otherwise violative of section 2, article 7 of the Constitution.

Section 3 of the act provides as follows:

“Every applicant for a dealer’s permit, except municipal corporations importing motor fuels solely for their own use, shall file with the commissioner a bond.....”

It will be noted that the bond is not required of every dealer, but of every “applicant” for a dealer’s permit. The State having conceded that the permit provision does not aPPly to a municipal corporation, section 3 does not apply to a municipal corporation because in the first instance, if a permit could not be required, it could not be legally issued, and the city therefore could not be an effective applicant therefor. In the second place, where the city imports fuel for its own use, the statute expressly states no bond is required.

Sections 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9, provisions dealing with phases of the permit and bond sections, are eliminated from the operation of the act as to municipalities because their supporting conditions precedent do not apply.

Section 20 subjects a dealer, which if the act applies to, includes municipal corporations, for violation of the act, to criminal prosecution punishable by fine and imprisonment. Conceding without deciding that the fine might be applicable to a municipal corporation, there is no statute fixing the criminal responsibility of the officers of a municipal corporation for the acts of a municipal corporation, or at least none has been called to our attention, whereby such officer or officers could be incarcerated as perhaps officers of a private corpora *510 tion could be. To consider that a municipal corporation therefore comes within the definition of “dealer” as stated by the act, and under the provisions of the act, other than those indicated perforce eliminated, we must consider that the legislature would have passed the act as thus reduced, i. e., without the permit, bond, and penal provisions, which we should do unless such provisions are so inseparably a part of the entire act, that the legislature would not have passed the act making the tax applicable to gasoline imported and used by a municipal corporation without these enforcing and regulatory sections, and since other provisions entirely adequate to enforce payment remain, as demonstrated by this very action herein, and the central and main object of the act is the $.05 tax, credited in the main to the state highway fund, such eliminations do not as to this phase defeat the balance of the statute, if applicable. (Johnson v. Diefendorf, 56 Ida. 620, 57 Pac. (2d) 1068.)

Prior to this act, the statute of 1923 as amended in 1927 and 1929 was held to authorize the collection by the sellers of gasoline within the State, of a similar gallonage imposition considered an excise tax, from municipalities. (Independent School Dist. v. Pfost, 51 Ida. 240, 4 Pac. (2d) 893, 84 A. L. R. 820.) It is true there was no question there of the municipality importing gasoline from without the State. The imposition of the tax however though indirect, because paid in the first instance by the dealer, but nevertheless an ultimate exaction from the municipality as consumer, was held not to be unconstitutional. If the city’s construction of the 1933 act be given force and effect, it results in this situation: That a municipality which buys its gasoline within the State pays, to the dealers and through the dealers, the State $.05 per gallon tax. If as in the ease at bar, the municipality buys the gasoline from without the State, it does not so pay the tax. Did the legislature intend this result? South Dakota, construing a somewhat similar statute and considering the precise result, has held to the contrary. State v. City of Sioux Falls, 60 S. D. 330, 244 N. W. 365, quoting with approval City of Portland v. Koser, 108 Or. 375, 217 Pac. 833, which was in turn quoted with approval by this court in Independent School Dist. v. Pfost, 51 Ida. 240 at 253, 254, 4 *511 Pac. (2d) 893, 84 A. L. R. 820, distinguished by this court in the consideration of the kilowatt tax in City of Idaho Falls v. Pfost, 53 Ida. 247, 23 Pac. (2d) 245, and the construction of the 1923 act set forth by the court in Independent School Dist. v. Pfost, supra, was clearly correct:

“A property tax cannot be levied in Idaho against the property of the United States, the state, counties, towns, cities and other municipal corporations because such property is exempted by see. 4, art. 7, of the State Constitution. This exemption of property from taxation where not expressed in the Constitution or legislative act will generally be assumed in the absence of the expression of a clear intent not to exempt it.....
“However, this rule applies only to property taxation, and does not apply to excise or privilege taxes.....”

Crockett v. Salt Lake County, 72 Utah, 337, 270 Pac. 142, 60 A. L. R. 867, where a statute quite similar in terms was considered, held the statute applicable to the municipality on the theory of City of Portland v. Kozer, supra, followed with approval in Independent School Dist. v. Pfost, supra, and distinguished as to the statute considered in City of Idaho Falls v. Pfost, supra, at page 262 (Idaho Report):

“Appellant relies on Independent School Dist. v. Pfost, supra, and the similarity of the language used, as declaratory by the court of the applicability of this statute to municipal corporations. It will, however, be observed that the requirements of sec. 3 herein must apply, if at all) to municipal corporations, while in the gas tax there construed, the requirements of sections similar, it is true, to sec. 3 herein, were held to apply not to the municipal corporation as actor, but as purchaser, so there is no inconsistency, the holding therein not being controlling or pertinent here. Furthermore, the tax there considered went into the road fund; here this tax is a substitute, in so far as it can be in amount, for a property tax, which at least raises a doubt as to the intent of the legislature to have this tax apply to municipal corporations, when thus viewed, considering sec. 4, art. 7. We do not follow this observation, nor depend upon it further than as it affects this one phase, i. e., legislative intent.

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 1016, 57 Idaho 507, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pfost-v-boise-city-idaho-1937.