State Ex Rel. Porterie v. Violet Oil Co.

146 So. 322, 176 La. 651, 1933 La. LEXIS 1585
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 32196.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 So. 322 (State Ex Rel. Porterie v. Violet Oil Co.) 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. Porterie v. Violet Oil Co., 146 So. 322, 176 La. 651, 1933 La. LEXIS 1585 (La. 1933).

Opinions

OVERTON, J.

On January 4, 1933, the state of Louisiana and Miss Alice Lee Grosjean, supervisor of public accounts, upon the relation of the Attorney General of the state, brought suit to recover of defendant $500 for a tax, with 20 per cent, penalty thereon, • and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, alleged to be due upon a certain tank of gasoline, brought by the Violet Oil Company into the state from the state of Texas.

The tank, it is alleged, reached its destination in this state on or about January 1,1933, and it is also alleged that its contents were unloaded into defendant’s storage tanks, without the payment of the tax, and without the posting of a bond securing the payment of the tax and penalties. The petition also contains the following allegation:

“Petitioner further avers that having failed to pay the tax on the aforesaid gasoline and having failed and refused to furnish adequate bond to secure the state of Louisiana the amount of said tax, plus the penalty and attorney’s fees, the defendant by its aforesaid conduct and under the provisions of section 4 of Act No. 6 of 1928 (Ex'. Sess.), as amended by Act No. 8 of 1930, § 1, and by section 4 of Act No. 1 of 1930 (Ex. Sess.), is to be construed as attempting to avoid the payment of said taxes, penalty and attorney’s fees, and such conduct constitutes sufficient ground for an attachment of defendant’s gasoline or motor fuel, wherever the same may be located or found, whether said gasoline or motor fuel is in the possession of the defendant corporation or in the possession of any other person, firm, corporation, or association of persons.” •

The judge below refused to grant an order for the attachment to issue, because' the order is -not authorized by law; because the *655 remedy sought by plaintiff is of such a nature as to subject defendant to irreparable injury since the state is not compelled to- furnish bond to obtain an attachment; because the claim of the state is indefinite, in that it is alleged that the tank car is one of approximately 10,000 gallons, on which the tax of 5 cents a gallon, fixed by law, is computed, showing the tax to be $500 on that indefinite quantity; because the affidavit attached to the petition, which was made by an assistant to the supervisor of public accounts, which reads, substantially, that he, affiant, verily believes the facts and allegations contained in the petition to be true and correct, is too uncertain in connection with the amount alleged to enable defendant to pay the amount of the claim; and because the proper remedy is for the court to issue a rule on defendant to show cause why an attachment should not issue, instead of issuing an order ex parte for the attachment.

The attachment asked for, in a case such as the present, where gasoline is brought into the state for sale therein, without either paying the tax thereon or furnishing bond for its payment, is fully authorized by section 4 of Act No. 1 of 1930 (Ex. Sess.). This act is now a part of the Constitution. In the section cited, it is provided: “That failure to pay any tax, penalties or costs accruing under this Article' or failing to furnish bonds as provided in this Article [referring to the entire act as a proposed constitutional amendment], shall ipso facto make the said tax, penalties and costs delinquent and shall be construed as an attempt to avoid the payment of same which shall be sufficient grounds for attachment of gasoline, * * * wherever the same may be located or found, whether said delinquent taxpayer be a resident or non-resident of this State, * * * and authority to attach is hereby specifically authorized and granted to the said Supervisor of Public Accounts. The procedure prescribed by law shall be followed except that no bond shall be required of the State.” This provision was’held to authorize an attachment in State v. Tri-State Transit Co., 173 La. 682, 138 So. 507.

The fact that the state is expressly exempted from furnishing a bond to procure the attachment, by the quoted provision, affords no reason whatever to deny the writ, but, to the contrary, the exemption necessarily confers clear authority to order it to issue.

The claim of the state, as to the amount for which the writ is asked to safeguard as due, is not uncertain or indefinite, but. is for the precise sum of $500, with 20 per cent, penalty, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fee on the principal and penalty. The fact that the amount of gasoline brought into the state in the tank car is estimated in order to fix the amount of the tax does not make the amount -of the tax, claimed or demanded, indefinite, although it may weaken the correctness of the amount claimed. There is here, we think, a substantial compliance with article 243 of the Code of Practice. Flower v. Griffith’s Heirs, 12 La. 345; Belden v. Read & Hunt, 27 La. Ann. 103.

The affidavit for the writ, which declares that affiant, an assistant to the supervisor of public accounts, verily believes all of the facts and allegations of the petition to be true, the petition setting forth the necessary *657 facts for an attachment, which the affidavit shows the affiant read and therefore had knowledge of, suffices. The state, of necessity, must act through its officers and agents, and, an officer being in the position of an agent, it is sufficient that the officer swear to the best of his belief, instead of positively, to the existence of the debt. Cf. Schneider v. Vercker, 11 La. Ann. 274; Code of Practice, arts. 216 and 217.

The view of the respondent judge, which may be said also to be the contention of the respondent corporation, that the proper course for the judge to 'pursue, in a case such as the present, is to issue a rule nisi to determine whether or not he should grant the order for the attachment, after a hearing had, does not appeal to us as correct. Such a course, in our opinion, is contrary to, and tends to destroy, the main purpose in authorizing attachments; namely, to protect a claimant from the fraudulent disposition of his debtor’s property.

Section 4 of Act No. 1 of 1930 (Ex. Sess.) in referring to the power granted to attach, in such cases as the present, provides that: “The procedure prescribed by law shall be followed except that no bond shall be required of the State.” (Italics ours.) We know of no law, and are cited to none, sanctioning the issuance of a rule nisi, prior to granting an order for a writ of attachment, but consider such procedure contrary to the very nature and purpose of an attachment. When a petition for an attachment is presented to a judge, upon his finding that the application, upon its face, entitles the applicant to the writ, he must grant it, and. this, without issuing a rule nisi. Uncle Sam Planting & Manufacturing Co. v. Reynaud, 157 La. 955, 103 So. 276; 6 C. J. 102, § 148 D. If he finds that the application does not entitle the applicant to the writ, he must refuse it without issuing a rule. He has no discretion in the matter.

The ruling, in State, etc., v, Violet Oil Co., Inc., (not for publication), where an application in a case similar to the present one for writs of certiorari and mandamus was refused, contains nothing contrary to the views here expressed. The question here presented was not decided one way or another there, for the reason that the court could not grant timely relief.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 322, 176 La. 651, 1933 La. LEXIS 1585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-porterie-v-violet-oil-co-la-1933.