State v. Baker

393 P.2d 893, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 221
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1964
Docket428
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 393 P.2d 893 (State v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baker, 393 P.2d 893, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 221 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

- This is an appeal by the State of Alaska, defendant below, from an order granting summary judgment 1 to the plaintiff-appel-lees by reason of collateral estoppel.

The appellees, Sam E. Baker and Frank W. Ford, copartners, who we shall refer to herein as Baker & Ford, brought this suit for refund to them of certain business license fees or taxes and interest thereon, which they had paid to the state under protest for the years 1953-1959. It is their claim that the Alaska Business License Act 2 (hereinafter designated ABLA), under which the taxes were paid is unconstitutional as to them since the only business they ever did in Alaska was construction work performed under contract with the Government exclusively on United States military reservations as a result of competitive bidding.

As the basis for their claim of right to a summary judgment, Baker & Ford rely upon the following facts and circumstances: After they had commenced this action in Alaska, the State of Alaska brought suit against them in their domiciliary State of Washington to collect the business license taxes for the year 1959. They defended there by asserting the same claim made in the Alaska court, namely, that the ABLA is unconstitutional. After trial and hearing, Judge Boone Hardin of the Washington superior court found that the activities of Baker & Ford in Alaska were performed entirely upon United States military reservations, that the Government had not granted Alaska any rights or jurisdiction over such reservations, except to levy and collect thereon income taxes and sales or use taxes as permitted by the Buck Act; 3 and that the amounts required to be paid under the ABLA were not income taxes 4 *895 or sales or use taxes within the meaning of the Buck Act. 5

Judge Hardin reasoned that, even if the tax or fee imposed by the ABLA were held to be a revenue measure, that is, an income tax permitted under the Buck Act, it was, nevertheless, an attempt to collect a fee for a permit or license and constituted an invalid exercise of jurisdiction by the state. He also found that it conflicted with existing federal laws as to control over Government contractors. He thereupon entered judgment dismissing the state’s entire action for taxes, penalties and interest. 6

It is this ruling of the Washington superior court that the ABLA imposed an unconstitutional burden upon their activities as federal contractors which Baker & Ford subsequently used as the basis for their motion for summary judgment in the instant case. Since the parties and the subject matter or transaction are the same in both actions and the only difference is in the taxable years involved, the appellees contend that the prior Washington decision, under the doctrine of collateral estoppel or es-toppel by judgment, applies and precludes the state from relitigating the legal issue of constitutionality in the Alaska court.

In its brief on appeal, the state concedes that the doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes a party from relitigating matters that have been previously adjudicated in another action, but argues that the doctrine is not applicable in the present case for the following reasons: (1) because the Washington decision has been appealed to the supreme court of that state; (2) the doctrine does not apply to matters of state taxation or to questions of pure law; and (3) because it would result in an unjust discrimination among taxpayers.

As to the first objection raised by the state to the application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel in this case, that issue has become moot in a sense because on April 9, 1964 the Supreme Court of the State of Washington modified Judge Hardin’s decision by reversing that portion of the judgment which held the revenue sections of the ABLA invalid. 7

In what we consider to be a sound opinion, Judge Langenbach, 8 speaking for the Washington State Supreme Court, stated in 390 P.2d at 1016:

“The ABLA is primarily an act for the imposition and collection of a tax for revenue purposes only. It must be reasonably construed as permitting the collection of an income tax based upon the gross receipts of the respondents [Baker & Ford] engaged in doing business in Alaska, within the meaning and intent of the Buck Act. The appellant [State of Alaska] is thus empowered to issue a license to respondents to engage in their contractual business for an initial fee of $25 plus an additional 1 per cent of the gross receipts in excess of $20,000 from business during the year. [Citing Floward v. Commissioners, 344 U.S. 624, 628, 73 S.Ct. 465, 97 L.Ed. 617, 621 (1953).]” 9

*896 Judge 'Langenbach then went on to hold as strictly regulatory measures and not within the exceptions of the Buck Act certain other provisions of the ABLA and statutes relating to nonresident businessmen, such as those requiring nonresidents doing business in Alaska to make a showing of financial responsibility 10 and to appoint the Commissioner of Commerce as agent for service of process, 11 providing for the imposition of criminal penalties 12 and civil penalties as well as interest charges 13 in case of noncompliance, and declaring that the amount of the license fee, interest and penalties shall constitute a lien in favor of the state. 14 However, he pointed out that the regulatory provisions were severable under the severability clause of the ABLA 15 and should be severed. 16

While the Washington Supreme Court felt that the regulatory provisions of the Alaska statutes mentioned must be stricken as an unlawful invasion and interference with the contractual rights of Baker & Ford in the gainful pursuit of their business in Alaska, it nevertheless disallowed recovery by the State of Alaska of penalty and interest for an entirely different reason as follows:

“Concerning the penalty and interest sought to be collected from respondents, these must be set aside and cancelled as barred by the respective statutes of limitations of the states of Alaska and Washington.” 17

To summarize, the highest court of the State of Washington has now ruled that the ABLA must be basically construed as an income tax measure within the purview of the Buck Act, from which any regulatory provisions for the collection of the tax are severable by statute.

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Bluebook (online)
393 P.2d 893, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baker-alaska-1964.