State v. Fitts

405 S.W.2d 90, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2669
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 1966
DocketNo. 11424
StatusPublished

This text of 405 S.W.2d 90 (State v. Fitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fitts, 405 S.W.2d 90, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2669 (Tex. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinions

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by appellee for a declaratory judgment that he was not liable for motor fuel taxes under Chapter 9 of Title 122A, Taxation-General, Vernon’s Civil Statutes. The State filed cross action for the taxes. The trial court held appellee was not liable for any of the State’s claim.

The State’s cause of action in chief is for taxes upon taxable sales of gasoline by appellee imposed by Article 9.02(1) which have not been paid to the State. Appellee’s liability for these taxes is grounded in the main on its audit pursuant to Articles 9.22(2) and 9.17(1).

The State audited all the known records of appellee, and the records of his vendors and vendees. The audit shows that he sold at wholesale to service station retail outlets in Texas, and at retail through his own service stations, more gasoline than he purchased from his known suppliers. The State’s investigation did not discover from whom nor in what manner he acquired this excess gasoline.

The State and Robert S. Calvert, Comptroller, filed their cross action for tax claim in the amount of $3,362.35 of taxes and for the penalties and interest provided for in said Chapter 9 and also for the additional statutory penalty in the same amount of the taxes, which is provided for in Article 9.22(1) of said Chapter 9. Appellants also prayed for foreclosure of the statutory lien upon the truck tractor and tank trailer used by appellee in his wholesale gasoline distribution business to secure its claim.

Appellants assert that Chapter 9 of Title 122A was intended to provide and that it does provide a completely comprehensive method of taxing every gallon of motor fuel sold, distributed and used in this State and of collecting that tax.

Applied to the case at bar we submit that it provides that any one who acquires gasoline in any manner without being able to show either payment of the tax as provided in Articles 9.22(2) and 9.17(1) or that such acquisition was lawfully tax free, and who sells such gasoline at other than a tax free sale duly authorized as such by the Comptroller, makes a first resale which is a “first sale” and a taxable sale.

[92]*92The appeal is founded on nine points and are to the effect that the trial court erred in failing to hold that plaintiff’s sales of the motor fuel were taxable “first sales,” and no evidence to disqualify all such sales from being taxable sales and the evidence proved that such sales were taxable, and such sales were taxable subsequent sales within contemplation of Article 9.02(1), in failing to hold that plaintiff was a distributor who made first sales, and that plaintiff was a dealer who was required to keep full records of all purchases and sales and to pay the taxes; that the court erred in not holding that the State had a prior lien on the truck used in plaintiff’s business, and in not assessing a penalty equal to the amount of the taxes due against plaintiff, and finally that the court erred in refusing to admit into evidence certain exhibits concerning prosecution of plaintiff for a criminal offense occurring some time subsequent to the period the taxes were alleged to be delinquent for the purpose of testing the memory and veracity of Mrs. Fitts, a witness for plaintiff.

Article 9.01(10) defines “first' sale” as follows:

“ ‘First sale’ shall mean, except as otherwise provided herein, the first sale or distribution in this State of motor fuel, produced, refined compounded, imported into, or otherwise acquired in said State; provided that when motor fu,el has been purchased tax free under the terms of this Chapter, the first resale or distribution of said motor fuel for any purpose other than a tax free sale duly authorized as such by the Comptroller shall, for the purposes of this Chapter, mean and constitute a ‘first sale.’ ”

We believe that the plaintiff was liable for the taxes and the resulting penalty and the State should recover the taxes sued for and the penalty- and was entitled to a lien and a foreclosure of such on the truck. Judgment is here rendered for the State and that of the trial court is reversed.

The plaintiff, appellee herein, does not plead that he acquired the motor fuel in question at a prior sale in Texas, or at a prior “first sale” in the State.

The audit made by the State is uncon-tradicted and shows that the appellee sold more gasoline during the period of the audit than refinery records from whom he states he purchased show that he purchased. There was no showing from whom or in what manner he acquired the excess gasoline he sold, that is, the amount his records show he sold over the amount shown by the records of the refineries as purchased by him.

The core of this litigation is how or from whom the excess gasoline in controversy was acquired by appellee, the manner of such acquisition, of if any former seller or purchaser thereof, if any, had paid the tax thereon to the State.

The State contends in the alternative that if appellee’s excess sales were not the first actual sale of motor fuel which had been acquired in some manner in this State, then that all of appellee’s sales were the first resale of said motor fuel within contemplation of that portion of the definition of a “first sale” contained in Article 9.01(10) which reads:

“ * * * provided that when motor fuel has been purchased tax free under the terms of this Chapter, the first resale or distribution of said motor fuel for any purpose other than a tax free sale duly authorized as such by the Comptroller shall, for the purposes of this Chapter, mean and constitute a ‘first sale.’ ”

There is no question but that the tax imposed upon sales of motor fuel has not been paid to the State on the fuel in question.

Appellee could not purchase, legally, at tax-free purchases by himself, because he was not a licensed and bonded distributor as required by Article 9.05, subdivisions 1 and 2. He had neither a permit nor a bond.

[93]*93There is no indication that resales or subsequent sales should escape taxation but the intent of the statute is expressed in Article 9.02(1) which levies the tax that:

“ * * * the said 'tax shall be added to the selling price, so that such tax is paid ultimately by the person using or consuming said motor fuel for the purpose of generating power for the propulsion of any motor vehicle upon the public highways of this State.”

The Motor Fuel Tax Act as enacted shows a Legislative intent to tax every first actual sale and each subsequent sale, excepting those specifically exempt under Article 9.02 (4), and those tax-free under Article 9.05 (1) and (2), is subject to the tax so that the tax is passed on to the ultimate consumer.

Article 9.17(1):

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Related

Allied Finance Company v. State
387 S.W.2d 435 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
State v. City of El Paso
143 S.W.2d 366 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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405 S.W.2d 90, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fitts-texapp-1966.