State v. Johnson

138 So. 503, 173 La. 669, 1931 La. LEXIS 1926
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1931
DocketNo. 31158.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 138 So. 503 (State v. Johnson) 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 v. Johnson, 138 So. 503, 173 La. 669, 1931 La. LEXIS 1926 (La. 1931).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

The state of Louisiana brought this action against defendant to recover the total sum of $2,819.26, as tax on five shipments of gasoline brought into this state from the state of Arkansas, alleged to have been sold, distributed, or consumed in this state by defendant and its subsidiary corporations; said tax being levied by Act 6, Extra Session of 1928, as amended by Act 8 of 1930.

The act of the Legislature referred to provides, section 1:

“That there is hereby levied a tax of four cents (4<f) per gallon on all gasoline, or motor fuel, sold, used or consumed in the State of Louisiana for domestic consumption, to be collected as hereinafter set forth.”

It is provided in section 2 of the act that the said tax “shall be collected from all persons, firms, corporations or associations of persons, engaged as dealers in the handling, sale or distribution of such products within the state of Louisiana.” The same section defines the term “dealer” to mean i“the person, firm, corporation or association of persons who imports such gasoline or motor fuel from any other state or foreign country for distribution, sale or use in the state of Louisiana.” (Italics ours.)

It will be noticed that the word, “distribution” is not used in the title of the act nor in section 1, which imposes the tax.

The act provides that the collection of this tax shall be under the supervision of the supervisor of public accounts and that he shall “forward the full amount collected by him during the preceding calendar month to the State Treasurer, to be placed to the credit of the General Highway Fund, created by Section 22 of Article VI of the Constitution,” and, “All such taxes, when so placed to the credit of the General Highway Fund, shall be allotted and disbursed by the said Louisiana Highway Commission for the purpose of the construction and maintenance of the system of State highways and bridges, and for such other purposes as provided for in paragraph (a), Section 22 of Article VI, of the said Constitution of Louisiana.” Section 5.

The defense is that defendant is not a dealer in or a distributor of gasoline in the sense those terms, are used in the act, but that it purchased said gasoline in the state of Arkansas and had it shipped into the state of Louisiana to be consumed by it and its subsidiary corporations in the states of Arkansas, Texas, and Mississippi, and some parts in Louisiana, and that only a portion of said gasoline was used in the. state of Louisiana, and that said gasoline was not sold in this state, but only used by defendant and its subsidiary corporations, the greater portion in interstate business.

' The defendant, Johnson, is receiver for a Louisiana corporation which operates motor-buses and motortrucks for the transportation of passengers and freight both interstate and intrastate and uses gasoline as fuel for the operation of said, vehicles.

The gasoline on which the tax is sought to be collected was purchased in tank car lots in the state of Arkansas, shipped to Shreveport in this state, where the corporation has its domicile and headquarters, and there deposited in storage tanks, from which it was pumped into the tanks of the vehicles. The *673 gasoline was not brought into the state for sale or distribution to the public but only for use by defendant in its business.

The state is not here seeking to collect a tax on the shipment of the gasoline from Arkansas into Louisiana. Its contention is that the defendant was a dealer in gasoline as defined by the act, in that when this gasoline came to rest in the storage tanks of defendant in Louisiana, it became a commodity of this state and that the pumping of the gasoline by defendant from its storage tanks into the tanks of its vehicles was a distribution of the commodity which constituted defendant a dealer under the act.

It is further contended by the state that since the gasoline was distributed in this state by the defendant, which distribution, it is contended, made the defendant a dealer, the tax was due on the total amount distributed, regardless of the purpose for which it was finally used, whether used as an agency or instrumentality in interstate or intrastate commerce and whether finally consumed within or without the state.

The defendant contends on the contrary, first, that it is not a dealer in gasoline, and, second, that if it be held to be such under the act it owes no tax on the gasoline destined for use in interstate commerce; that gasoline so used is an instrumentality of interstate commerce and cannot be taxed by the state for so to do would be to lay a burden upon such commerce, which is prohibited' by the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, and that in so far as this state has attempted to do so by Act 6 of the Extra Session of 1928, said act is unconstitutional.

It was held by the trial judge that the defendant must pay the tax on all gasoline used by it “on intra-state trips,” and, “Further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the demands of the State of Louisiana against defendant for the tax on gasoline used on interstate trips by said companies are hereby rejected.” (Italics ours.)

1. In so far as the judgment condemns defendant to pay this tax on gasoline “used on intra-state trips” it is correct, but in so far as it rejected the state’s demand for the collection of the tax on gasoline used “on interstate trips” it is correct only in part.

The state of Louisiana has, by legislative enactments, taken over and now owns the principal public highways of the state. It has within the last few years launched and is now engaged in a paving scheme of vast proportions. It has already spent millions of dollars in paving its roads and building bridges and millions are yet to be spent, many of the major projects having been completed at the time this suit was brought. In order to raise funds for this purpose, it levied a tax on gasoline or motor fuel. It is provided that upon the collection of this tax, it shall be paid over to the state treasurer,, who shall at once place the same to the credit of the “General Highway Fund” to be disbursed by the Louisiana highway commission “for the purpose of constructing and maintaining the system of state highways and bridges.” The entire amount realized from the collection of this tax is allocated to the general highway fund and can be used for no purpose other than the building and maintaining of roads and bridges.

The defendant is receiver for a Louisiana corporation engaged in the transportation of passengers and freight in motor buses and trucks, partly in interstate commerce between this state and the states of Arkansas, Texas, and Mississippi.

Its buses and trucks used in such interstate commerce are operated on the highways built^ maintained, and owned by this state.

*675 It now seeks to'evade the payment of the tax on so much of the gasoline as it uses in interstate commerce 'on the theory that such gasoline is an instrumentality used for carrying on this commerce and that the tax is “a tax or burden” on such commerce and is prohibited by the Federal Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 503, 173 La. 669, 1931 La. LEXIS 1926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnson-la-1931.