State v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

153 N.W. 850, 130 Minn. 377, 1915 Minn. LEXIS 588
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 16, 1915
DocketNos. 19,328—(20)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 153 N.W. 850 (State v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 153 N.W. 850, 130 Minn. 377, 1915 Minn. LEXIS 588 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Schaller, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment for defendant entered in the district court of Kamsey county, Minnesota, in an action brought by the state to enforce a claim against the defendant for gross earnings taxes on two omitted items.

Defendant is a common carrier operating lines of railroad in this state.

From the year 1899 to 1911, inclusive, defendant as such common carrier operated certain freight warehouses at Minneapolis and Duluth on its line of railway, using them for the purpose of receiving and transferring to cars freight for shipment, for temporarily storing freight and for receiving freight from its cars for delivery to consignees or connecting carriers. Certain other railway companies, having lines of railway running into said two cities, did not have freight house facilities at such points, and during said years the freight of such other railway companies was handled at the freight houses of the defendant and by the employees and agents of the defendant, said agents and employees assuming to deal and treat with shippers as agents and employees of the said other railway companies. During said time such railway companies have paid to defendant as compensation for the use of its freight warehouses and the services of its employees, in performing such services a certain flat rate per ton for the freight so handled. Defendant’s employees in performing the services and in billing and collecting charges as between themselves and the public acted as the agents of such other [379]*379companies. They reported and accounted directly to such other companies in all such matters, but were paid wages by defendant only.

The flat rate per ton received by defendant represented as nearly as possible the actual cost of the services performed, and was agreed upon for convenience and ease of accounting.

The sums received as aforesaid were all received for handling freight in the course of and as an incident to transportation by the other railway companies; the other companies received for such transportation, including the said services performed by defendant, their lawful published tariff rates, and all the freight charges so received by said other companies (except the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic [Railway Co.), were duly returned by them to the state of Minnesota as a part of their gross earnings and taxes thereon were duly assessed and paid.

The defendant during all of said times performed services for the said Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Railway Co. in hauling its freight trains and cars over defendant’s lines and in switching cars for said company. Defendant’s earnings in Minnesota for such services were duly returned by defendant and taxes paid thereon.

During the years 1904 to 1911, inclusive, the defendant owned certain warehouses at Duluth, located on its line and used in its railroad business. The warehouses were situated on wharves or piers and were so arranged that defendant’s cars could be loaded or unloaded on one side of the warehouse and freight boats plying to and from the port of Duluth could be loaded or unloaded on the other side. Freight can be transferred through the warehouses from the cars to the boats and from the boats to the cars. It is sometimes temporarily stored in such warehouses.

During the times mentioned it was the duty of the companies operating the boats, as part of the transportation thereof by them, to unload’ the in-bound freight from the hold of its' boats and put it into such warehouses and to load the out-bound freight into such vessels from such warehouses. Defendant’s duty was to unload lake-bound freight from its cars into the warehouses and to load from such warehouses into cars all freight from such boats for points on its lines of railway. By arrangement with the boat com[380]*380pañíes the defendant employed stevedores to perform all the manual labor of handling all of said freight, the vessels furnishing the mechanical power for hoisting from and lowering freight into the holds of the vessels. Under the agreement the boat lines paid to the defendant a certain flat rate per ton for all freight handled in delivering said freight to and from the dock. This flat rate per ton was, as nearly as could be determined by long experience, the actual cost of handling this freight from the vessels to the warehouse and from the warehouse to the vessels.

The defendant did not, during the years aforesaid or at any other time, return the amounts received from said boat lines as aforesaid as a part of its gross earnings to the state of Minnesota for taxation.

It appears that there are two kinds of income upon which taxes are demanded:

A. Moneys received by defendant for the handling of freight into, through and out of its warehouses or freight depots at Minneapolis and Duluth. This work was done for other railway companies, who included the services performed by the defendant in their transportation charges and paid taxes thereon.

B. Moneys received by defendant from boat companies for handling freight to and from lake carriers into and out of the defendant’s freight warehouse at docks or piers at Duluth.

1. The state contends that the moneys received by defendant for handling freight of other roads through its warehouses represent earnings derived from operation. Defendant asserts that such is not the case; that the services rendered are rendered by its agents as the agents for the other lines; that the moneys by it received represent the actual cost of the service rendered and no more and that in effect it is merely the hiring and disbursing agent for the other roads.

Not all the income of a railway company operating in this state is subject to the gross earnings tax. State v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. 30 Minn. 311, 15 N. W. 307; State v. Minnesota & I. Ry. Co. 106 Minn. 176, 118 N. W. 679, 1007, 16 Ann. Cas. 426.

So where two carriers enter into an arrangement by which' one becomes merely the hiring and disbursing agent for the other in the [381]*381performance of duties partly owing by both, paying out for and receiving back from the other only the actual cost of the service, without any intention to gain revenue or make a profit out of the transaction, and where such arrangement is made in good faith and not for the purpose of fraud, subterfuge or evasion of the obligations of either party to the state or to the public, such income will hot be held subject to the gross earnings tax. It is within the spirit of the ruling in State v. Minnesota & I. Ry. Co. supra.

2. Defendant contends that, because these services are included in the freight charges of the other railway lines, upon which charges a gross earnings tax is paid, to compel it to pay a tax on these same receipts would be in the nature of double taxation, exacting the commutation taxes on the same property twice. This cannot be lawfully done.

It was held in State v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. 30 Minn. 311, 15 N. W. 307 (Gilfillan, C. J.), that “exacting three per centum upon the rent paid the company, and also upon the receipts by the tenant earned by operating the railroad, would be, to the extent of the rent, in the nature of double taxation, or rather of exacting twice the commutation for taxes on the same property.”

This case was followed by State v. Northern Pacific R. Co. 32 Minn. 294, 20 N. W. 234, in which the tenant company was held liable to pay the per centum upon the earnings of the line leased and operated by it.

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State v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.
299 N.W. 657 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)
State v. Duluth, Missabe & Northern Railway Co.
292 N.W. 401 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1939)
Holmes v. Borgen
273 N.W. 623 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1937)
State v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
233 N.W. 105 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1930)
State Ex Rel. Byers-Prestholdt Motor Co. v. Minnesota Tax Commission
227 N.W. 43 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
State v. Great Northern Railway Co.
203 N.W. 453 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 850, 130 Minn. 377, 1915 Minn. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-minn-1915.