State v. Phillips Pipe Line Co.

97 S.W.2d 109, 339 Mo. 459, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 2, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 109 (State v. Phillips Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Phillips Pipe Line Co., 97 S.W.2d 109, 339 Mo. 459, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 667 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

COLLET, J.

This is an action brought by the Attorney General on behalf of the State of Missouri to collect corporation franchise taxes for the year 1934 in the amount of $1117.71 from the defendant Phillips Pipe Line Company. The respondent is a Delaware corporation authorized, on its application, to transact business in the State of Missouri as a foreign corporation. With the exception of three qualifying shares of a total of 1000 shares of capital stock it is wholly owned by the Phillips Petroleum Company. The Attorney General contends that Sections 4596 and 4641, Revised Statutes 1929, read together impose a privilege tax upon all corporations authorized to transact business within this State regardless of whether intrastate business is actually engaged in. He asserts further that even if the statute is not properly susceptible to that construction still respondent is actually engaged in intrastate business and is estopped to deny that fact. Respondent takes sharp issue with the Attorney *463 General’s construction of Sections 4641 and 4596, supra, insisting that these statutes contemplate a tax only upon corporations actually engaged in intrastate business. It further denies that its business is in any respect intrastate in character pr that it is estopped to assert and maintain that position and asserts that the imposition of the tax would constitute a burden upon interstate commerce in violation of the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, and would further constitute a denial of respondent’s rights under the “due process” clause of the Federal and State Constitutions.

The respondent operates an underground pipe line from Borger*' Texas to East St. Louis, Illinois, with a branch line from Paola, Kansas, to Kansas City, Kansas. Petroleum products are introduced into the pipe line at Borger, Texas, Eldorado, Kansas, Paola, Kansas, and Kansas City, Kansas, and delivered at terminal points located at Wichita, Kansas, Jefferson. City, Missouri, and East St. Louis, Illinois. Pumping stations are maintained at intervals along the line to-maintain sufficient pressure to propel the product being.transported. During the year 1934 the pipe line was devoted to the transportation of five commodities — butane, twenty-six-pound natural gasoline, straight run refinery gasoline, cracked gasoline and twelve-pound natural gasoline. None of these alone constitutes a satisfactory motor fuel but combined in proper proportions and mixed with other ingredients constitute different grades of gasoline sold for use in motor vehicles. Quantities of each product, described as “shipments” were transported for shippers under a tariff filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, the terms of which will be referred to hereafter. The Phillips Petroleum Company is the only customer shipping to the Jefferson City terminal. Since that terminal is the only one located in Missouri the issues presented require our consideration of only the practices engaged in by defendant at this terminal and respondent’s relations with the Phillips Petroleum Company. The Jefferson City terminal is located approximately two miles south of that city on a tract of land consisting of seventy acres owned by respondent. On this tract respondent has constructed a number of large tanks, several houses for the use of its employees, warehouses for the storage of supplies, office buildings, pumps and a system of interconnecting pipe lines between the various tanks for the purpose of moving the contents of one tank to another, water, electric and heating plants for the purpose of providing water, electricity and heat for use at the station and in the'dwelling houses used by the, resident employees, and private telephone lines for use in its business. The commodities above referred to are received at Borger and Pampa, Texas, and transported through the pipe line under high pressure to the Jefferson City terminal. These various commodities being of a, different character, are-transported separately *464 in quantities of not less than 50,000 barrels. Each product is discharged from the pipe line into storage tanks at the Jefferson City terminal in the amount directed by the shipper. The respondent transfers the proper amount of each product' to what are designated as blending tanks where the different grades are mixed by the use of a blending spider, resulting in the production of a gasoline of the grade desired. In making one grade described as ethyl gasoline tetra-ethyl'lead is injected into the gasoline in the blending tank. The tetra-ethyl lead is furnished by the shipper. It is shipped to Jefferson Gity in large quantities by rail at intervals of about six months. Being very dangerous to handle it is unloaded and transferred to respondent’s storage tank under the supervision of representatives of the “Ethyl Corporation.” Another grade of gasoline required the addition of coloring matter and still another of “whitening.” As the desired quantity of each grade of gasoline is created it is transferred from the blending tank to a storage or “delivery” tank. Thus a quantity of the different grades of gasoline is made available to the shipper in the delivery tanks at all times. Although these delivery tanks were the property and under the care of the respondent it appears that the outlets were kept locked with the keys in the possession of the local superintendent of the Phillips Petroleum Company who supervised the withdrawal of the completed product from the delivery tanks to trucks belonging to his company for distribution to dealers purchasing it from the Petroleum Company. The superintendent of'the respondent’s Jefferson City terminal issued invoices in the name of the Petroleum Company for gasoline withdrawn from the delivery tank, and delivered them to the Petroleum Company’s superintendent who, as above'Stated, supervised the withdrawals. All of the employees at the terminal were paid by respondent except the Petroleum Company’s superintendent. The trucks were owned by the Petroleum Company and the drivers paid by that company. The written contract of carriage provided that the blending should be performed by the carrier. The charge therefor was included in the tariff rate.' The published tariff fixed a rate to the Jefferson City terminal of 90J cents per barrel from Borger and Pampa, Texas. This rate was described as the “local rate.” The tariff also contained a schedule of rates which provided in effect that a different rate would be charged for the transportation of gasoline from Borger or Pampa, Texas, to the Jefferson City terminal on all gasoline which was forwarded within a year to any one of approximately 200 cities and towns in Missouri named in the tariff. That rate was designated the “proportional rate” and was fixed at 37 cents per barrel. The tariff provided for the payment of the “local rate” from the place of shipment to the Jefferson City terminal either in advance or before release from storage at the ter *465 minal and a lien was impressed on tbe shipment for tbe charges. The application of the lower “proportional rate” to gasoline later remoyed therefore required an arrangement for a refund. The tariff provided for this by stating that a refund equal to the difference between the “local rate” of 90-3,- cents and the “proportional rate” of 37 cents would be given on all quantities of gasoline removed within one year from storage by trucks upon' the presentation of paid truck freight bills.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 109, 339 Mo. 459, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phillips-pipe-line-co-mo-1936.