State v. Reed Oil Co.

137 S.W.2d 292, 176 Tenn. 10, 12 Beeler 10, 1925 Tenn. LEXIS 119
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 292 (State v. Reed Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. Reed Oil Co., 137 S.W.2d 292, 176 Tenn. 10, 12 Beeler 10, 1925 Tenn. LEXIS 119 (Tenn. 1926).

Opinions

Me. Justice Cook

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the validity of Chapter 33, Pub. Acts of 1917, and related Statutes levying inspection fees on coal oil and gasoline, and Chapter 54, Pub. Acts of 1925, imposing a privilege tax on petroleum products bn which the inspection fees are not paid. A proviso of the Act excludes from taxation products on which inspection fees have been paid. The privilege tax imposed by the latter Act is slightly higher than the fees paid under the former Acts.

*13 Tire Reed Oil Company was engaged in the sale of petroleum in Tennessee and from July 1, 1924, to December 31, 1925, refused to pay any inspection fees. From April 11, 1925, to December 31, 1925, it refused to pay the privilege tax. It insisted that the inspection fees are so excessive as to render the Statutes providing for the inspection of such products void, and that the Act imposing the privilege tax makes an arbitrary classification which renders it void.

The Chancellor sustained both Acts and upon the admission of Reed Oil Company that if the State was entitled to recover inspection fees the recovery should be $16,704.90, he gave a decree for that sum with interest. The inspection fees allowed by the Chancellor covered the entire period for which the State could claim a privilege tax and no recovery was allowed under the latter Act because the Company could not be held for both inspection fees and the privilege tax.

It is said by the Company that the Statutes providing for the inspection of petroleum products in this State and the payment of the charge provided in Section 2, Chapter 33, Pub. Acts of 1917, produces fees so greatly in excess of the cost of the inspection as to render the Act void, and that it is void because it constitutes a burden on interstate commerce. It is insisted that Chapter 54, Pub. Acts of 1925, is void because of its arbitrary classification contrary to Article 1, Sec. 8, and Article 11, Sec. 8, of the State Constitution and the Fourteenth-Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

It appears from the record that products of the Reed Oil Company are all produced in another State and are shipped to this State where they are sold and distributed. It also appears that Reed Oil Company does not re *14 ship nor transport any of its products after their arrival here to another State for any purpose. A stipulation in the record shows:

“1. Defendant, Reed Oil Company, is a corporation, and was organized in 1922 and has since been engaged in business as a dealer, both as wholesaler and jobber, in petroleum products in Davidson and Madison Counties, Tennessee.
“2. Defendant paid the coal oil and gasoline inspection fees on all products sold by it up to July 1, 1924, since which time it has failed and refused to pay such inspection fees; but it then and has since offered to pay, and has been ready, able and willing* to pay, its proportionate part of the expense to the State of making inspection.
“3. Said defendant has likewise wholly failed and refused to pay the one-half cent tax prescribed by chapter 54 of the Acts of 1925.
“4. The number of gallons of oil and gasoline sold by said defendant from July 1, 1924, to December 31, 1925, inclusive, upon which it has paid neither inspection tax nor one-half cent gasoline tax is as shown in Exhibit A to the bill in the cause Rule No. 3741®.
“5. Almost all petroleum products sold in Tennessee are manufactured in other parts of the United States and shipped into Tennessee, and this was true of all products handled by defendant, Reed Oil Company. Such products were and are brought in by dealers in various forms, quantities and containers; some are in barrels and casks, which are then by dealers resold to their customers in the original unbroken containers. Also a portion of such commodities were and are shipped to dealers in railroad tank cars, and in instances are resold to customers *15 in sucia tank cars without being unloaded or broken, while in other instances the cars are unloaded and the contents transferred to the dealers’ storage tanks; in other instances products are sold to consumers on orders taken before shipment and shipped from other states direct to purchaser. The greater portion of the products are stored in storage tanks of dealers and delivered to customers and consumers by tank wagons or service station pumps. No distinction is made by the State’s inspectors between any of said commodities, and no claim until now has been made by any dealer that any particular portion of his commodity is exempt from payment of inspection fees. This particular defendant does not reship or transport any of its products to other states.
“6. The following shows the aggregate inspection fees collected by the state and also the cost thereof to the state, including salaries and expenses, for the several periods from 1915 to 1925, inclusive:
Amount Cost to Collected State
For the biennial period from 1922 to 1924 .$769,725.03 $38,784.79
For the biennial period from 1920 to 1922 . 645,455,93 36,229.52
For the biennial period from 1918 to 1920 . 401,468.53 24,321.85
For the biennial period from 1917 to 1918 . 317,912.75 27,783.71
For the biennial period from 1915 to 1917 . 163,948.10 24,364.79
“7. There are approximately 100 wholesale dealers and jobbers in Tennessee who are engaged in the same *16 business that defendant, Reed Oil Company, is engaged in. Many of them have, like said defendant, failed and refused to pay inspection fees since August 1, 1924, and the % cent privilege tax since its passage in April, 1925. Others have paid the inspection fees falling due, and such as have paid inspection fees, have not and will not be required to pay the % cent privilege tax under chapter 54, Pub. Acts 1925.
“8. The quantity of gasoline reported by the State inspectors as having been inspected in 1924 was 2,066,-455 gallons less than the quantity upon which the 2 cent privilege tax under Acts 1923 was paid through the Excise Tax Department in that year.
“9. As shown in Section 4 hereof, the number of gallons sold by defendant from July 1, 1924, to December 31,1925, upon which no inspection fees have been paid is 4,008,513; and if the defendant is liable for said fees, then the amount of its liability for the period from July 1, 1924, up to December 31, 1925, would be $16,704.90 exclusive of interest and costs.
“10.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 292, 176 Tenn. 10, 12 Beeler 10, 1925 Tenn. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reed-oil-co-tenn-1926.