State v. Walla Walla Fruit Growers, Inc.

248 P. 54, 140 Wash. 94, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 632
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1926
DocketNo. 19439. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 P. 54 (State v. Walla Walla Fruit Growers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Walla Walla Fruit Growers, Inc., 248 P. 54, 140 Wash. 94, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 632 (Wash. 1926).

Opinions

Mackintosh, J.

— Subdivision (c), § 1, ch. 173, of the Laws of 1921, p. 669 [Rem. Comp. Stat., §8327], defines a distributor of liquid fuel to be one “who imports and sells such liquid fuel into this state.” The act thereafter provides that a distributor shall pay to the state an excise tax of one cent per gallon on all liquid fuels sold by it.

This action was begun against the appellant, which we shall hereinafter call the “growers company,” and the Farmers Fuel & Oil Company, which we shall hereinafter call the “oil company,” to collect approximately $600, being the excise tax claimed on liquid fuel handled by the two defendants. The trial court found that the two defendants had entered into a contract, by virtue of which they had imported into this state and sold a certain quantity of liquid fuel. From this finding, the court concluded that each of these defendants was a distributor, as defined by ch. 173, Laws of 1921, p. 669, and were jointly liable for the tax, and entered judgment against them jointly. From this judgment, the growers company alone has appealed.

The matter presented is, whether the contract between the growers company and the oil company was a contract of partnership or not. If it was a contract of partnership, the judgment must be affirmed. If it was not such a contract, and the relationship established is that of principal and agent, or employer and employee, the judgment must be reversed, in order that there will be no liability on the growers company.

The contract contains these material elements: That the growers company leased to the oil company sufficient ground upon which to erect and maintain stor *96 age tanks for the purpose of storing oil, gasoline, etc. This property was leased for a period of five years, with the privilege of renewal for a like period, the oil company agreeing to pay one dollar a year as rental. The growers company reserved the right to cancel the lease, at any time that the business of the oil company was insufficient in volume to warrant the growers company in performing the services relative to the distribution of liquid fuel, as further provided for in the contract. The growers company agreed “to finance the purchase in car lots of all gas, distillate and oil required by and which may be purchased by the” oil company; to unload the liquid fuel from shipping cars or tanks and into the storage tanks of the oil company; to “sell the same for cash for the second party (oil company) to such classes of customers as the second party shall designate”; and to keep books, make collections, properly conduct the business and render all services necessary in connection with the delivery and distribution of the oil and products kept for sale, with the provision that the growers company should not, at any time, be required to “finance” more than three cars of gas or distillate; that the growers company was' to conduct all this business for the fixed charge of two cents per gallon, and was to collect, in addition, such sum as the oil company might designate, “to the end that the second party may secure sufficient revenue with which to pay interest on its capital stock, taxes and other incidental expenses.” The growers company further agreed that it would not order oil or other product from any other company, or distribute the same for any company, other than the oil company. It was further agreed that the growers company should not be held responsible on account of non-delivery of any goods ordered, or on account of the quality or test *97 of any goods, and that the oil company should fully “protect its property, including all oil and gas on hand,” hy insurance. The growers company further agreed to account to the oil company, from time to time, for all sums collected over and above the fixed charges and amount necessary to cover shrinkage.

The respondent, of course, claims that the terms of this contract measure up to- the requirements necessary to constitute a partnership, and specifies those requirements as being, first, a community of interest in profits and losses; second, a community of interest in the capital employed; and third, a community of power in administration.

Assuming that all that is necessary to constitute a partnership is a community of interest and power in the three particulars mentioned, an examination of this contract must disclose that these essential elements are not therein provided for. Considering first the interest in the profits and losses: Nowhere in the contract is there any provision that the growers company and the oil company shall share in the losses, if any; nor does the contract provide for a distribution in any ratio of the possible profits. The growers company was to receive a fixed compensation of two cents per gallon on all the product handled hy it, and, as we read the contract, this compensation was to he paid, irrespective of the fact as to whether any profit had been made or not in the transaction. The power to fix the price, at which the product was to he sold, rested in the oil company, hut out of the price received the growers company was to receive a fixed compensation. The fact that the growers company had a right to withdraw from the contract and cancel it, is no evidence of a partnership, hut, rather, it was a provision made for the growers company’s protection, in that it allowed it *98 to withdraw, if the two cents per gallon compensation proved unsatisfactory, or any other reason developed which convinced" the growers company that the contract was no longer satisfactory to it.

Next arises the question, whether there was any community of interest in the capital employed. The tanks, buildings and equipment used in the conduct of the business were owned exclusively, so far as the contract provided, by the oil company. The only capital employed in the enterprise, which under the contract could be said to be furnished by the growers company, was the amount which it should furnish in financing the purchase of the liquid fuel. But the use of the word “finance” is a strong circumstance negativing the idea of a partnership. “To finance” means to loan. Hobgood v. Ehlen, 141 N. C. 344, 53 S. E. 857. If the contract had provided that the growers company should contribute money to the enterprise, it might very well be taken to mean, that the two parties to the contract were entering into a partnership where they had a community of interest in the capital. But where the contract provides that one party shall finance the purchase of a product, that means nothing more than that that party will loan the amount necessary, which will be repaid to it. The fact that no time is set, nor manner provided, for the repayment, does not alter the relationship of the parties. The growers company, therefore, having no interest in any of the capital employed, and being, at most, a creditor as to money which it loaned, the essential element in regard to interest in capital necessary to create a partnership seems to be lacking.

. The final requisite of partnership, that is, a community of power in the administration, is not met by the. terms of this contract. The oil company had the entire direction and management of the enterprise. *99

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 54, 140 Wash. 94, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walla-walla-fruit-growers-inc-wash-1926.