Stewarts' Pharmacies, Ltd. v. Fase

43 Haw. 131, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 118
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1959
DocketNos. 4040 and 4041
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 Haw. 131 (Stewarts' Pharmacies, Ltd. v. Fase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewarts' Pharmacies, Ltd. v. Fase, 43 Haw. 131, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 118 (haw 1959).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

MARUMOTO, J.

We have before us two submissions on agreed facts by the same parties involving a single question of law as to whether the Compensating Tax Law, R.L.H. 1955, Ch. 118, is valid under the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States.

[132]*132The parties have agreed to the following facts:

1. Taxpayer is a retailer licensed under the General Excise Tax Law, R.L.H. 1955, Ch. 117. It owns and operates in Honolulu a number of stores at which it sells drugs and other merchandise to consumers. It obtains the merchandise which it sells from four sources, namely:

A. Wholesalers licensed under the General Excise Tax Law. With respect to merchandise from this source, the wholesalers pay the tax under the General Excise Tax Law at the rate applicable to wholesalers.

B. Sellers not doing business in the Territory and not licensed under the General Excise Tax Law, haying in the Territory "representatives” within the meaning of the Compensating Tax Law. Such representatives are independent contractors established in business in the Territory and having their own offices where they do business as representatives for several lines of merchandise. They receive commissions from the sellers, who in most cases are the manufacturers of the products sold. They procure orders and forward them to the extraterritory offices of the sellers, where the orders are subject to acceptance or rejection. If the orders are accepted, which usually occurs, they are filled by direct shipment from extraterritory points to taxpayer on credit and taxpayer remits, the purchase price plus amounts advanced by the sellers for freight to the extraterritory offices of the sellers. With respect to merchandise from this source, taxpayer had been paying the tax under the Compensating Tax Law but has discontinued such payment on the ground that the law violates the commerce clause.

C. Sellers not doing business in the Territory and not licensed under the General Excise Tax Law, who do not have representatives in the Territory. Taxpayer obtains merchandise from this source by sending orders by mail or wireless to the extraterritory offices of the sellers, where the orders are accepted and filled as stated in connection with purchases from source B. With respect to merchandise from this source, no tax is paid either under the General Excise Tax Law or under the Compensating Tax Law.

D. Local manufacturers licensed under the General Excise Tax Law. With respect, to merchandise from this source, the manufac[133]*133turers pay the tax under the General Excise Tax Law at the rate applicable to manufacturers who sell to retailers.

2. It is more convenient for taxpayer to obtain merchandise from sources A and B than from source C because in the former instances the wholesalers or the representatives constitute points of local contact.

3. Other things being equal, taxpayer purchases from source C in preference to source A or source B because of the difference in costs resulting from the fact that no tax applies with respect to purchases from source C.

4. Except for the Compensating Tax Law, other things being equal, taxpayer will purchase from source B in preference to source A or source C. The existence of the law, and the tax which it imposes or purports to impose, has caused representatives and those represented by them to lose business.

5. With respect to purchases from source D, some of the products involved in such purchases can only be obtained from local manufacturers, but other products, such as stationery and perfume, may be obtained from source A, B, or C.

Case No. 4040 involves an assessment under the Compensating Tax Law, at the rate in effect before the 1957 amendment to the law, covering merchandise obtained from source B and added to taxpayer’s stock in September 1956. Case No. 4041 involves an assessment under the same law, at the rate in effect after the 1957 amendment, covering merchandise so purchased and added to taxpayer’s stock in July, 1957. Taxpayer does not dispute that such assessments were duly made and are correct, except insofar as its contention as to the constitutionality of the law may be sustained. In order to perfect its appeal under R.L.H. 1955, § 118-7, taxpayer paid the taxes as assessed, and the amounts so paid are now held by the Treasurer of the Territory pending the determination of the instant submissions.

While the submissions involve the constitutionality of the Compensating Tax Law only, a background knowledge of the General Excise Tax Law and the Consumption Tax Law, and their relationship to the Compensating Tax Law, is essential for a full understanding of the question at hand.

[134]*134The General Excise Tax Law is the principal revenue producer in the tax system of the Territory. It imposes a tax on the privilege of engaging in business and other activities, including retailing, wholesaling, manufacturing, and acting as representatives or purchasing agents as defined in the Compensating Tax Law. The tax is measured by the gross income derived from the business and other activities engaged in. The rates are variable, depending on the nature of the business and other activities.

The Consumption Tax Law imposes a tax with respect to the use or consumption in the Territory of property in the hands of consumers as to which the excise tax on retailers has not been paid. It was enacted to complement the General Excise Tax Law. The rate of tax under it is equated to the excise tax on retailers. It serves the same function as the complementary use tax in a state which has a sales tax law.

The Compefisating Tax Law imposes "an excise tax on the use in this Territory of tangible personal property which * * * .is purchased from an unlicensed seller for use in this Territory, through the activity or with the assistance of a purchasing agent or representative * * The tax accrues when the property is acquired by the purchaser and "becomes subject to the taxing jurisdiction of the Territory.” According to the definitions in the law, "use” is any use, or the keeping for use or sale, of property and includes the exercise of any right or power incident to ownership; "unlicensed seller” is a seller who, with respect to the particular sale, is not subject to the tax imposed by the General Excise Tax Law; and "representative” is a salesman, commission agent, manufacturer’s representative, broker or other person who is authorized or employed by an unlicensed seller to assist such seller in selling property for use in the Territory by procuring orders for such sales and who carries on such activities in the Territory, it being immaterial whether such activities are regular or intermittent. A manufacturer’s representative whose functions are purely promotional and do not include the procuring, soliciting or accepting of orders for property, the making of deliveries, the collection of payments for deliveries, or the keeping of books of account concerning such orders, deliveries or collections is not a representative as defined in the law. We need not consider the definition of purchasing agent be[135]*135cause the submissions do not refer to any purchase brought about by the activities of such agent.

The quoted provision of the law seemingly applies to any use in the Territory of property acquired by any purchaser from an unlicensed seller through the intervention of a purchasing agent or a representative.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Haw. 131, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewarts-pharmacies-ltd-v-fase-haw-1959.