Swiss Oil Corporation v. Shanks, Auditor

270 S.W. 478, 208 Ky. 64, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 216
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 20, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 478 (Swiss Oil Corporation v. Shanks, Auditor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swiss Oil Corporation v. Shanks, Auditor, 270 S.W. 478, 208 Ky. 64, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 216 (Ky. 1925).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming on the direct and reversing on the cross appeal.

By this action the Swiss Oil Corporation attacks the validity of section 4223e-l of the Kentucky Statutes, which imposes a tax upon oil producers, and seeks to recover $8,944.64 paid by it to the state thereunder, and also to require the auditor to make similar refunds to all other producers of like taxes paid by them.

The lower court refused to permit plaintiff to sue for and on behalf of the other oil producers, but held the act void, and awarded plaintiff -a judgment requiring the auditor to issue to it a warrant for the amount paid by it.' Complaining of so much of the judgment as refused to permit it to sue for and on behalf of other oil producers, plaintiff prosecuted this appeal, and' the auditor has *66 cross-appealed from that part of the judgment holding the act invalid and ordering a refund of the $8,944.64.

The single question presented by the direct appeal may be disposed of very briefly. Section 162 of the statutes empowers the auditor to issue his warrant on the treasury for taxes improperly paid, “in behalf of the person who paid the same.” Section 163 provides he shall not issue his warrant for any money improperly paid for taxes “unless application be made in each case within two years from the time when such payment was made. ’ ’

Hence it is clear that the auditor cannot issue his warrant for a refund of taxes improperly paid unless and until' application is made therefor “in each case,” and “in behalf of the person who paid the same.” This necessarily implies, as reason dictates, that the application for a refund must be made by the party entitled thereto, or some one authorized by him to make such demand, and that each claim shall be made separately.

It is, therefore, clear that the demand made by the plaintiff upon the auditor for the aggregate claimed to be due it and others for whom it had no authority to act, was not such a demand as the statute contemplates.

Then again, the claims of the different producers for refund of taxes paid by them are necessarily separate and individual, and not of such character as that one of them may sue for the benefit of all under section 254 of the Code of Practice, and by reason of which appellant claims the right so to do. This question is conclusively settled against the appellant in Union Light & Power Co. v. Mulligan, 177 Ky. 670, 197 S. W. 1081; Batman v. Louisville Gas & Electric Co., 187 Ky. 659, 220 S. W. 318; Barriger v. Louisville Gas & Electric Co., 196 Ky. 268, 244 S. W. 690, and upon authority of those cases, the judgment upon the direct appeal is affirmed.

Section 4223c-l of the statutes, under which the taxes that appellant seeks to compel the auditor to refund were laid and collected, is an act of the 1917 session of the legislature, as amended at the 1918 session. As thus amended it was construed and declared valid by this court in Raydure v. Board of Supervisors, 183 Ky. 84, 209 S. W. 19, and again in Associated Producers Co. v. Supervisors, 202 Ky. 538, 260 S. W. 335.

It is insisted, however, for appellant that the question of the act’s validity was not present in either case, and that these declarations of validity are therefore *67 dicta and not controlling. Whether or not this is true is the first question for decision on the cross-appeal.

In the Eaydure case, the board of supervisors assessed for ad valorem taxation several oil leases owned by him, except five acres surrounding each producing well. lie contested their' right to do so upon three grounds, namely: (1) That oil leases are not property within the meaning of our taxing laws, (2) if so, their assessment against him, a nonresident, was discriminative and illegal because there was no provision for taxing same in the hands of a resident of the state, and (3) that his liability for a produciton tax on his producing wells, under section 4223c-l, supra, exempted him from liability for any tax of any and all kinds upon the leases upon which these producing wells were located.

This latter contention, presented not only by brief of counsel and upon the oral argument, but also by the agreed statement of facts upon which the case was tried in the courts below, clearly tendered to this court for decision both the validity and the meaning of the act levying the so-called production tax, /since obviously unless that act was valid and actually allowed the claimed exemption, appellant’s contention was unsound. So, after deciding that there was no merit in either of Eaydure’s first two contentions, the court took up section 4223c-l, considered its validity under sections 171 and 181 of the state Constitution, which involved the character of the tax it imposed, and whether or not it did in fact, as claimed by Eaydure, exempt his leases from assessment for ad valorem taxes.

More than six printed pages — nearly half of the opinion — are devoted to a discussion as to the validity and meaning of that section of the statutes. Many opinions pertinent to those questions, from this and other courts, were reviewed, and, after a most careful consideration of both questions, from every possible angle, the conclusion was reached that while the act was valid, as; contended by the appellant, it did not grant the claimed, exemption, although it provided that the payment of the i tax thereby imposed should be “in lieu of all other taxes on wells producing said crude petroleum.”

If the court had stopped here, surely no one would ever have thought of calling its decision of either of these questions obiter. But the court went farther and also held that if the provisions quoted above were construed to grant an exemption from ad valorem taxes, it *68 would render the whole act violative of section 171 of the Constitution, and void.

By having decided not only that the act did not grant the claimed exemption, but also that if it did it would have been unconstitutional, it is now apparent that the court need not have decided the question of the validity of the act, and it is solely because the court did not waive that question that it is now insisted its decision thereof is dictum. Despite some apparent plausibility, this contention is, we feel sure, wholly unsound.

While statements made in an opinion that are not necessary to the decision of the question under consideration by the court are dicta, it does not follow by any means, and is not true, that the decision of either of two questions, presented by the record and in the arguments, is obiter simply because a decision of one of them disposed of the case and rendered a decision of the other unnecessary.

Despite some conflict in the authorities as to what is and what is not dictum in other circumstances, the rule is well settled, upon both reason and authority, that:

“Two or more questions properly arising in a case under the pleadings and proof may be determined. though either one would have disposed of the entire case upon its merits without the other, and neither holding is a dictum

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 478, 208 Ky. 64, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swiss-oil-corporation-v-shanks-auditor-kyctapphigh-1925.