Tax Commission v. Melvale Distillery Co.

117 A. 894, 140 Md. 231, 1922 Md. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 13, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 117 A. 894 (Tax Commission v. Melvale Distillery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tax Commission v. Melvale Distillery Co., 117 A. 894, 140 Md. 231, 1922 Md. LEXIS 56 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

As the appeals of the State Tax Commission of Maryland in the cases against the Melvale Distillery Company of Baltimore County and Morris Sehapiro and others, co-partners trading as the Stewart Distilling Company, involve the same questions and were argued together, they will be disposed of in one opinion.

On the 14th of March, 1921, after hearing, the State Tax Commission assessed the Melvale Distillery Company for purposes of taxation for the year 1921 with 5,312 barrels of distilled spirits at $20 per barrel, and the Stewart Distilling Company with 12,110 barrels at the same rate, under the provisions of sections 218, etc., of article 81 of the Code. The office of State Tax Commissioner was abolished and the duties imposed, upon and powers given him by existing law devolved upon the State Tax Commission, which was created by the Act of 1914, ch. 841.

By what is now section 218 of article 81 of the Code, it was enacted that there should be levied and collected upon all distilled spirits in'this State as personal property the same rate of taxation which is imposed by the laws of the State on other property for State and county purposes. By section 219, for the purpose of assessment and collection, it was made the duty of each distiller' and of every owner or pro *233 prietor of a bonded or other warehouse, in which distilled spirits are stored, and of every person or corporation having custody of such spirits, to make report to the State Tax Commissioner on the 1st day of January of each and every year of all the distilled spirits on hand at such date, and the tax for the ensuing year from the said first of January shall he levied and paid on the assessment of distilled spirits so in hand as representing the taxable distilled spirits for such year; provided, however, that the same distilled spirits shall not be taxed twice for the same year. Sections 220 to 228 provide for the method of taxation, for ah appeal, for a lien upon the distilled spirits for which taxes have been paid by the warehouseman, custodian or agent, etc. It was shown at the hearing before the State Tax Commission on March 11th, 1921, that the number of barrels of whiskey above stated were in the respective bonded warehouses and belonged to other parties.

The eases now before us are appeals from the Baltimore City Court, which reversed the finding of the State Tax Commission and held the tax to he inoperative. The validity of the law tiras taxing distilled spirits was sustained by this Court and tlie Supreme Court of the United States by a number of decisions. Monticello Co. v. Baltimore, 90 Md. 416; Fowble v. Kemp, 92 Md. 630; Carstairs v. Cochran, 95 Md. 488 (affirmed in 193 U. S. 10); Hannis Distilling Company v. Baltimore, 114 Md. 618 (216 U. S. 285). See also Thompson v. Kentucky, 209 U. S. 340; Selliger v. Kentucky, 213 U. S. 200. We will, therefore, not- discuss that question, excepting in so far as it may be necessary in considering the points now raised, owing to the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the Act of Congress of October 28th, 1919, commonly known as the “Volstead Act,” and regulations, etc., of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Prohibition Commissioner.

The appellees contend, (a) that by the action of the State Tax Commission they are deprived of their property with *234 out due process of law guaranteed to them by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, by reason of the fact that they are compelled to pay taxes on property belonging- to others without having power to reimburse themselves for the taxes on the whiskey stored in their warehouses — that by reason of the control and prohibition of the Federal Government, the State cannot give them the meáns to enforce the lien conferred by the State statute to reimburse themselves; (b) that the action of the State Tax Commission denies to them the equal protection of the law they are entitled to under the laws of the State and under the Fourteenth Amendment; (c) that it violates Articles 15 and 23 of the Declaration of Rights of Maryland, in that it requires one person to pay the taxes due by another, without furnishing any means to the one paying the tax by which he may reimburse himself for what he has paid.

It will be well to examine the Act of Congress referred to, and see just what it does provide for. The Eighteenth Amendment does not seem to leave any doubt as to what was meant by its section 1, which is: “After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is- hereby prohibited.” The prohibition was thus to begin one year from the ratification of the amendment, and was limited to the manufacture, sale, etc., “for beverage purposesSection 2 provides that: “The Congress and the several states shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Congress promptly passed an act under that section, but some of the states, including Maryland, have moved very slowly in taking advantage of the right to legislate on the subject, causing them to be dependent on such laws as they had on the subject of intoxicating liquors prior to the Eighteenth Amendment and were still enforceable.

*235 In Ulman v. State, 137 Md. 642, the defendants were indicted for selling liquor in Baltimore City without a license. They filed pleas in which they admitted that they had sold whiskey to the parties named “for non-beverage purposes, to wit, for medicinal purposes,” and alleged that at the time of the sale they had a permit, issued by the United States Commissioner of Prohibition, to sell liquor for other than beverage purposes to others holding permits to purchase and use intoxicating liquor for those purposes, and alleged that the parties to whom they sold had such permits. They contended that the liquor laws applicable to Baltimore City had been abrogated or nullified by the Eighteenth ^Amendment and the Volstead Act, hut we held that there was nothing in the liquor laws applicable to Baltimore City which were repugnant to the Eighteenth Amendment or the Act of Congress, and sustained the conviction of the traverser in the lower court. The opinion concluded by saying: “We hold that the law in question has not been abrogated so far as it prohibits in Baltimore City the sale of intoxicating liquor without a license, regardless of the purpose for which the liquor is sold.”

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Related

New Orleans v. Houston
119 U.S. 265 (Supreme Court, 1886)
Carstairs v. Cochran
193 U.S. 10 (Supreme Court, 1904)
Thompson v. Kentucky
209 U.S. 340 (Supreme Court, 1908)
Selliger v. Kentucky Ex Rel. Alexander
213 U.S. 200 (Supreme Court, 1909)
Fowble v. Kemp
48 A. 379 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1901)
Carstairs v. Cochran
52 A. 601 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
Monticello Distilling Co. v. Mayor of Baltimore
45 A. 210 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1900)
First National Bank of Havre De Grace v. White
79 A. 1085 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1911)
Ulman v. State
113 A. 124 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1921)
Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Appeal Tax Court
50 Md. 397 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 894, 140 Md. 231, 1922 Md. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tax-commission-v-melvale-distillery-co-md-1922.