Tennessee Natural Gas Line, Inc. v. Atkins

287 S.W.2d 67, 199 Tenn. 468, 3 McCanless 468, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 345
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 287 S.W.2d 67 (Tennessee Natural Gas Line, Inc. v. Atkins) 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
Tennessee Natural Gas Line, Inc. v. Atkins, 287 S.W.2d 67, 199 Tenn. 468, 3 McCanless 468, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 345 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the Tennessee Natural Gas Lines, Inc., to recover taxes alleged to have been illegally exacted of it by the Commissioner of Finance and Taxation and paid under protest.

The Chancellor in a well considered opinion sustained the bill of complainant, and the State appealed.

[470]*470Tbe question for decision is thus posed by the State’s Attorney General, as counsel for the defendant Commissioner :

“This case involves the question of whether a Tennessee corporation, operating entirely within Tennessee and engaged in the buying of natural gas from an interstate pipe line company and the reselling of a portion of that gas to a large industrial user, is subject to a tax upon its gross receipts with respect to the gas so used under Section 1248.3, Item H of the Code Supplement of 1950, which reads, insofar as here pertinent, as follows:

“ ‘Item TI. Gas, water, electric power and light companies. — Each person engaged in the business of furnishing or distributing gas, water, or electric current, whether to dealer, consumer, municipality or other customer, shall, for the privilege of doing such business, pay to the state for state purposes an amount equal to three per cent (3%) of the gross receipts derived from intrastate business in the state. Persons engaged in the business of manufacturing gas or of distributing manufactured gas or natural gas shall, in lieu of the foregoing, pay an amount equal to one and one-half per cent (114%) of the gross receipts derived from intrastate business in this state, which payment shall be subject to the same provisions, restrictions and credits hereinafter provided in this item.
“ ‘This tax shall not apply to cities or other political subdivisions of the state owning and operating gas companies, water companies or power plants; nor shall it apply to any governmental agency of the United States.
“ ‘It is the intention of this item to levy a tax for the privilege of engaging in intrastate commerce car[471]*471ried on wholly within this state and not a part of interstate commerce. # * *’ ”

The facts, as shown by the hill and answer (the case was heard by consent on bill and answer), are correctly stated on the appellant’s brief as follows:

“Complainant is a Tennessee corporation engaged in buying and selling of natural gas. Incidental to this business it owns, operates and maintains approximately 29.-87 miles of high pressure natural gas pipe lines extending from Westernia in Cheatham County in a general southeasterly direction to Old Hickory in Davidson County. This line connects at Westernia with the interstate gas transmission lines of the Tennessee Gas Transmission Company, from which concern complainant purchases all of its gas. The Tennessee Gas Transmission Company’s lines extend from-gas fields in Louisiana and Texas northwardly across Tennessee and into various Northern and Eastern states.

“ Complainant maintains six stations along its lines at which it makes deliveries of gas to its customers — the E. I. Dupont De Nemours & Company and the Nashville Gas Company. The gas sold to the Dupont Company is delivered to that company at Old Hickory from a metering station which complainant maintains on the premises of the buyer, where the pressure is reduced prior to the gas entering the buyer’s service lines. Complainant makes deliveries to its other customer, the Nashville Gas Company, at five separate stations in Davidson County. Nashville Gas Company is the wholly-owned subsidiary corporation of complainant and sells gas to consumers in the Nashville area.

“Complainant’s attorneys in the early part of 1948 addressed a letter to the then Attorney General of Ten-. nessee the Honorable Boy H. Beeler, in which they took [472]*472the position that they were not liable for the gross receipts tax in question. The then Advocate General, and present Solicitor General, the Honorable Allison B. Hum-phreys, responded, disagreeing- with complainant’s attorneys and taking the position that complainant was liable for the tax. This was the only occasion where complainant took any exception to the payment of the tax, and it has paid same regularly as it became due since that time, and its filing of its bill in this cause represents the first challenge of the tax as applied to complainant.

“On August 4, 1954, complainant paid the defendant under protest the sum of $39,084.71, such sum representing complainant’s taxes for the years 1954 and 1955, which taxes were due on August 1, 1954. Thereafter it seasonably filed' this suit' seeking the recovery of the taxes. Both the payment under protest and the filing of the suit are within the meaning of and constitute a compliance with Sections 1790 et seq. of the Code.

“Prior to the decision of this case in the lower court, defendant abandoned any contention that the tax was applicable to gas sold by complainant for resale purposes and taxed upon resale, leaving the sole question for determination the application of the tax to complainant’s sales for industrial consumption to the Dupont Company. ’ ’

•The complainant, appellee here, makes the following insistence:

“It is the complainant’s position that it is not liable for the tax (1) because it is not a distributor of natural gas as this term is used in the statute, that the tax is only levied on ‘distributing natural gas,’ and that the complainant is not engaged in the business of distributing natural gas; and (2) because all sales made by the complainant' both to the Nashville Gas Company and to its [473]*473only other customer, the Dupont Company, are ‘a part of interstate commerce’, and because the statute expressly says that

“ ‘It is the intention of this item to levy a tax for the privilege of engaging in intrastate commerce carried on wholly within this state and not a part of interstate commerce.’ (Emphasis supplied.)

“It is the complainant’s position that all of its operations are essentially an integral part of interstate commerce even though its properties are located wholly within the State of Tennessee and even though all the gas it sells is sold and consumed within the State of Tennessee.”

It clearly appears from the facts stated that the complainant herein is not an interstate carrier of natural gas. On the contrary it is a buyer of natural gas from an -interstate carrier, to wit, Tennessee Gas Transmission ■Company, and is in the business of re-selling to the Nashville Gas Company and the Dupont Company. It owns and operates its own facilities for that purpose. Is this activity ‘-‘a part of interstate commerce”? The concluding paragraph of the statute, quoted above, expresses a clear legislative intention, that the tax is “for the privilege of engaging in intrastate commerce carried on wholly within this state and not a part of interstate commerce.” (Emphasis ours.) We construe this to mean that the State has no desire or intention to impose the tax upon any transaction that would be admittedly in violation of law. In other words, if the transaction in the instant case is “a'part of interstate commerce” in the sense that the tax imposed is an unreasonable burden upon such commerce, then in that event the statute, Code Section 1248.3, Item H, supra, has no application.

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Commonwealth Natural Resources, Inc. v. Commonwealth
248 S.E.2d 791 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1978)
Tennessee Public Service Commission v. Nashville Gas Co.
551 S.W.2d 315 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W.2d 67, 199 Tenn. 468, 3 McCanless 468, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-natural-gas-line-inc-v-atkins-tenn-1956.