Territory of Alaska v. Hawkins

9 Alaska 573
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedSeptember 18, 1939
DocketNo. 4298
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Alaska 573 (Territory of Alaska v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Territory of Alaska v. Hawkins, 9 Alaska 573 (D. Alaska 1939).

Opinion

PRATT, District Judge.

1. Chapter 20, Session Laws of Alaska 1937, is as follows :

“An Act To provide for a tax on mines and mining and to repeal Subsection 14, of Section 3138 of the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, as amended by Chapter 74, of the Session Laws of Alaska, 1935.
“Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Territory of Alaska:
[578]*578“Section 1. Any person, firm or corporation, prosecuting or attempting to prosecute, or engaging in the business of mining in the Territory of Alaska, shall apply for and obtain a license and pay for such license for the said business of mining.
“ ‘Mining’ as used in this Section, means any operation by which valuable metals, ores, minerals, asbestos, gypsum, coal, marketable earth or stone, or any of them, are extracted, mined or taken from the earth.
“The license tax on mining, with the exception of the mining of gold, platinum, palladium, osmium, irridium and any other metal or mineral belonging to the platinum or palladium group, shall be as follows:
“Upon all net income:
Not over $10,000................................... %%
Over $10,000 and not over $20,000.................. 1%%
Over $20,000 and not over $100,000....-............. 1§4%
Over $100,000 and not over $150,000................. 3 %
Over $150,000 and not over $250,000................. 4 %
Over $250,000 and not over $500,000................. 5 %
Over $500,000 and not over $750,000 ................. 6 ' %
Over $750,000 and not over $1,000,000............... 7 %
Over $1,000,000 .................................... 8 %
“By ‘net income’ is meant the cash value of the output of the mine, or mining operation, less the following deductions, viz.: (a) actual operating expenses; (b) repairs actually made; (c) royalties actually paid; and (d) by way of depreciation, 10% of the actual cost of permanent improvements actually made during the calendar year in, on, or about and to the benefit of the mine during the calendar year; provided, however, that said 10% depreciation on said cost may be taken not only during the calendar year in which the improvement is actually made but also during each of the nine calendar years immediately following the calendar year in which the improvement is actually made, until a total of, but not in excess of, 100% de,preciation, at the rate of 10% per calendar year, is taken for said improvement; provided further, however, that no [579]*579deduction shall be made or taken, as depreciation, or otherwise, on, of or for any betterment or improvement, or the cost thereof, which bett'erment or improvement was made prior to January 1, 1937; no deductions shall be made on account of depreciation of any mine, mining operation, ore reserve, equipment, machinery, or otherwise, except the aforesaid 10% depreciation on cost of improvements, actually made, as hereinbefore provided, nor shall any deduction be made for interest on bonds or on money borrowed, or other taxes paid. Provided, further, that the lessee of any mine or mining operation, in order to receive credit for royalties paid, must give, in his return of his own taxes hereunder, the name and address of the person or persons, association or associations, company or companies, to whom such royalties were paid and the amount of money or the percentage of the gross output paid to each such person, association -or company.
“Where mining operations are conducted in two or more places by the same person, association or company, or affiliated association or company, such operations, shall be treated as a single mining operation and the tax hereunder shall be computed upon the aggregate income derived from all such mining operations; provided further, that the lessor of any mine operated under a lease shall be deemed to be engaged in mining within the provisions of this Act and the royalties received by him, shall be deemed to be the net income hereunder of his said mining operations, and, where such lessor receives royalties from more than one mine or mining operation, the tax, payable hereunder by such lessor, shall be computed upon the aggregate royalties received by such lessor from all such mines or mining operations as though they constituted a single mining operation.
“Gold, Platinum, Palladium, Osmium, Irridium and any Other Metal or Mineral Belonging to the Platinum or Palladium Group. The license tax on all gold, platinum, osmium, irridium and any other metal or mineral belonging to the platinum or palladium group produced in any mine [580]*580or mines in the Territory of Alaska, shall be 3% upon the cash value of the gross production in excess of Ten Thous- and Dollars ($10,000.00).
“By ‘gross production’• is meant the total cash value of all of the products taken from any mine or mines.
“Section 2. Sub-section 14, of Section 3138 of the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, as amended by Chapter 74, of the Session Laws of Alaska, 1935, is hereby repealed.
“Approved March 4, 1937.”

. Subsection 14 of Section 3138, Compiled Laws of Alaska 1933, as amended, which was repealed by said Chapter 20, contained provisions for a license tax on the business of mining upon the basis of the net income of a mine and Sections 3140, 3141 provided that the license tax was to be based upon the value of the annual recovery from mines, which was required to be reported to the Treasurer of Alaska, and the tax to be due December 31st of each year and payable by the 15th of the following January.

The complaint in this action was filed May 4, 1939, and was based upon Chapter 20, S.L.A.1937. It contained two causes of action: The first cause of action alleges that the defendant, during the calendar year of 1937, operated certain mining property and mined gold therefrom to the value of $66,945.79, without having procured or paid for a license as provided for in said Act of 1937. The second cause of action alleges that the defendant, during the calendar year of 1938, operated certain mining property and mined gold therefrom to the value of $57,867.

It is alleged that a tax of 3 per cent of the value of the gold mined, over and above $10,000, during each said year is due the Territory, together with a penalty of 10 per cent and interest on the whole amount at the rate of 12 per cent per annum from March 15, 1938, on the first cause of action and from March 15, 1939, on the second cause of action.

[581]*581Thu defendant has interposed a demurrer to each cause of action on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

2. As to the subject of the act not being expressed in the title of Chapter 20, S.L.A.1937:

In 59 C.J., page 811, Sec.

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