Texas Co. v. Dyer

174 So. 80, 179 Miss. 135, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 13
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1937
DocketNo. 32720.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 So. 80 (Texas Co. v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Co. v. Dyer, 174 So. 80, 179 Miss. 135, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 13 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Texas Company, a foreign corporation, the appellant here, has been since 1926, and now is, engaged, in the state of Mississippi, in the sale, storage, and distribution of gasoline, kerosene, and other products, and, under the provisions of chapter 93, Laws of 1932, was under the duty to make a report of the amount of its transactions, for the purposes of taxation, for the month of April, 1932, on or before the 15th day of May, 1932. Section 8 of said chapter 93 reads as follows: “Monthly Reports and Remittances. — Each distributor or wholesale dealer of gasoline, within the state shall report monthly to the Auditor of Public Accounts all purchases of gasoline, and also all purchases of kerosene, fuel oil, distillate oils, or other motor fuels made by him during the preceding month, which report shall give the names and addresses from whom all said commodities received by him during the preceding month, was acquired, and the excise tax herein provided shall be paid upon all of the gasoline purchased, acquired or stored by said distributor or wholesale dealer, during the preceding month, less 2 per cent for loss by evaporation, spillage and other causes, and except such as is exempted by the preceding section, and an invoice of all purchases of said commodities shall be kept on file by said wholesale dealer or distributor for twelve months from the date of purchase *143 and shall be open to inspection by any state officer at all reasonable hours. The report herein required shall be filed with the Auditor of Public Accounts, on or before the 15th day of each month, and shall be accompanied by an amount equal to the required tax per gallon on all gasoline, kerosene, fuel oil, distillate oils or other motor fuel, received by said distributor in the preceding month, less the allowance for evaporation on gasoline as provided. Reports bearing the Government postmark showing mailing on or before the 15th shall be considered as filed on or before the 15th. In case gasoline in storage is destroyed by explosion or fire or tornado, then the wholesale dealer or distributor may deduct the amount so destroyed and may also deduct any payment erroneously made, on making proof thereof, approved by the state auditor; such deductions less 2 per cent to be made from its next monthly report. Gasoline will be considered as received or acquired by the distributor or wholesale dealer when the car containing same has been placed by the carrier for the purpose of being unloaded, and the same rule shall apply whatever the manner in which the gasoline is received, unless the car is refused. The unloading of any part thereof within ten days from the time of placing the car shall automatically fix the time of receipt at the time of placing the car. The provisions of this section shall extend and apply to retail dealers who acquire the gasoline from sources of the ‘dealer’s option.’ ”

In section 10, chapter 93, Laws of 1932, it is provided that: “Every distributor or wholesale dealer of gasoline and/or other motor fuel, . . . failing or refusing to pay all excise taxés as provided for by law when due, shall be liable for a penalty thereon, equal to 25% of the amount of the excise tax due, which penalties shall be collected by any officer entitled to do so and distributed monthly as other gasoline taxes, less not exceeding 20% commission .on the principal, not including the penalty, for collecting as allowed by law, but no officer . *144 shall be entitled to any commission for such collection until said tax shall be due thirty days during which period the Auditor of Public Accounts who is primarily charged with the duty of collecting such tax shall exert every reasonable effort to make such collection, and no officer shall, either directly or indirectly, remit, abate, or fail to collect the full amount of penalty herein imposed, and any officer neglecting, failing or refusing to collect the full amount of said penalty when same is collectible by law be liable on his official bond for so much of said penalty as he neglects, fails or refuses to collect. Provided, however, if the reports so mailed on time shall unknowingly contain an error, and said error be discovered by the dealer or distributor and he shall call same to the attention of the Auditor of Public Accounts, and make correction within five days after mailing the said report, then the above penalty shall not attach,” etc.

By chapter 162, Laws of Í936, the office of “Motor Vehicle Commissioner,” in effect May 1, 1936, was created, and the statutes bearing upon the collection of these taxes and penalties were reenacted in substantially the same form as stated in chapter 93, Laws of 1932. By section 44 of chapter 162, Laws of 1936, among other things, it was therein provided that nothing in that act should “affect or defeat any right, claim, suit or cause of action for taxes levied on gasoline, kerosene, fuel oil and distillate which have not been paid by the person liable therefor prior to the effective date of this act, whether such claim, suit, or cause of action has been instituted or begun prior to the date this act becomes effective, or may hereafter be instituted or begun, and all laws hereby repealed are expressly continued in full force, effect and operation for the purpose of collecting the taxes due under any of such laws prior to the date on which' this act becomes effective, and for the purpose of the imposition of any claim for penalties or damages for failure to comply therewith. Provided, further, that all laws hereby repealed are expressly continued in full *145 force, effect and operation for the purpose of collecting any fines and penalties due under such laws prior to the date on which this law becomes effective.”

It is alleged in the bill that the appellant, on the 15th day of May, 1936, secured a certified check from a New Orleans bank; inclosed it with the necessary report; addressed same to the Motor Vehicle Commissioner in Jackson, Miss., and delivered it to one of its-employees with instructions to mail same. This employee went to the post office for the purpose of registering said remittance, but found the registry window closed, it being after hours. Consequently, the remittance was not mailed .until the 16th of May, being thus postmarked, and reached the commissioner on Monday, May 18, 1936. The commissioner, on receipt of this letter, 'demanded the 20 per cent, penalty for failure to pay on the 15th, which penalty appellant paid, under protest, and secured a writ of injunction against the commissioner to prevent his paying the money into the state treasury, and filed a bill seeking to have the money refunded.

It is further alleged in the bill that, being a foreign corporation, appellant had appointed an attorney, under the laws of this state, upon whom service of process might be had, and had paid all fees and charges imposed by law as a condition precedent to doing business in the state; that it had built up a good business here, owning, approximately, fifty wholesale or bulk stations, its property in this state being valued'at over $300,000'; that its net sales in 1935 aggregated $1,910,318.82, and that it paid to the state of Mississippi, in the year 1935, taxes amounting to $914,529.14.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 80, 179 Miss. 135, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-co-v-dyer-miss-1937.