State v. Snell
Decision Date | 09 March 1929 |
Docket Number | 28,598 |
Citation | 275 P. 209,127 Kan. 859 |
Parties | THE STATE OF KANSAS, ex rel. WILLIAM A. SMITH, Attorney-general, Appellee, v. ROBERT G. SNELL et al., Appellants |
Court | Kansas Supreme Court |
Decided January, 1929.
Appeal from Cheyenne district court; EDWARD E. KITE, judge.
Judgment affirmed.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT.
TAXATION--Motor Vehicle Fuel Tax--Capacity to Maintain Action to Collect--Constitutional Law. In an action by the state to recover motor vehicle fuel taxes accruing under the provisions of chapter 274 of the Laws of 1925, the record considered, and held: (a) the state had capacity to maintain the action; (b) the law is not unconstitutional for any of the reasons assigned by the defendants; (c) the evidence was sufficient to sustain the findings and judgment.
L. D Dowling and O. R. Cram, both of St. Francis, for the appellants.
William A. Smith, attorney-general, Walter T. Griffin, assistant attorney-general, and Roy T. Johnson, county attorney, for the appellee; E. E. Steerman, of Osborne, of counsel.
The action was one to recover motor vehicle fuel taxes accruing to the state under the provisions of chapter 274 of the Laws of 1925. Plaintiff prevailed, and the defendants appeal.
The facts are substantially as follows: The defendants, who in 1925 were dealers in motor vehicle fuel at Bird City, refused to pay the two-cent tax on fuel oil, and this action was brought to recover the amount due. Trial to a jury resulted in judgment for plaintiff on some eight causes of action covering that number of months in 1925 for which such tax was due. The defendants contend that the plaintiff has no capacity to maintain the action and that the act (Laws of 1925, ch. 274) is unconstitutional. They also contend that chapter 214 of the Laws of 1925 is unconstitutional. (This chapter was repealed by chapter 255 of the Laws of 1927.) The argument is that as the statutes make special provision for the collection of taxes they are not debts in the ordinary sense of that term (Comm'rs of Stafford Co. v. National Bank, 48 Kan. 561, 30 P. 22) and that an action prescribed by the civil code will not lie for their recovery. Also, that section 12 of chapter 274 of the Laws of 1925 provides a complete and adequate remedy in that one failing or refusing to abide by the provisions of such law may be fined and imprisoned. The act in question creates no property tax but is a personal liability upon dealers. The act merely provides "that said tax shall be paid by the dealer to the state oil inspector." (§ 5.) It does not make the tax a charge upon any specific property, nor does it prescribe any method or remedy for recovery of the tax. The only means of collection of the tax is by enforcement of the personal liability of the dealer handling the fuel. Nor is the prosecution authorized by the act a "full, complete and adequate remedy" for defendants' failure to pay the tax. The prosecution provided by the act furnishes no means for such collection. Nor is Comm'rs of Stafford Co. v. National Bank, supra, an authority against the position taken by the state in the instant case. It was there said:
"A tax is not a debt in the ordinary acceptation of that term and consequently a civil action will not lie for its recovery except in those cases where the statute expressly confers the right to bring such an action, or where it impliedly confers such a right by omitting all mention of any method for the collection of the tax." (p. 562.)
In 3 Cooley on Taxation, 4th ed., § 1331, p. 2631, this language is used:
(See, also, 26 R. C. L. 380, 381; 37 Cyc. 1240, 1241; note in 41 L.R.A. n.s. 730, 734; United States v. Chamberlin, 219 U.S. 250, 31 S.Ct. 155, 55 L.Ed. 204; Pioneer Oil & Refining Co. v. State, 273 S.W. 615.)
Under the authorities cited there can be no question but that the state was empowered by implication to collect the tax now under consideration. Other issues were involved in the following California cases, but the right of the state to bring civil action for the recovery of gasoline taxes appears not to have been questioned: People v. Ventura Refining Co., (Cal.) 268 P. 347; People v. General Petroleum Corp., (Cal.) 268 P. 352; People v. Richfield Oil Co., (Cal.) 268 P. 353, 355.
The right of the state to maintain a civil action to recover a gasoline tax was not denied in State, ex rel., v. Panhandle Oil Co., 147 Miss. 663, 112 So. 584, although it was held by the United States supreme court that there was no liability to the state for taxes upon sales to the United States fleet and the United States hospital. (See same case, Panhandle Oil Co. v. Mississippi, ex rel. Knox, 277 U.S. 218, 72 L.Ed. 857, 48 S.Ct. 451; see, also, Price v. United States, 269 U.S. 492, 70 L.Ed. 373, 46 S.Ct. 180; Updike v. United States, 8 F.2d 913; United States v. Ayer, 12 F.2d 194.)
The chief attack on the constitutionality of the acts is made under section 8 of article 11 of the constitution, which provides that "The state shall never be a party in carrying on any works of internal improvement except to aid in the construction of roads and highways," and...
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