The only question for decision in the present ease is whether the business of the petitioner, the retail distribution and sale of natural gas in the cities of Cleveland, Youngstown, Akron, etc., is to be regarded as a local and intrastate business subject to the excise tax imposed by General Code, § 5483, or whether such business is so colored by the fact that the gas is brought from West Virginia as to take on the characteristics of, and be classified as, interstate commerce, which, it is conceded, cannot be burdened by an excise tax. U. S. Constitution, art. 1, § 8; Rosenberger v. Pacific Exp. Co.,
The petitioner is an Ohio corporation engaged in selling natural gas to consumers under local franchises from municipalities in the eastern part* of that state. Some of its product is produced in the Ohio field, but, for determination of the pivotal question here involved, that fact is immaterial. It is conceded that, as regards the sale of the gas produced in Ohio, the excise tax is applicable. Most of the gas sold by petitioner is purchased from the Hope Natural Gas Company, a corporation under the laws of West Virginia with producing fields located in that state, and is delivered to petitioner by pipe line at the state boundary. It is with the sale of this gas only that we are concerned. It should also be observed that the Hope Natural Gas Company is not taxed by virtue of its sales to petitioner; nor is any excise tax attempted to be laid upon the right to transport such gas from the point of delivery' at the state boundary to the point of consumption. The excise tax is computed solely upon gross receipts from sales to local consumers.
It must be conceded that, inasmuch as transportation of whatever goods, from a point of origin in one state to a point of eon-
The petitioner is a public service corporation, exercising rights of eminent domain and occupancy of the public streets. It exercises its franchises only through grant from the state, even though control of such franchise grants is delegated to the municipalities. The tax purports to he, and is, we think, an excise tax; that is, “an impost for a license to pursue certain callings, or to deal in special commodities, or to exercise particular franchises.” Maine v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co.,
So simplified and considered, we are constrained to the opinion that the petitioner’s business, whieh was subjected to the excise tax, was a loeal or intrastate business which might properly thus be taxed. Public Utilities Comm. v. Landon,
We are not here and now concerned with various questions suggested during oral argument, such as, whether the petitioner’s position would be in any wise different had it produced the gas on its own properties in West Virginia, instead of purchasing it; whether any excise tax could be laid directly upon the business of transporting it through the state; the nature and permissible extent of regulation under the police power of the state; or the effect of accepting the total of consumers’ meter readings as indicating the gross amount sold to petitioner. These matters all become immaterial when we arrive at the decision of the independence and local character of the business, the gross receipts from which serve as a measure of the tax. The intrastate nature of this business is further emphasized also when we consider that no part of the receipts which serve as such measure is paid from without the state, and no deliveries of gas, with which we are here concerned, aré made by the petitioner in another state.
Decree may be presented dismissing the bill for want of equity.
