delivered the opinion of the court.
By Chapter 266, Laws of 1921 (sees. 2397-2408, Rev. Codes 1921), every person engaged in producing petroleum or other mineral or crude oil within this state is required to pay to the state annually a license tax equal to one per centum of the gross value of the oil so produced during the year. The Mid-Northern Oil Company is a domestic .corporation actively engaged in the production of crude petroleum within this state, but claims exemption from the operation of the statute above. It refuses to pay the tax, and, to avoid a multiplicity of suits, and as well the penalty provided by the Act for a refusal to pay, instituted this suit to secure an injunction restraining the members of the state board of equali
The essential facts involved here are these: Pursuant to the terms of the federal Oil and Gas Leasing Law (Act Feb. 25, 1920, 41 Stat. 437), the government of the United States executed and delivered to certain individuals leases under the terms of which the respective lessees were given the exclusive right to explore fоr, extract, and dispose of oil and gas in lands covered by homestead entries for which patents had not issued. The plaintiff is the owner, in whole or in part, of these leases by assignments which have been duly approved by the Land Department, and in the production of oil its operations are confined exclusively to the lands mentioned in the leases.
There cannot be any cоntroversy over the character of the tax involved. The statute declares that it is imposed “for engaging in and carrying on such business” and that the tax, when collected, shall become a part of the general fund of the state. The tax is not in any sense a property tax, and neither is it exacted for regulatory purposes under the police power. The statute is a revenuе measure, and the exaction is a license or occupation tax. (State v. Camp Sing,
We enter upon our investigation of this subject confronted by the declaration of our state Constitution that the legislative assembly may impose a license tax upon persons and corporations doing business in the state (sec. 1, Art. XII), and by the principle well-nigh universally recognized “that taxation is the rule and еxemption the exception.” (Cruse v. Fischl,
In Choctaw, O. & G. R. Co. v. Harrison,
In Indian Ter. Ill. Oil Co. v. Oklahoma,
Finally, in Gillespie v. Oklahoma,
As we understand thesе decisions, the exemption in each instance was based solely upon the peculiar character of the lease involved, and not upon the fact that the individual or corporation benefited was a lessee of the government. In other words, the court did not hold that every individual or corporation having a lease upon public land is ipso facto an agent or instrumentality through which the government executes its power to dispose of the public lands, but it did hold that the fiduciary relationship existing between the United States and the particular Indian wards imposed upon the government a positive duty to lease the Indian lands and to secure for the Indians the most advantageous terms available; that in the discharge of its duty the government approved the leases in quеstion and chose the lessee in each
It cannot be contended that every individual or corporation having a contract with the United States is by force of that fact alone an essential governmental agency immune to interference by the state in which the оperations under the contract are carried out. In Baltimore Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. Baltimore,
In Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Pennsylvania,
In these cases we think the supreme court of the United States has recognized a distinction between an agency or instrumentality through which governmental powers are executed and an agency employed or made use of by the government as a mere incident to the discharge of some of its functions, and support for this view- is found in Flint v. Stone Tracy Co.,
It must be conceded that the interests of the United States in the lands covered by plaintiff’s leases are mineral in character; that oil is a mineral, and that an oil well is a mine. (Burke v. Southern Pac. R. Co.,
Again, it appears to us that it was never the intention of the Congress that a lessee under the federal oil and gas leasing law should be permitted to enjoy the immunity claimed by this plaintiff. Section 32 of the Act above provides “that nothing in this Act shall be construed or held to affect the rights of the states or other legal authority to exercise any rights which they may have, including the right to levy and collect taxes upon improvements, output of mines, or oilier rights, property, or assets of any lessee of the United .States.” It is the general rule for the construction of statutes that every word, phrase, clause or sentence employed is to be considered and none shall be held to be meaningless if it is possible to give effect to it. (Stadler v. City of Helena,
When our Constitution declares that thе legislative assembly may impose a license tax upon persons and corporations doing business in this state, it means, of course, that the authority may be exercised upon persons or corporations to whieh the taxing power of the state extends. It was said in McCulloch v. Maryland, above, that the sovereignty of a state extends to everything which exists by its own authority or is introduced by its permission, and that “all subjects over which the sovereign power of a state extends are objects of taxation. ’ ’
Plaintiff is a domestic corporation owing its very existence and right to transact business to the grace of this state expressed through our general incorporation laws, and, though its charter is a contract, it was sought and accepted upon the express condition declаred by our state Constitution that the laws authorizing it “shall be subject to future repeal or alteration by the legislative assembly.” (Sec. 2, Art. XV.) If, instead of enacting the occupation tax statute, our legislature had repealed the statute under which plaintiff exists, its powers to explore for or produce petroleum in this state would have been destroyed absolutely, and plaintiff could nоt have been heard to complain. Section 6013, Revised Codes of 1921, in force in this state since July 1, 1895, provides: “The legislative assembly may at any time amend or repeal this part, or any chapter, or section thereof, and dissolve all corporations created thereunder.” That the power
It is our conclusion that plaintiff is not such an agency or instrumentality of the general government as that it may claim immunity from stаte regulation or control; that it is not exempt from payment of the occupation tax prescribed by Chapter 266, above, and that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to entitle it to relief.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to sustain the defendants’ demurrer.
Reversed.
