101 P.2d 70 | Wyo. | 1940
Plaintiff, the state board authorized to administer and enforce the Emergency Sales Tax Act of 1935, Sess. Laws 1935, ch. 74, appeals from a judgment against it in an action to recover taxes that defendant failed to collect on sales of coal during the years 1935 and 1936. The defense was that the sales were in interstate commerce and the taxes prohibited by section 8 of article 1 of the federal constitution providing that "The congress shall have power * * * to regulate commerce * * * among the several states." Judgment was for defendant on that ground.
The act levied "a tax upon every retail sale of tangible personal property made within the State of Wyoming equivalent to two per cent. of the purchase price paid or charged." Section 4. It was contemplated that the tax be paid by the buyer to the seller, and the latter was "responsible for the collection of the amount of the tax," which when due and unpaid "shall constitute a debt due the state" from the seller. Sections 5 and 11. There were certain exemptions including "all sales which the State of Wyoming is prohibited from taxing under the constitution or laws of the United States." Section 6.
The material facts are not in dispute. Defendant sold coal at its mine in Lincoln County, Wyoming, *445 about 35 miles east of the Idaho-Wyoming boundary line. There was no nearby railroad, and the coal was taken from the mine in trucks. It was stipulated that:
"All of the sales in question were sales of coal made by the defendant to sundry persons at or near the defendant's mine in Lincoln County, Wyoming. All of said coal was delivered to and received by the various purchasers thereof at or near the mine of the defendant in Lincoln County, Wyoming. Such purchasers after receiving said coal transported it into the State of Idaho for use or consumption. The records of the defendant do not show that such coal was purchased for transportation into Idaho or elsewhere and no claim of exemption was made by any purchaser and filed with the defendant."
The parties reserved the right to adduce evidence, not contradictory to the facts stipulated, and "tending to establish the character of the movements of said coal as being interstate or intrastate." It may be conceded that there was evidence sufficient to show that the coal was hauled by people who went from Idaho to the mine for the sole purpose of buying the coal, and who, as soon as it was bought and delivered to them, took it into Idaho where from the first they intended to take it. In defendant's brief it is said that the coal "could go nowhere else," that "the interstate movement was inevitable," but this cannot be conceded. The road runs from the mine north and west until it connects with a north and south main highway in Wyoming near the Idaho line. Trucks arriving at the junction may go either south through the Star Valley in Wyoming or north and west through Alpine, Wyoming, and thence into Idaho. About ten per cent. of defendant's product was taken south from the junction to the Star Valley, and about ninety per cent., including the coal in question, was taken north and west into Idaho. Defendant, probably having in mind the last sentence in the opinion in Superior Oil Co. v. Mississippi, infra, *446
says there is "a great dramatic movement of coal from Wyoming to markets outside its borders." There was no evidence to show this, but we are asked to notice it as a matter of common knowledge. We are far from thinking that the amount of coal taken to markets outside of Wyoming is material on the question of the validity of the tax on retail sales in Wyoming (see Oliver Iron Co. v. Lord,
We cannot agree that there was anything unusual or significant in the movements at the mine. The buyers came in empty trucks and drove first to the scalehouse where the trucks were weighed; then to bins in the tipple where they obtained their loads; returned to the scalehouse where the loaded trucks were weighed, the loads adjusted to meet the customers' wants and sales slips showing the buyers' names and addresses issued by the scalemaster and signed by the buyers. The buyers then paid for the coal and drove away with it.
For authority on the question to be decided we look to decisions of the federal courts. Cases discussing the power of the states to regulate interstate commerce by prohibitions, penalties or discriminatory exactions that place it at a disadvantage as compared or in competition with intrastate commerce may be put aside. The taxes in question here were imposed on all local sales. There was no discrimination, unless one is created in favor of non-resident buyers by exempting sales like those in question. The sales contracts did not involve *447
any extrastate orders nor require interstate deliveries, but were made and fully performed in this state. It is true that interstate commerce includes the buying in one state and the selling in another, as has been frequently stated in cases drawing in question the right of congress or of a state to regulate an interstate business. But these cases have frequently been treated as irrelevant in considering the validity of a nondiscriminatory tax on goods or sales of goods that had been or were about to be transported from one state to another. See Bacon v. Illinois,
The manufacture, production and sale in one state of a commodity for transportation or use in interstate commerce, and its keeping, use and sale in the state to which it is transported have been treated as local transactions that may be the subjects of non-discriminatory taxes. We refer to only a few of the illustrative cases. The generation of electricity though the generation and interstate transmission were practically instantaneous (Utah Power Light Co. v. Pfost,
Perhaps we should have been content to rest our decision solely on the authority of the case of Superior Oil Co. v. Mississippi,
The trial court in the case at bar was probably influenced by A.G. Spalding Bros. v. Edwards,
Recent cases, from Wiloil Corp. v. Pennsylvania,
The judgment will be reversed and the case remanded to the district court with instructions to enter judgment for plaintiff.
Reversed.
RINER, Ch. J., and BLUME, J., concur. *451