STATE OF GEORGIA et al. v. COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
No. 35897
Court of Appeals of Georgia
FEBRUARY 23, 1956
REHEARING DENIED MARCH 15, 1956
93 Ga. App. 609
Special ground 4 assigns error because it is alleged that the court committed reversible error in refusing to admit certain questions. The questions concerned liquor transactions which occurred some four or five months after the instant case was made. In refusing to allow the questions to be asked the court specifically advised defense counsel that they would be free to raise the question later in the trial if something in the meantime should transpire which counsel felt would cure the objectionable features of the question. Counsel must not have felt that any such thing ever transpired because they never again availed themselves of the generous offer made by the court. They never again raised the question. It is apparent that the answer would have been hearsay. For this reason, and because the question was not relevant and was not harmful to the defendant, this special ground is not meritorious.
Special ground 5 is but a reiteration of the general grounds. We have covered the general grounds thoroughly in division one. The court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial for any of the reasons assigned.
Judgment affirmed. Townsend and Carlisle, JJ., concur.
Eugene Cook, Attorney-General, Ben F. Johnson, Jr., H. Grady Almand, Jr., William L. Norton, Jr., Assistant Attorneys-General, Broadus B. Zellars, Deputy Assistant Attorney-General, for plaintiff in error.
Edward R. Kane, Jones, Williams, Dorsey & Kane, contra.
The first question to be decided is, whether petitioner was engaged in the business of selling Coca-Cola syrup. In the absence of any evidence of subterfuge or fraud, the conclusion is demanded that the petitioner was so engaged. The bottlers ordered their syrup from petitioner and were obligated to pay petitioner, and petitioner only, for the syrup ordered. Petitioner and petitioner alone was liable for breaches of its undertaking to see that the syrup ordered was delivered. Under the plain terms of the contracts, there was no agency or mere royalties involved. The fact that the contracts contained numerous other provisions would not operate to affect the selling provisions, nor would the fact that The Coca-Cola Company shipped the syrup directly from its plant to the various bottlers. The corporations are separate and distinct entities, authorized by law, and there is nothing shown in the way of evidence or legal authority why they may not operate legally and ethically as they undertook to do. The fact that petitioner never acquired title to the syrup does not mean that it cannot be engaged as a wholesaler of the product. No such legal authority is cited to us. The same principle is involved when an automobile retailer gives an order to a customer on a manufacturer and an automobile is delivered to the
In the absence of an application to the commissioner by petitioner for permission to use a method of computing its tax other than the three-factor-ratio formula as required by
The other basis for the taxpayer‘s claim for refund is that the commissioner erred in including in the taxpayer‘s gross receipts within the State the sales to customers outside Georgia where deliveries were made outside of Georgia.
We think
The court did not err in overruling the general demurrer to the petition and in finding in favor of the petitioner regardless of the reason given for its judgment.
Judgments affirmed. Gardner, P. J., and Townsend, Carlisle and Nichols, JJ., concur. Quillian, J., dissents.
QUILLIAN, J., dissenting. I entertain a different view from that expressed in the majority opinion as to whether the plaintiff in selling personal property within the State and elsewhere, was entitled to use the three-factor formula of
Ordinarily a taxpayer engaged in the selling of some particular commodity or commodities calculates the amount of his taxable income realized from such sales by the simple process of subtracting from the gross returns of the sales the aggregate of the several items of expense incurred in carrying on the business.
Where a taxpayer is engaged in the business of selling tangible commodities within the State and elsewhere, incurring such operation expenses incident to both the conservation of both classes
The enactment of the three-factor formula of
The formula, it will be remembered, provides that the gross income derived from sales made within the State and elsewhere be balanced against the two general items or factors of expense, namely the inventory held within the State and elsewhere, and the compensation paid for services in connection with the taxpayer‘s business to employees within the State and elsewhere.
Whatever process may be employed in determining any business enterprise‘s net income necessarily involves the comparison or balancing of gross profits earned against the expense incurred in earning the profits. In no other way is it possible to ascertain the net earning of any business institute upon which may be imposed income tax.
While the formula provides a way in which the ratio of the taxpayer‘s income derived from sales of personal property within the State or elsewhere is taxable by the State, this is not its only function.
The formula also supplies another method of procedure in balancing the gross returns from sales made within the State against the aggregate of the items of expense incident to and incurred in making the sales, so as to reflect the net income realized from the sales to customers within the State.
The “factors” referred to in the Code section to be considered in arriving at the ratio and amount of the taxpayer‘s income upon which this State may impose taxes are its gross earned income, and the two categories of expense normally incident to making such sales, those of keeping on hand a stock of goods, referred to by the statute as inventory, and the other general expenditures including salaries, wages, commissions, and compensation of employees.
The formula is, after all, just a means of solving a mathematical problem the equations of which are the gross profits and the items of expense. In the solution of any such problem all of the equations must be considered in arriving at the correct answer.
The formula provides that the sum total of the sales, and the two classes of expense, one the keeping of the inventory, the other expenses necessarily involved in profitably disposing of the inventory, be divided by three, because there are three factors making up that total.
I am constrained to hold that the plaintiff, which kept no inventory, was not entitled to use the formula in arriving at the ratio of its income derived from sales made to customers both within the State and elsewhere taxable by the State, and that the method employed by the plaintiff for that purpose was not permissible.
The statute does not authorize the use of the formula by balancing against the gross income a non-existent element or factor of expense. This is exactly the process by which the plaintiff proceeded when it added to the gross income from the sales and the salaries, wages, and other expenses incurred in conducting its business a zero, representing, as it contended, the inventory that it did not keep, and then divided the two existent factors by the divisor three.
The plaintiff contends that it was the duty of the commissioner, if the use of the formula was not the correct method of arriving at the ratio and amount of its income taxable by this State, to direct that some other method be employed, and that until he, the commissioner, did give permission to use such other method as he deemed appropriate for the purpose, it had the right to use the formula as was adaptable to its situation. The position is not tenable for the reason that
