198 S.W.2d 316 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Affirming in part, reversing in part. *591
This action was instituted in the Estill County Court in 1941 under KS 4260-1 as amended in 1937 (now KRS
The Commonwealth appealed to the Estill Circuit Court and after bearing proof the chancellor found that the franchise was taxable and he fixed the value of it, and apportioned the amount of the franchise among the three counties according to the number of miles of pipe line there was in each county. The Company appeals from the judgment of the circuit court.
Three propositions are presented on this appeal. First, the pipe line served only the Company's refinery and carried no oil for others, therefore it is not a public service line and is not subject to a franchise tax under KS 4077 (now KRS
Among the companies enumerated under KS 4077 as amended in 1938, Baldwin's 1939 Supplement to Carroll's Kentucky Statute, (now KRS
It is vigorously argued by the Company that as every barrel of oil it transported through this line belonged to the Company before entering the line it was not a pipe line within the meaning of the statute, and the line was performing no public service and the Company was not subject to a franchise tax thereon. There are two answers to this argument.
First, KS 3766b-1b, an Act of 1920 (now KRS
Second, in an unbroken line of decisions construing sec. 4077 (now
The Company cites a Texas case, Col-Tex Refining Co. v. Hart, Tex. Civ. App.,
The Company insists that it never used the right of eminent domain and that as it is not a public service company, the Legislature had no authority to confer this extraordinary power upon it. But we have seen that by statute a pipe line is designated as a public service company. By conferring the right of eminent domain upon pipe line companies the statute gave them a special privilege not allowed by law to natural persons, and it is immaterial whether or not the Company exercised this extraordinary power given it. Martin v. Producers Pipe Line Co., 6 Cir.,
In the instant case the record shows that the Texas Company purchased oil from the Ashland Oil Refining Company and from the Petroleum Exploration Company at the posted price of $1.43 per barrel, plus 18c a barrel to Petroleum and 21c a barrel to Ashland, for the oil these two companies delivered to the Texas Company in their own pipe lines. The evidence does not show what these extra payments of 18c and 21c represented. Wakefield, Manager of the Texas Company, testified, "We pay the posted price plus transportation charges." However, Cloyd, Special Auditor of that Company, testified his company's contracts with Ashland and Petroleum do not specify that these charges are transportation charges, but he could not say just what such charges represented. The chancellor interspersed this remark during the trial, "It (the 18c and 21c) seems to be a premium"; yet in arriving at the value of the franchise on the plan of capitalizing the net income he considered 18.3c as a carrying, or transportation, charge paid to Ashland and to Petroleum for delivering oil in their respective pipe lines to the Texas Company's refinery, and applied this rate to the oil run through the Texas Company's line.
The record does not show any pipe line rates in the particular community where the Company maintains its line, but it does show that the Mountain State Gas Company of West Virginia charges 5c per barrel for oil run through its line. That company's line is located approximately *594 100 miles from the Texas Company's refinery at Pryse, Kentucky, and that it transports oil about the same distance that the Ashland and Petroleum companies transported it to the Texas Company's refinery. We do not feel justified from this record in accepting 18.3c as the usual or customary carrying charge of pipe lines similar to that of the Texas Company, nor do we feel justified in accepting the one isolated instance of the Mountain State Gas Company's charge of 5c as fixing a customary and fair rate. The value of the franchise of the Texas Company's pipe line was determined by the lower court by capitalizing its net earnings, which is an approved method as we will subsequently see, and the net earnings are largely dependent upon what is the customary and fair charge per barrel of oil run through it. The trial court should have had sufficient evidence before it to accurately determine what that rate is. It should not be difficult for the parties to show what is the customary and fair rate for a pipe line similarly situated to the one here involved to charge for transporting oil under similar conditions.
Ordinarily, when we reverse a judgment in an equity case we direct what order the chancellor should enter. However, at times it is necessary to remand a case for more proof and to direct the chancellor to reheat it upon the additional evidence so that an accurate decision may be had. Preece v. Woolford,
The chancellor arrived at the franchise value of the pipe line by multiplying the number of barrels of oil run through it each year by the rate of 18.3c per barrel, which gave the gross revenue. From this he subtracted the total actual cost chargeable against revenue on income, also, the average annual depreciation on the line on account of the depletion of the field, which gave the net income. This net income he capitalized at 7%, and then *595
he equalized that figure at 80% (the figure at which the Tax Commission normally equalizes franchise taxes) and deducted therefrom the assessed value of the tangible assets and the sum which remained was fixed as the value of the franchise. This procedure is in conformity with KS 4080 (now KRS
The Company complains that this method does not take into consideration the pipe line is in a rapidly declining field, which results in an excessive value being placed on the franchise, citing Cumberland Pipe Line Co. v. Lewis, D.C. Ky.,
So much of the judgment is affirmed as holds that the pipe line is subject to a franchise tax and which places a value on the franchise in accord with the method of the capitalization of the net income. But so much of the judgment as fixing the carrying charge of this pipe line at 18.3c per barrel is reversed and the case is remanded for further proof as to what is a fair and reasonable rate for the transportation of oil through this pipe line. After the chancellor has determined that rate *596 from the additional proof to be heard, he will then fix the value of the franchise using the capitalization method he applied on the first trial.
The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part.