An Arkansas statute, Act 118 of 1923, Pope's Digest, Arkansas
Statutes (1937), §§ 13371-13375, imposes a tax on the severance of
timber from the soil; requires payment of the tax in the first
instance by the person actually engaged in severing the timber from
the soil, but, in general terms and without excepting the United
States, requires the severer to collect or withhold the amount of
the tax from the price paid to the owner of the timber at the time
of the severance, and gives the State a lien upon all timber
severed from the soil. A contractor contracted with the United
States for the purchase and severance of timber on national forest
reserves located within the State, some of which were public lands
of the United States when Arkansas was admitted to statehood and
some of which were acquired by the United States by purchase with
consent of the State. The contract provided that "title to all
timber . . . shall remain in the United States until it is paid
for, and scaled, measured or counted." The contractor severed
timber from the forest reserves in question; execution was issued
for collection of the tax, and the contractor sued to enjoin
collection.
Held:
1. Since the record in No. 328 does not show that appellants
presented for decision to the State Supreme Court any federal
question, and since that court, in holding the tax constitutional,
did not necessarily pass on the constitutional validity of the
statute, this Court is without jurisdiction of the appeal under §
237(a) of the Judicial Code, but the appeal is treated as a
petition for certiorari, as required by § 237(c), and certiorari is
granted. Pp.
327 U. S.
480-482.
2. Having treated the appeal in No. 328 as a petition for
certiorari, as required by § 237(c) of the Judicial Code, and
having granted certiorari, this Court can pass only on the federal
questions passed upon by the State Supreme Court. P.
327 U. S.
482.
3. The contractor, being taxed by the State on his activities in
severing timber from Government lands under contract with the
Page 327 U. S. 475
Government, cannot claim the benefit of implied constitutional
immunity of the Federal Government from taxation by the State. Pp.
327 U. S.
482-483.
4. Since the point is made for the first time here, this Court
is not free to consider an attack on the state statute on the
ground that it requires the severer to collect the tax from the
owner of the timber at the time of severance and gives the State a
lien on the land from which the timber is severed and a lien upon
the severed timber, even though title to the severed product has
not passed to the taxpayer, and that the statute thus purports to
place a forbidden tax directly on the United States. P.
327 U. S.
483.
5. This Court is not now concerned with the Government's
liability to the statutory lien or for the payment of the tax,
since it will be time enough to consider those questions when some
effort is made to enforce the lien or collect the tax from the
United States. P.
327 U.S.
484.
6. The State has territorial jurisdiction to lay the tax upon
activities carried on within the forest reserve purchased by the
United States. P.
327 U.S.
486.
(a) The Arkansas statute consenting to the purchase of forest
lands by the United States (Pope's Digest, Arkansas Statutes, §
5646) made no express grant or reservation of legislative power
over the areas purchased and cannot be taken as having yielded or
intended to surrender to the Federal Government the state
legislative jurisdiction over the area in question, so far as
exercise of that jurisdiction is consistent with federal functions.
P.
327 U.S. 486.
(b) By § 12 of the Act of March 1, 1911, 16 U.S.C. § 516,
authorizing the purchase of forest reserves, Congress in effect has
declined to accept exclusive legislative jurisdiction over forest
reserve lands, and expressly provided that the State shall not lose
its jurisdiction in this respect nor the inhabitants "be absolved
from their duties as citizens of the State." P.
327 U.S. 486.
7. The State has legislative jurisdiction over the federal
forest reserve lands located within it which were public lands of
the United States when Arkansas was admitted to statehood. P.
327 U. S.
487.
(a) Upon admission of Arkansas to statehood upon an equal
footing with the original States, the legislative authority of the
State extended over the federally owned lands within the State, to
the same extent as over similar property held by private owners,
except that the State could enact no law which would conflict with
the powers reserved to the United States by the Constitution. P.
327 U. S.
487.
Page 327 U. S. 476
(b) Such authority did not pass to the United States by virtue
of the provision of Article I, § 8, cl. 17 of the Constitution,
which authorizes it "to exercise exclusive Legislation . . over all
Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in
which the Same shall be." P.
327
U.S. 488.
(c) Since the United States did not purchase the lands with the
consent of the State, it did not acquire exclusive jurisdiction
under the constitutional provision, and there has been no cession
of jurisdiction by the State. P.
327 U.S. 488.
(d) Although Arkansas has conferred on Congress power to pass
laws for the administration and control of lands acquired by the
United States in Arkansas, it has not ceded exclusive legislative
jurisdiction either over lands reserved by the United States from
the public domain or over lands acquired in the State. P.
327 U.S. 488.
208 Ark. 459, 187 S.W.2d 7, reversed in part and affirmed in
part.
A contractor who had contracted with the United States for the
purchase and severance of timber on national forest reserves in the
Arkansas sued to enjoin collection of a tax levied by the State on
the severance of timber from the soil. The state chancery court
enjoined collection of the tax. On appeal, the Supreme Court of
Arkansas modified the judgment, holding that the State was without
authority to lay a tax on the severance of timber from lands which
were public lands of the United States when Arkansas was admitted
to statehood; that the authority of the State to lay the tax
extended to transactions occurring on the forest reserve acquired
by the United States by purchase, and that the tax assessed against
the contractor for the severance of timber on forest reserves of
the latter class did not lay an unconstitutional burden on the
United States. 208 Ark. 459; 187 S.W.2d 7. Each party appealed from
that part of the decision which was adverse to him. On submission
of jurisdictional statements, this Court postponed consideration of
its jurisdiction of the contractor's appeal (No. 328), but
dismissed the Tax Commissioner's appeal (No. 329) for want of
jurisdiction, treated the papers as
Page 327 U. S. 477
a petition for certiorari, and granted certiorari. 326 U.S. 685.
Reversed in part and affirmed in part, p.
327 U. S.
489.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
An Arkansas statute, Act 118 of 1923, Pope's Digest, Arkansas
Statutes 1937, § 13371, imposes "a privilege or license tax . . .
upon each person . . . engaged in the business of . . . severing
from the soil . . . for commercial purposes natural resources,
including . . . timber." By § 13372, as a condition of the license,
there is imposed on the severer an obligation to pay the tax and
consent that the tax "shall . . . remain a lien on each unit of
production until paid into the State Treasury." Section 13375 fixes
the tax at 7 cents per thousand feet of the timber severed. Section
13376 provides that the state "shall have a lien upon any and all
natural resources severed from the soil." In § 13382, it is
provided that
"the payment of said privilege taxes shall be required of the
severer . . . actually engaged in the operation of severing natural
products, whether as owner, lessee, concessionaire or contractor.
The reporting taxpayer shall collect or withhold out of the
proceeds of the sale of the products severed the proportionate
parts of the total tax due by the
Page 327 U. S. 478
respective owners of such natural resources at the time of
severance."
Appellants in No. 328 a copartnership, entered into contracts
with the United States for the purchase and severance of timber on
national forest reserves located within the state, some of which
were public lands of the United States when Arkansas was admitted
to statehood and some of which were acquired by the United States
by purchase with the consent of the state. The contracts of
severance and purchase provided that "title to all timber included
in this agreement shall remain in the United States until it is
paid for, and scaled, measured, or counted." By the contracts, the
appellants were required in advance of severance to place with the
Government representative advance installments of the estimated
purchase price.
In the years 1937 to 1942, appellants, proceeding under their
contract, severed timber from the forest reserves in question. An
execution having been issued and delivered to the county sheriff,
appellee in No. 328, and also appellant in No. 329, for collection
of the tax assessed against appellants in No. 328 for the years in
question, they brought the present suit in the state chancery court
to enjoin the collection. The questions on which the parties ask
decision are (a) whether the forest reserves which were public
lands of the United States before Arkansas was admitted to
statehood are subject to the taxing jurisdiction of the state; (b)
whether the forest reserves acquired by the United States by
purchase remain subject to the taxing authority of the state, and
(c) whether the tax is unconstitutional as a tax laid upon the
property or activities of the United States, or because the tax
laid on plaintiffs imposed an unconstitutional burden on the United
States.
The chancery court gave judgment for plaintiffs enjoining
collection of the tax. It held that, if the tax "be
Page 327 U. S. 479
applied" to plaintiffs, it "would be a tax upon the operations
of the Government of the United States," and that the tax "does not
apply to timber severed by the plaintiffs from the National
Forest." On appeal, the Supreme Court of Arkansas modified the
judgment, holding that the state was without authority to lay a tax
on the severance of timber from lands which were public lands of
the United States when Arkansas was admitted to statehood; that the
authority of the state to lay the tax extended to transactions
occurring on the forest reserve acquired by the United Stat § by
purchase, and that the present tax assessed against plaintiffs for
the severance of timber on forest reserves of this class did not
lay an unconstitutional burden on the United States. 187 S.W.2d
7.
Plaintiffs have appealed, in No. 328, from so much of the
judgment as sustained the tax with respect to lands acquired by the
United States by purchase, urging in their assignments of error
that the Supreme Court of Arkansas erred in reversing the judgment
of the chancery court, "which held to be void the severance tax
statute," and in holding that the severance tax law is not
repugnant to the supremacy clause, Art. VI, cl. 2 of the
Constitution, or to Art. IV, § 3, cl. 2, conferring on Congress
power to dispose of "and make all needful Rules and Regulations
respecting . . . Property belonging to the United States."
Defendant, appellant in No. 329, seeks by his appeal to reverse so
much of the judgment as denied the right to levy the tax for
severance of timber from forest lands reserved from the public
domain. On submission of the jurisdictional statements in this
Court, we postponed to the hearing on the merits consideration of
our jurisdiction in No. 328. In No. 329, we dismissed the appeal
for want of jurisdiction. § 237(a) of the Judicial Code as amended,
28 U.S.C. § 344(a). Treating the papers on which the appeal
Page 327 U. S. 480
was allowed as a petition for writ of certiorari, as required by
§ 237(a) of the Judicial Code as amended, we granted certiorari.
326 U.S. 685.
Under § 237 of the Judicial Code, we are without jurisdiction of
the appeal in No. 328 unless there was "drawn in question" before
the Supreme Court of Arkansas "the validity of a . . . statute" of
the state, "on the ground of its being repugnant to the
Constitution, . . . or laws of the United States." The purpose of
this requirement is to restrict our mandatory jurisdiction on
appeal,
Memphis Gas Co. v. Beeler, 315 U.
S. 649,
315 U. S. 651,
and to make certain that no judgment of a state court will be
reviewed on appeal by this Court unless the highest court of the
state has first been apprised that a state statute is being
assailed as invalid on federal grounds,
Charleston Assn. v.
Alderson, 324 U. S. 182,
324 U. S.
185-186, and cases cited, or, when the statute, as
applied, is so assailed, until it has opportunity authoritatively
to construe it.
Fiske v. Kansas, 274 U.
S. 380,
274 U. S. 385,
and cases cited. This jurisdictional requirement is satisfied only
if the record shows that the question of the validity under federal
law of the state statute, as construed and applied, has either been
presented for decision to the highest court of the state,
Wall
v. Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co., 256 U.
S. 125,
256 U. S. 126;
Citizens Nat. Bank v. Durr, 257 U. S.
99,
257 U. S. 106;
or has in fact been decided by it,
Nickey v. Mississippi,
292 U. S. 393,
292 U. S. 394;
Whitfield v. Ohio, 297 U. S. 431,
297 U. S.
435-436, and that its decision was necessary to the
judgment.
Cuyahoga River Power Co. v. Northern Realty Co.,
244 U. S. 300,
244 U. S. 304,
and cases cited. The record in this case does not disclose that, at
any time in the course of the proceedings in the state courts,
plaintiffs asserted the invalidity of a state statute on any
federal ground. The bill of complaint in the chancery court set up
only that the demand of the state for the tax "is an illegal and
void exaction" and "is in violation of" Art. IV, § 3, cl. 2 and of
Art.
Page 327 U. S. 481
VI, cl. 2 of the Constitution. There were no assignments of
error in the Supreme Court of Arkansas.
As the record does not show that the plaintiffs presented for
decision to the state Supreme Court any federal question, they have
no appeal to this Court unless the opinion of the state Supreme
Court shows that that court ruled on the validity of a state
statute under the laws and Constitution of the United States.
Charleston Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Alderson,
supra, 324 U. S.
185-186, and cases cited. That court's opinion, while
holding that the "tax law" was applicable to "persons severing
timber from lands of the United States in the national forest,"
does not indicate that plaintiffs raised there, or that the court
passed upon, the validity of the statute as applied. The court
considered only the validity of "the tax," not that of the
statute.
With reference to plaintiffs' liability for the tax, it decided
only that the state "has the right to collect the severance tax, so
far as territorial jurisdiction is concerned," for severance of
timber from lands acquired by the United States by purchase, and
that plaintiffs could not claim the benefits of the immunity, if
any, of the Federal Government from "the tax," since it was imposed
on plaintiffs, not the Government or its property. It said that the
Government was not constitutionally immune from such economic
burden as might be passed on from the taxpayer to the Government by
reason of the effect of the tax paid by the severers, citing
James v. Dravo Contracting Co., 302 U.
S. 134, and
Alabama v. King & Boozer,
314 U. S. 1. Being
asked to enjoin the collection of the tax, the state court
contented itself with holding that the tax, which was assessed on
plaintiffs and not the Government, imposed no burden on the
Government which infringed its implied constitutional tax immunity.
Since the collection of a tax by a state officer, as here, may or
may not offend against the Constitution, independently of the
Page 327 U. S. 482
constitutionality of a statute,
see Nashville, C. &
St.L. Ry. v. Browning, 310 U. S. 362,
310 U. S. 369,
the state court, in holding the tax constitutional, did not
necessarily pass on the constitutional validity of the statute.
In order to support an appeal to this Court, it is necessary
that the question of the validity of the state taxing statute be
either presented to the state court or decided by it. It is not
sufficient merely to attack, as here, the tax levied under the
statute, or "the right to collect the tax" which has been levied,
or to show that the validity of the tax alone has been considered.
Charleston Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Alderson,
supra, 324 U. S. 185,
and cases cited. For "the mere objection to an exercise of
authority under a statute, whose validity is not attacked, cannot
be made the basis" of an appeal.
Jett Bros. Distilling Co. v.
City of Carrollton, 252 U. S. 1,
252 U. S. 6. It is
for this reason that we have held that an appeal will not be
sustained where there has been only an attack upon a tax
assessment,
Jett Bros. Distilling Co. v. City of Carrollton,
supra; Miller v. Board of County Comm'rs, 290 U.S. 586;
Memphis Gas Co. v. Beeler, supra, 315 U. S. 650;
Commercial Credit Co. v. O'Brien, 323 U.S. 665;
Charleston Assn. v. Alderson, supra, 324 U. S. 185,
or, as here, upon a "tax,"
Citizens' National Bank v. Durr,
supra, 257 U. S. 106;
Indian Territory Illuminating Co. v. Board of County
Comm'rs, 287 U.S. 573;
Baltimore National Bank v. State
Tax Comm'n, 296 U.S. 538;
Irvine v. Spaeth, 314 U.S.
575, or upon the attempt to collect a tax,
Jett Bros.
Distilling Co. v. City of Carrollton, supra.
Since plaintiffs' attack is directed to the validity of the tax
as laid, and not to the validity of the statute as applied, we are
without jurisdiction of their appeal under § 237 of the Judicial
Code. Treating the appeal as a petition for writ of certiorari, as
required by § 237(c) of the Judicial Code, we grant certiorari, as
we did in No. 329. We can consider only the federal questions
passed upon by the state Supreme Court.
Our decision in
James v. Dravo Contracting Co., supra,
and in
Alabama v. King & Boozer, supra, and the
cases
Page 327 U. S. 483
cited in those opinions, can leave no doubt that the Supreme
Court of Arkansas correctly held that plaintiffs, who are taxed by
the state on their activities in severing lumber from Government
lands under contract with the Government, cannot claim the benefit
of the implied constitutional immunity of the Federal Government
from taxation by the state.
Plaintiffs now, for the first time, assail the tax and the
statute imposing it on the ground that the Act requires the severer
to collect the tax from the owner of the timber at the time of
severance, Pope's Digest, § 13382, and gives to the state a lien on
the land from which the lumber is severed,
id. § 13374,
and a lien upon the severed timber,
id. § 13376, even
though title to the severed product has not passed to the taxpayer.
They contend that the Act thus purports to place a forbidden tax
directly on the United States.
Cf. Mayo v. United States,
319 U. S. 441.
But we are not free to consider these grounds of attack, for the
reason that they were not presented to the Supreme Court of
Arkansas or considered or decided by it. While the constitutional
question now sought to be presented is in some measure related to
that decided by the state court, and, like it, arises under the
implied constitutional immunity of the Federal Government from
state taxation, it is not merely "an enlargement" of an argument
made before the state court, but is so distinct from the question
decided by the state court that our decision of the issue raised
there would not necessarily decide that now sought to be raised.
Compare Dewey v. Des Moines, 173 U.
S. 193,
173 U. S.
197-198. We are therefore not free to consider it.
"In reviewing the judgment of a state court, this Court will not
pass upon any federal question not shown by the record to have been
raised in the state court or considered there, whether it be one
arising under a different or the same clause in the constitution
with respect to which other questions are properly presented."
New York ex rel.
Cohn
Page 327 U. S. 484
v. Graves, 300 U. S. 308,
300 U. S. 317,
and cases cited. For, as we said in
McGoldrick v. Compagnie
Generale Transatlantique, 309 U. S. 430,
309 U. S.
434-435,
"In cases coming here from state courts in which a state statute
is assailed as unconstitutional, there are reasons of peculiar
force which should lead us to refrain from deciding questions not
presented or decided in the highest court of the state whose
judicial action we are called upon to review. Apart from the
reluctance with which every court should proceed to set aside
legislation as unconstitutional on grounds not properly presented,
due regard for the appropriate relationship of this Court to state
courts requires us to decline to consider and decide questions
affecting the validity of state statutes not urged or considered
there. It is for these reasons that this Court, where the
constitutionality of a statute has been upheld in the state court,
consistently refuses to consider any grounds of attack not raised
or decided in that court."
See also Keokuk & Hamilton Bridge Co. v. Illinois,
175 U. S. 626,
175 U. S. 633;
Bolln v. Nebraska, 176 U. S. 83,
176 U. S. 89-92;
New York v. Kleinert, 268 U. S. 646,
268 U. S.
650-651;
Whitney v. California, 274 U.
S. 357,
274 U. S.
362-363;
Saltonstall v. Saltonstall,
276 U. S. 260,
276 U. S.
267-268.
In view of the lien provisions of the statute and its provisions
which purport to authorize the taxpayer to collect the tax from the
owner of the severed timber, here the Government, it is suggested
that we cannot rightly adjudge that the state is entitled to
recover the tax on the transactions of severance involved without
determining the applicability of these provisions to the Government
and their validity if so applied. We are not now concerned with the
Government's liability to the statutory lien or for payment of the
tax. It will be time enough to consider its interests when some
effort is made to enforce the lien or collect the tax from the
United States. We obviously do not, by our judgment against the
plaintiffs,
Page 327 U. S. 485
impose the tax on the Government. Their property alone is
subject to the lien of the present judgment, and to execution
issued under it. They cannot recover the amount of the judgment
from the Government unless the Constitution permits. And if it
forbids, they obviously will not collect the tax. In neither case
does our judgment impose any burden on the United States. We are
not called on to determine whether plaintiffs could have
successfully contested their liability in the state courts or here,
if the contentions were properly raised, upon the ground that they
would be unable to collect the tax from the Government, either
because the provision purporting to allow such collection is
inapplicable where the owner is the Government or, if applicable,
invalid, or on the ground that the tax, applied to them without
recourse against the Government, would deny to them the equal
protection of the laws.
The state, construing its own law, has rendered an unconditional
judgment holding plaintiffs liable for the tax. For purposes of our
review, we must assume that the judgment conforms to state law.
Hence, we are called on to determine only federal questions
properly raised on the record. Considering the only question of the
tax immunity of the United States which is so raised, we decide for
reasons already stated that the tax now laid and sustained imposes
no unconstitutional burden on the federal Government. No question
arising under the Fourteenth Amendment is raised by the record
either in the state courts or here, and we are without jurisdiction
to pass upon it.*
Page 327 U. S. 486
A further question is whether the lands in the forest reserve,
which were purchased for that purpose by the United States, are
within the territorial taxing jurisdiction of the state. The answer
turns on the interpretation of the statute of the United States
authorizing the acquisition of the lands, §§ 7 and 12 of the Act of
March 1, 1911, c. 186, 36 Stat. 961, 16 U.S.C. §§ 480, 516, and of
the state statute of Arkansas authorizing the sale. Pope's Digest,
§ 5646. The meaning of both statutes, as applied in this case, is a
federal question, since upon their construction depend rights,
powers and duties of the United States.
Mason Co. v. Tax
Comm'n, 302 U. S. 186,
302 U. S. 197,
and cases cited.
The statute of Arkansas consenting to the purchase of forest
lands by the United States provided that the state should "retain a
concurrent jurisdiction with the United States in and over lands so
acquired . . . " to issue and execute "civil process in all cases,
and such criminal process as may issue under the authority of the
State. . . ." It made no express grant or reservation of
legislative power over the areas purchased. Hence, the statute
cannot be taken as having yielded or intended to surrender to the
Federal Government the state legislative jurisdiction over the area
in question, so far as exercise of that jurisdiction is consistent
with federal functions. Any doubt as to the effect of such a grant
by the state in conferring exclusive legislative jurisdiction over
the territory which is acquired by the Federal Government is
removed by the provisions of the federal statute.
Section 12 of the federal statute, authorizing the purchase,
provided:
"That the jurisdiction, both civil and criminal, over persons
upon the lands acquired under this Act shall not be affected or
changed by their permanent reservation . . . as national forest
lands, except so far as
Page 327 U. S. 487
the punishment of offenses against the United States is
concerned, the intent and meaning of this section being that the
State wherein such land is situated shall not, by reason of such
reservation and administration, lose its jurisdiction, nor the
inhabitants thereof their rights and privileges as citizens, or be
absolved from their duties as citizens of the State."
By this enactment, Congress in effect has declined to accept
exclusive legislative jurisdiction over forest reserve lands, and
expressly provided that the state shall not lose its jurisdiction
in this respect, nor the inhabitants "be absolved from their duties
as citizens of the State."
Compare Mason Co. v. Tax Comm'n,
supra; Atkinson v. State Tax Comm'n, 303 U. S.
20;
Collins v. Yosemite Park Co., 304 U.
S. 518,
304 U. S. 528;
Stewart & Co. v. Sadrakula, 309 U. S.
94,
309 U. S.
99.
Our conclusion, based on the construction of the interrelated
state and federal statutes, is that the state has territorial
jurisdiction to lay the tax upon activities carried on within the
forest reserve purchased by the United States.
What we have said of the argument that the tax assessed on
plaintiffs is an unconstitutional burden on the Government is
applicable to the tax assessed for severance of timber from forest
reserve lands which, from the beginning, have been a part of the
public domain. That tax is likewise valid if the state has
legislative jurisdiction over such lands within its boundaries.
Upon admission of Arkansas to statehood in 1836 upon an equal
footing with the original states, Act of June 15, 1836, c. 100, 5
Stat. 50, the legislative authority of the state extended over the
federally owned lands within the state to the same extent as over
similar property held by private owners, save that the state could
enact no law which would conflict with the powers reserved to the
United States by the Constitution.
Ft.
Leavenworth R.
Page 327 U. S. 488
Co. v. Lowe, 114 U. S. 525,
114 U. S. 539;
Utah Power & Light Co. v. United States, 243 U.
S. 389,
243 U. S. 404.
Such authority did not pass to the United States by virtue of the
provisions of Article I, § 8, cl. 17 of the Constitution, which
authorize it "to exercise exclusive Legislation . . . over all
Places purchased by the consent of the Legislature of the State in
which the Same shall be."
Since the United States did not purchase the lands with the
consent of the state, it did not acquire exclusive jurisdiction
under the constitutional provision, and there has been no cession
of the jurisdiction by the state.
Surplus Trading Co. v.
Cook, 281 U. S. 647,
281 U. S. 651;
Mason Co. v. Tax Comm'n, supra, 302 U. S. 210.
Although Arkansas has, by § 5647, Pope's Digest, conferred on
Congress power to pass laws, civil and criminal, for the
administration and control of lands acquired by the United States
in Arkansas, it has ceded exclusive legislative jurisdiction
neither over lands reserved by the United States from the public
domain nor over lands acquired in the state.
Ft. Leavenworth R.
Co. v. Lowe, supra, 114 U. S.
530-531. It follows that the state has retained its
legislative jurisdiction, which it acquired by statehood, over
public lands within the state which have been included within the
forest reserve.
We conclude that the state has legislative jurisdiction over the
federal forest reserve lands located within it, whether they were
originally a part of the public domain of the United States or were
acquired by the United States by purchase, and that the tax
assessed against plaintiffs is not subject to any constitutional
infirmity or to any want of taxing jurisdiction of the state to lay
it with respect to transactions on the federal forest reserve
located within the state.
The judgment is reversed insofar as it adjudged plaintiffs not
liable for the tax on severance of timber from lands held by the
United States as original owner, and the cause
Page 327 U. S. 489
is remanded to the Supreme Court of Arkansas for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. In all other
respects, the judgment is affirmed. On the remand, the state courts
will be free, so far as their own practice allows, to determine any
state questions here involved and any federal questions not already
decided by this opinion.
Compare Schuylkill Trust Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 302 U. S. 506,
with Schuylkill Trust Co. v. Pennsylvania, 296 U.
S. 113.
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 329,
Cook, Commissioner of Revenues v.
Wilson et al., doing business as Wilson Lumber Co., on
certiorari to the same court, argued and decided on the same
dates.
* Even if the opinion of the Supreme Court of Arkansas had
proceeded on a ground so unexpected as to make timely, by petition
for rehearing, the raising of the federal questions now for the
first time advanced,
compare Saunders v. Shaw,
244 U. S. 317;
Ohio v. Akron Metropolitan Park District, 281 U. S.
74,
281 U. S. 79,
plaintiffs in their petition for rehearing did not suggest
them.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, dissenting.
In No. 328, the Court sustains the application of the Arkansas
severance tax to the appellants. [
Footnote 1] In my judgment, the cause should be remanded
to the state court for it to determine the applicability of the
lien and collection provisions to the United States, or their
severability, and, in the light of that determination, to ascertain
the constitutional validity of the tax as applied to appellants.
Those issues are inescapable on the record in this case. For, until
they are determined, any decision here can affect only a tax of
uncertain incidence, unless the Court in sustaining it means to
rule, as I think the Arkansas court ruled, that the tax is valid
whether or not the statute's lien and collection provisions
[
Footnote 2] apply to the
United States as owner of the land and the severed timber.
Page 327 U. S. 490
Neither course is properly open to us. Since the Arkansas court,
as this Court's opinion does not dispute, has sustained the tax
without deciding whether the lien and collection provisions are
severable and inapplicable to the United States, we are completely
at loss to know whether the tax rests ultimately upon the
Government, as it does under Arkansas law on all other owners not
expressly exempted. Consequently we have no determinable issue, but
only a speculative inquiry of a sort beyond the tradition, and, in
my opinion, the jurisdiction, of this Court to decide. On the other
hand, if the effect of the decision here, as in the Arkansas court,
is to sustain the tax regardless of whether the lien and collection
provisions apply in whole or in part to the United States, the
result is substantially to sustain a tax laid by the state directly
on the Government. This result is as unacceptable as to render an
advisory opinion upon the validity of a tax of uncertain and
speculative application.
From
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, to now, the rule has
remained that the states are without power, absent the consent of
Congress, to tax the United States, whether with reference to its
property or its functions.
Page 327 U. S. 491
United States v. Allegheny County, 322 U.
S. 174,
322 U. S. 177.
That rule is of the essence of federal supremacy. It is not to be
chipped away by ambiguous decisions of state courts or easy
assumptions relating to their effects which ignore the direct
impact of state taxes where they have no right to strike.
This is true regardless of the vagaries of decision at different
periods in allowing expansion of the Government's immunity to
include others. Recent recessions from former broad extensions of
this kind have settled that ultimate economic incidence upon the
Government of a state tax laid upon others is not alone enough to
invalidate the tax.
James v. Dravo Contracting Co.,
302 U. S. 134;
Alabama v. King & Boozer, 314 U. S.
1;
see Penn Dairies v. Milk Control Comm'n,
318 U. S. 261,
318 U. S. 269.
[
Footnote 3] But this does not
mean either that such incidence of the tax is irrelevant to its
validity or that all state taxes purporting to be laid upon others
but in fact reaching the Government are valid.
It is still true that "the taxpayer is the person ultimately
liable for the tax itself."
Colorado Nat. Bank v. Bedford,
310 U. S. 41,
310 U. S. 52;
Federal Land Bank v. Bismarck, 314 U. S.
95. If the person who must pay the tax in the first
place is required by the taxing statute to collect the tax or an
equivalent amount from the United States, the tax is upon the
United States. "State law could not obligate the Central Government
to reimburse for a valid tax, much less for an invalid one."
United States v. Allegheny County, 322 U.
S. 174,
322 U. S. 189.
Although the Court has gone far in permitting the states to force
one private person to act as tax collector for another,
cf.
Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, 292 U. S.
86;
Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co. v.
Gallagher,
Page 327 U. S. 492
306 U. S. 62;
General Trading Co. v. State Tax Comm'n, 322 U.
S. 335,
322 U. S. 349, and
dissenting opinion at
322 U. S. 339,
that device cannot be utilized by the states to lay taxes on the
United States. Nor has it been held heretofore, if it is now, that
a tax purporting to be laid upon a private individual or concern is
valid regardless of whether the provisions of the state taxing
statute for passing on the tax to another are applicable to the
United States, or are valid if so applied.
I am unable to comprehend the effect of the Court's decision. If
it is ruling
sub silentio or
ex hypothesi that
the lien and collection provisions of the Arkansas statute, for any
application to the Government, are inapplicable or severable, we
have no right to make such a decision. That is the business of the
Arkansas courts. If the ruling is that the tax is valid even though
those provisions are applicable to the United States, then, for the
first time, the Court is overruling the basis principle of
McCulloch v. Maryland. If the decision is, finally, that
the tax is valid whether or not the lien and collection provisions
are applicable or severable, then it embodies both faults.
I do not think the Court means to overrule
McCulloch v.
Maryland. Nor does it purport to interpret or determine the
Arkansas law concerning either applicability or severability of the
statute's provisions. But, unless it is doing this without so
stating, I see no escape from the other horn of the dilemma. Either
the tax as applied is valid or it is invalid. Whether it is valid
or not depends on whether the lien and collection provisions apply
to the United States, for they place the tax directly upon the
owner. That issue is inescapable in this case, whether in the
Arkansas court or here.
I do not think the Arkansas court decided either that the lien
and collection provisions are inapplicable to the United States or
that they are severable from the remainder
Page 327 U. S. 493
of the statute, notwithstanding it had those provisions before
it, cited them though without ruling upon them, and proceeded to
sustain the application of the tax to appellant. I think it clear
that the court avoided making such a ruling. In my opinion, the
Arkansas decision, in effect, though not in words, was that the tax
is valid regardless of whether the enforcement provisions apply to
the United States, which, in effect, was to rule that the tax had
been constitutionally applied even though the collection provisions
are applicable to the United States -- to the extent, at least, of
the withholding provisions.
My reasons for this view are several. In the first place, the
court's opinion, though noting the collection and lien provisions
and the contract's term that title to the severed timber should
remain in the Government "until it has been paid for, and scaled,
measured or counted," does this in the introductory statement of
the case, and then proceeds through a lengthy discussion without
again referring to those provisions.
Moreover they provide plainly that, where the severer is
different from the owner, the former must pay the tax, but he is
required to pass it on to the owner. [
Footnote 4] A further provision requires him to withhold
the amount of the tax from any money or severed property in kind
due the owner under their contract. [
Footnote 5] Another section gives the state a
Page 327 U. S. 494
lien on the severed resources for the tax and penalties.
[
Footnote 6] The clear effect
of the provisions requiring "the reporting taxpayer" to "collect or
withhold" the amount of the tax from the owner is to give him a
defense to the owner's action to recover the full contract price
for the severed resources and an equally clear right of action
against the owner for the amount of the tax.
Thus, the scheme of the tax is to place both its ultimate legal
and its ultimate economic incidence on the owner. The tax in terms
is "due by the respective owners of such natural resources."
[
Footnote 7] It is "a privilege
tax or license tax, and is levied on the business of severing," as
the Arkansas court declared in this case. 208 Ark. 459, 468, 187
S.W.2d 7, 12. But it is ultimately, as that court has also
declared, though not expressly in this case, a privilege or license
tax levied upon the owner's business of severing, for it applies to
him whenever he severs or permits severance for sale, and "sale"
includes turning over the timber
Page 327 U. S. 495
to one who clears the land as payment for the clearing, although
his purpose in doing this is only to make the soil available for
tilling. [
Footnote 8]
Moreover, as the Arkansas court did hold specifically in this
case, the act contains only two exemptions, neither of which
applies to the United States. [
Footnote 9] And, on this ground, together with the maxim
expressio unius, it ruled the act applicable to the
severance of timber "in all instances except the two exemptions
mentioned." [
Footnote
10]
That ruling, it seems to me, is especially significant when it
is considered not only in the light of the court's failure to make
further reference to or ruling upon the collection provisions, but
also in view of the Arkansas court's previous decisions. Thus, in
Miller Lumber Co. v. Floyd, 169 Ark. 473, 480, 275 S.W.
741, 743 the court held:
"Where a landowner makes a contract with another person to cut
and remove the timber from his land for sale or commercial
purposes, the owner must pay the severance tax, for such contractor
and his servants who actually sever the timber
act for the
owner in the premises, and their act of severing the timber is the
act of the owner. [
Footnote
11]"
(Emphasis added.)
Page 327 U. S. 496
No reference was made in this case to the
Miller case.
In the absence of one, we cannot assume that the court intended to
overrule that decision or to destroy its rationalization or
universal applicability, except for the specific exemptions. Not
only the opinion in this case, as much by its omissions as by what
it expressly rules, but also the Arkansas court's prior decisions,
give every ground for believing that it did not intend either to
apply the tax differently in this case than in any other or to
overrule its
Page 327 U. S. 497
prior determinations of the ultimate nature, character, and
incidence of the tax. [
Footnote
12]
The majority seem to imply, however, that this may be exactly
what was done; that perhaps the Arkansas court held that, since the
tax would be unconstitutional if, as the statute contemplates, it
were directly placed upon the Government as owner, it would treat
the tax as falling not on the Government, but on the severer alone.
As has been stated, nothing in that court's opinion suggests such a
ruling. And if there was either a ruling or a sufficient suggestion
of this sort, it would raise other serious questions, not
considered by that court or here, concerning the validity of the
tax. The effect of such a holding would seem to be to single out
contractors with the Government for the imposition of a tax not
placed on other severers. All other contractors, by the terms of
the statute and the Arkansas decisions, would be required to pass
the tax along to owners. Only contractors with the Government would
not be allowed or required to do this. Thus, to treat the tax as
applicable only to the severer in this case, and the collection
provisions affecting the owner as severable and inapplicable, would
raise serious questions of discrimination which neither the
Arkansas court nor this court has
Page 327 U. S. 498
considered and which appellants are entitled to have
determined.
It is true that they have not raised here any question of
discriminatory enforcement. But this is because they had no reason
to believe that the Arkansas court had applied, or would apply, the
statute differently to them than to others, or to anticipate the
character of the ruling now made. It is doubtful, to say the least,
that the Arkansas legislature could place a severance tax
exclusively upon persons who sever resources from governmentally
owned land. The same doubt would apply to the state court's effort
to make the statute so effective, were it to undertake doing this.
In my judgment, it has not done so. Whether or not such an effort
ultimately would be successful, appellants are entitled to be heard
upon the question before that result is achieved. They should not
be deprived of this opportunity through this Court's upholding of
an ambiguously applicable statute or in advance of a decision by
the only court which can remove the ambiguity. Because the Arkansas
court has not passed upon applicability or severability of the
collection provisions as they affect the owner, and because it has
not determined the validity of the tax as applied in the light of
such a determination, I think the course should be remanded to it
so that the former questions may be authoritatively determined
before we undertake to decide, upon the wholly speculative basis
now presented, whether the tax as applied is valid.
[
Footnote 1]
On the jurisdictional discussion of the Court, the appellants
are, of course, petitioners on certiorari.
[
Footnote 2]
Pope's Digest Ark.1937, §§ 13371-13395. The statute was first
enacted in 1923. Acts of Arkansas 1923, Act 118. It was materially
amended in 1929, but its essential scheme remained the same. Acts
of Arkansas 1929, Act 283.
See notes
4-6 9-12 and
text, for the substance and effects of the provisions.
Although, as I read its opinion, the Arkansas court carefully
refrained from ruling upon their severability and therefore also
their applicability to the Government (
see text
infra), the lien and collection provisions were before it,
were cited in the opinion, and were necessarily involved in the
issues presented. The Court appears to have ruled that the tax is
valid as applied to the appellants regardless of whether these
provisions are severable or are applicable to the United States.
That it did so furnishes no ground for believing that the issues
relating to them were not presented or were waived. The petition
for rehearing, as well as the opinion itself, demonstrates the
contrary. T he first ground set forth was: "The Court erred in
holding that the tax was not a direct tax on the United
States."
[
Footnote 3]
See Powell, The Waning of Intergovernmental Tax
Immunities (1945) 58 Harv.L.Rev. 633; Powell, The Remnant of
Intergovernmental Tax Immunities (1945) 58 Harv.L.Rev. 757.
[
Footnote 4]
Pope's Digest Ark. § 13382 provides:
"The reporting taxpayer shall collect or withhold
out of the
proceeds of the sale of the products severed the proportionate
parts of the total tax
due by the respective owners of such
natural resources at the time of severance."
(Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 5]
The provision reads:
"Every producer actually operating any oil or gas well, quarry
or other property from which natural resources are severed, under
contract or agreement requiring payment direct to the owners of any
royalty, excess royalty or working interest, either in money or in
kind, is hereby authorized, empowered,
and required to
deduct from any such royalty or other interest the amount of the
severance tax herein levied before making such payment."
Pope's Digest Ark. § 13382. (Emphasis added.)
"Producer" is defined as every person, firm, corporation or
association of persons
"engaged in the business of mining, cutting or otherwise
severing from the soil or water for commercial purposes natural
resources, including minerals and ores, pearls, diamonds, and other
precious stones, bauxite, fuller's earth, phosphates, shells,
chalk, cement, day, sand, gravel, asphalt, ochre, oil, gas, salt,
sulphur, lignite, coal, marble, stones and stone products, timber,
turpentine, and all other forest products, and all other natural
products of the soil or water of Arkansas."
Pope's Digest Ark. § 13371.
[
Footnote 6]
Pope's Digest Ark. § 13376:
"The State of Arkansas shall have a lien upon any and all
natural resources severed from the soil or water for the tax and
penalties herein imposed and, in addition thereto, said lien shall
attach to the well, machinery, tools and implements used in
severing of such resources."
As the section was enacted originally in 1923, the provision for
attachment of the lien to machinery, etc., used in severing was not
included. This was added by amendment in 1929.
Cf.
note 2
[
Footnote 7]
See note 4
[
Footnote 8]
See note 11
[
Footnote 9]
One was for the individual owner who occasionally severs in
order to build or repair improvements on the premises or for his
own use and another for the "producer of switch ties" who hews them
out entirely by hand. 208 Ark. 459, 463, 187 S.W.2d 7, 10.
[
Footnote 10]
The decision held the tax invalid as applied to the severance
from lands held by the United States as original owner, though not
as to those purchased with the state's consent.
[
Footnote 11]
The effect of the quoted statement is emphasized by its context,
in part as follows:
"It is apparent, then, that the owner of lands, who cuts down
trees for the purpose of building fences or repairing and
constructing houses and other improvements on the land from the
timber thus severed from the soil, is exempted from paying the tax.
It is equally evident that, when the timber severed from the soil
is sold, it falls within the terms of the act, and the tax must be
paid by someone. To illustrate: if the owner of timber lands
desired to sever it for the purpose of clearing the land and
putting it in cultivation and hired other persons to sever the
timber for him, he would be required to pay the severance tax. If
the owner should lease his land to another person for a designated
number of years in order to have his lessee clear the land and put
it in cultivation, and if the consideration for the lease in whole
or in part was that the lessee should have the timber so removed
from the land, the severance tax would have to be paid by such
lessee. It will be noted that the language of the act is specific
on this subject, and provides that the severer or producer, as he
is called, shall pay the tax. The act is very broad and
comprehensive, and is levied upon all persons engaged in severing
the timber from the soil for sale or commercial purposes,
regardless of the purpose for which it is done. The only exception
is that the tax shall not be paid where the timber severed is
actually used in erecting or repairing structures and other
improvements on the land. The application of the timber in part
payment for clearing the land is a severing of it for commercial
purposes, although the primary purpose of severing it is to enable
the land to be put in cultivation. Where a landowner makes a
contract with another person to cut and remove the timber from his
land for sale or commercial purposes, the owner must pay the
severance tax, for such contractor and his servants who actually
sever the timber act for the owner in the premises, and their act
of severing the timber is the act of the owner."
In a previous appeal in the same case, 160 Ark. 17, 254 S.W.
450, the court had sustained the act as constitutional on the
theory that it was a privilege tax, and not a property tax.
[
Footnote 12]
This view is sustained also by the court's expressed view that
"[i]mposition of the tax here does not in any sense interfere with
the Government's business." 208 Ark. 459, 468, 187 S.W.2d 7, 12,
the statement could mean that the tax would not be applied to the
Government as to other owners, in which event a severance of the
collection provisions would be implied. That it does not have this
meaning is evidenced, I think, by the court's reliance on
James
v. Dravo Contracting Co., supra, where quite different
statutory provisions were in question. The court's misapplication
of the
Dravo case was, I think, but a reflection of its
implicit idea that the tax would be valid since it was collected
immediately from the appellants, even though they might pass on its
economic burden to the Government, without regard to how that might
be done.