A statute of Maryland required all traders resident within the
state to take out licenses and to pay therefor certain sums
regulated by a sliding scale of from $12 to $150, according as
their stock in trade might vary from $1,000 to more than $40,000.
The statute also made it a penal offense in any person not being a
permanent resident in the state to sell, offer for sale, or expose
for sale, within certain limits in the state, any goods, wares, or
merchandise whatever, other than agricultural products and articles
manufactured in Maryland within the said limits either by card,
sample, or other specimen or by written or printed trade list or
catalogue, whether such person be the maker or manufacturer thereof
or not, without first obtaining a license so to do, for which
license (to be renewed annually) a sum of $303 was to be paid.
Held That the statute imposed a discriminating tax upon
nonresident traders trading in the limits mentioned, and that it
was
pro tanto repugnant to the federal Constitution and
void.
The Constitution of the United States, in one place, thus
ordains:
"ARTICLE IV. Sec. 2. The citizens of each state shall be
entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the
several states."
Also thus, in another:
"ARTICLE I. Sec. 8. The Congress shall have power to regulate
commerce among the several states."
With these provisions in force as fundamental law, the State of
Maryland passed two general laws regulating the subject of traders.
[
Footnote 1] One part of the
enactment regulated traders resident within the state, and another
sought to regulate
Page 79 U. S. 419
traders not so resident, but seeking to do business there, and
both parts required the party trading or seeking to trade to take
out and pay for a license.
These were the sections relating to
"
TRADERS RESIDENT OF MARYLAND"
"§ 41. No person within this state other than the grower, maker,
or manufacturer, shall barter or sell any goods, chattels, wares,
or merchandise, without first obtaining a license in the manner
herein prescribed."
"§ 42. When any person, body politic or corporate, shall propose
to sell or barter anything mentioned in the preceding section
except spirituous or fermented liquors, he shall apply to the clerk
of the circuit court of the county in which he may reside for a
license therefor."
"§ 43. Upon such application, the applicant shall state to the
clerk, on oath, the amount of his stock of goods, generally kept on
hand by him, or the concern in which he is engaged, at the
principal season of sale."
"§ 44. If the amount of the applicant's stock in trade does not
or will not exceed $1,000, the sum of $12 shall be demanded and
received by said clerk from said applicant before granting the
license."
"§ 45. If more than $1,000 and not more than $15,000, the sum of
$15."
"§ 46. If more than 1,500 and not more than 2,500, the sum of
18."
"§ 47. If more than 2,500 and not more than 4,000, the sum of
22."
"§ 48. If more than 4,000 and not more than 6,000, the sum of
30."
"§ 49. If more than 6,000 and not more than 8,000, the sum of
40."
"§ 50. If more than 8,000 and not more than 10,000, the sum of
50."
"§ 51. If more than 10,000 and not more than 15,000, the sum of
65."
"§ 52. If more than 15,000 and not more than 20,000, the sum of
80."
"§ 53. If more than 20,000 and not more than 30,000, the sum of
100."
"§ 54. If more than 30,000 and not more than 40,000, the sum
125."
"§ 55. If more than 40,000 or over more than 40,000, the sum of
150."
These were the sections relating to
"
TRADERS NOT RESIDENT OF MARYLAND"
"§ 37. No person, not being a permanent resident in this state,
shall sell, offer for sale, or expose for sale, within the limits
of the City of Baltimore, any goods, wares, or merchandise
Page 79 U. S. 420
whatever, other than agricultural products and articles
manufactured in the State of Maryland, within the limits of the
said city, either by card, sample, or other specimen, or by written
or printed trade list or catalogue, whether such person be the
maker or manufacturer thereof or not, without first obtaining a
license so to do."
"§ 38. Such license shall be issued to the person or
co-partnership applying for the same on the payment of $300, and
shall run one year from date."
"§ 39. No person, whether a resident or not of the City of
Baltimore, and licensed to sell therein, shall suffer or permit any
person not a permanent resident of the State of Maryland, or the
agent or representative of any person or persons not residents of
the State of Maryland, and not in his regular employ or service, to
sell any goods, wares, or merchandise by sample, card, or other
specimen, or by written or printed trade list under his name or the
name of his firm or partnership, or at the store, counting room, or
warehouse in his occupation or used as his place of business."
"§ 40. Any person offending against either of the three last
preceding sections shall be liable to indictment, and upon
conviction shall be fined not less than $400 for each offense."
The reader will thus observe that the highest price which any
trader resident within the state was ever called on to pay in order
to trade there was $150, while every trader not so resident, who
sought to trade within the state, was charged twice that sum.
In this state of constitutional and of statutory law, one Ward,
a citizen of the United States and of New Jersey, resident in New
Jersey, sold by sample horse harness within the limits of Baltimore
without any license and contrary to the above-quoted statute of
Maryland. He was accordingly, for the purpose of having the
validity of the Maryland act judicially tested, indicted in the
Criminal Court of Baltimore, the facts being agreed on. The
indictment contained two counts, one for selling and the other for
offering to sell by sample goods (to-wit, horse harness) other than
agricultural products and articles manufactured in Maryland. The
defense was that the statute of Maryland was unconstitutional
Page 79 U. S. 421
and void, the two clauses of the Constitution already quoted
being relied on as those to which the Maryland statute was
repugnant. The Criminal Court adjudged the statute valid and fined
Ward $400. This judgment being affirmed in the Court of Appeals of
Maryland, the case was now here for review.
Page 79 U. S. 423
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Power to reexamine final judgments of the state courts rendered
in criminal prosecutions, as well as those rendered in civil suits,
is conferred upon the Supreme Court when it appears that the
judgment was rendered in the highest court of law in which a
decision in the case could be had and
Page 79 U. S. 424
that there was drawn in question the validity of a statute of a
state on the ground of its being repugnant to the Constitution of
the United States and that the decision of the state court was in
favor of the validity of the statute. [
Footnote 2]
Persons not permanent residents in the state are prohibited by
the laws of Maryland from selling, offering for sale, or exposing
for sale, within a certain district of the state, any goods
whatever, other than agricultural products and articles
manufactured in the state, either by card, sample, or other
specimen, or by written or printed trade list or catalogue, whether
such person be the maker or manufacturer or not, without first
obtaining a license so to do. Licenses may be granted by the proper
authorities of the state for that purpose, on the payment of three
hundred dollars, "to run one year from date."
Both residents and nonresidents of that district are also
forbidden to suffer or permit any person, not a permanent resident
of the state and not in their regular employment or service, to
sell any goods in that way under their name or the name of their
firm or at their store, warehouse, or place of business.
Offenders against either of those prohibitions are made liable
to indictment, and, upon conviction, may be fined not less than
four hundred nor more than six hundred dollars for each offense.
[
Footnote 3]
Ward, the defendant, is a citizen of New Jersey, and not a
permanent resident of Maryland, and the record shows that he, on
the day therein named, at a place within the prohibited district,
sold to the persons therein named, "by specimen, to-wit, by
sample," certain goods other than agricultural products or articles
manufactured in the state without first obtaining a license so to
do, and that he was indicted for those acts in the proper criminal
court and was arraigned therein and pleaded not guilty to the
indictment. Apart from the plea of not guilty is the further
statement
Page 79 U. S. 425
in the record, that the defendant "puts himself upon the
judgment of the Court here, according to the act of assembly in
such cases made and provided," and that the attorney for the state
doth the like.
All matters of fact having been agreed, the parties submitted
the case to the court to the end that the judgment of the court
might be obtained whether the statute of the state was or was not
constitutional and valid. Judgment was rendered for the state, and
the criminal court sentenced the defendant to pay a fine of four
hundred dollars and costs, and the court below, upon appeal,
affirmed the judgment.
Adjudged constitutional, as the state law was by that decision,
the defendant, as he had a right to do, sued out a writ of error,
and removed the record into this Court for reexamination.
Congress possesses the power to regulate commerce among the
several states as well as commerce with foreign nations, and the
Constitution also provides that the citizens of each state shall be
entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the
several states, and the defendant contends that the statute of the
state under consideration, in its practical operation, is repugnant
to both of those provisions of the Constitution, as it either works
a complete prohibition of all commerce from the other states in
goods to be sold by sample within the limits of the described
district or at least creates an unjust and onerous discrimination
in favor of the citizens of the state enacting the statute in
respect to an extensive and otherwise lucrative branch of
interstate commerce by securing to the citizens of that state, if
not the exclusive control of the market, very important special
privileges and immunities by exemption from burdensome
requirements, and onerous exactions imposed upon the citizens of
the other states desirous of engaging in the same mercantile
pursuits in that district.
Attempt is made in argument to show in behalf of the state that
the statute in question does not make any such
Page 79 U. S. 426
discrimination against the citizens of the other states, as is
supposed by the defendant; that the citizens of the state are in
fact subjected to substantially the same requirements and exactions
as are imposed upon the citizens of other states, but it is too
clear for argument in a judicial opinion that the articles of the
code referred to as establishing that theory do not support the
proposition, nor do they give it any countenance whatever. Those
enactments forbid resident traders, other than the grower, maker,
or manufacturer, to barter or sell any goods or chattels without
first obtaining a license in the manner therein prescribed, and
they also point out the steps to be taken by the applicant to
obtain it, and what he must state in his application for that
purpose.
Small traders, whose stock generally kept on hand at the
principal season of sale does not exceed one thousand dollars, and
are not engaged in selling spirituous or fermented liquors, are
required to pay for the license the sum of twelve dollars. If more
than one thousand dollars and not more than fifteen hundred
dollars, they are required to pay the sum of fifteen dollars, and
so on through ten other gradations, the last of which requires the
applicant to pay the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars where his
stock generally kept on hand at the principal season of sale
exceeds forty thousand dollars, which is the largest exaction made
of any resident trader not engaged in the sale of spirituous or
fermented liquors. Compare one set of the regulations with the
other, and comment is unnecessary, as the comparison shows to a
demonstration that the statute in question does discriminate in
favor of the citizens of the state, and that the opposite theory
finds no support from the articles of the code which forbid
resident traders from bartering or selling goods or chattels
without first obtaining a license for that purpose, as therein
prescribed.
State power to lay and collect taxes may reach every subject
over which the unrestricted power of the state extends, but the
states cannot, without the consent of Congress, lay any imposts or
duties on imports or exports except what may be absolutely
necessary for executing their inspection
Page 79 U. S. 427
laws; nor can they, without the consent of Congress, lay any
duty of tonnage, as they are expressly prohibited from so doing by
the Constitution.
Implied prohibitions restricting the power of the states to lay
and collect taxes also exist which are as effectual to that end as
those which are express. Undoubtedly the states may tax every
subject of value within the sovereignty of the state belonging to
the citizens as mere private property, but the power of taxation
does not extend to the instruments of the federal government, nor
to the constitutional means employed by Congress to carry into
execution the powers conferred in the federal Constitution.
[
Footnote 4]
Power to tax for state purposes is as much an exclusive power in
the states as the power to lay and collect taxes to pay the debts
and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the
United States is an exclusive power in Congress. Both are subject,
however, to certain prohibitions and restrictions, but in all other
respects they are supreme powers possessed by each government
entirely independent of the other. Congress may lay and collect
taxes, duties, imposts, and excises to pay the debts and provide
for the common defense and general welfare, but direct taxation
must be apportioned among the several states according to their
respective numbers, and all duties, imposts, and excises must be
uniform.
Articles exported from any state cannot be subjected to any tax
or duty, nor is it competent for Congress to tax the salaries of
the judges of the state courts, as the exercise of such a power is
repugnant to the admitted right of the states to create courts,
appoint judges, and provide for their compensation. Subject to
those prohibitions and restrictions and others of a like character,
the power of Congress to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts,
and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense
and general welfare, is without limitation, but the powers granted
to Congress are not in every case exclusive of similar powers
Page 79 U. S. 428
existing in the states, unless where the Constitution has so
provided or where the nature of the power granted, or the terms in
which the grant is made, are of character to show that state
legislation upon the subject would be repugnant to the federal
grant or that the framers of the Constitution intended that the
power should be exclusively exercised by Congress.
Outside of the prohibitions, express and implied, contained in
the federal Constitution, the power of the states to tax for the
support of their own governments is coextensive with the subjects
within their unrestricted sovereign power, which shows conclusively
that the power to tax may be exercised at the same time and upon
the same subjects of private property by the United States and by
the states without inconsistency or repugnancy. Such a power exists
in the United States by virtue of an express grant for the purpose;
among other things, of paying the debts and providing for the
common defense and general welfare; and it exists in the states for
the support of their own governments, because they possessed the
power without restriction before the federal Constitution was
adopted, and still retain it except so far as the right is
prohibited or restricted by that instrument. [
Footnote 5]
Possessing as the states do the power to tax for the support of
their own governments, it follows that they may enact reasonable
regulations to provide for the collection of the taxes levied for
that purpose not inconsistent with the power of Congress to
regulate commerce nor repugnant to the laws passed by Congress upon
the same subject. Reasonable regulations for the collection of such
taxes may be passed by the states whether the property taxed
belongs to residents or nonresidents, and in the absence of any
Congressional legislation upon the same subject, no doubt is
entertained that such regulations, if not in any way discriminating
against the citizens of other states, may be upheld as valid; but
very grave doubts are entertained whether the
Page 79 U. S. 429
statute in question does not embrace elements of regulation not
warranted by the Constitution, even if it be admitted that the
subject is left wholly untouched by any act of Congress.
Excise taxes levied by a state upon commodities not produced to
any considerable extent by the citizens of the state may perhaps be
so excessive and unjust in respect to the citizens of the other
states as to violate that provision of the Constitution even though
Congress has not legislated upon that precise subject; but it is
not necessary to decide any of those questions in the case before
the Court, as the Court is unhesitatingly of the opinion that the
statute in question is repugnant to the second section of the
fourth article of the Constitution, which provides that the
citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several states. [
Footnote 6]
Taxes, it is conceded in those cases, may be imposed by a state
on all sales made within the state, whether the goods sold were the
produce of the state imposing the tax or of some other state,
provided the tax imposed is uniform; but the Court at the same time
decides in both cases that a tax discriminating against the
commodities of the citizens of the other states of the Union would
be inconsistent with the provisions of the federal Constitution,
and that the law imposing such a tax would be unconstitutional and
invalid. Such an exaction, called by what name it may be, is a tax
upon the goods or commodities sold, as the seller must add to the
price to compensate for the sum charged for the license, which must
be paid by the consumer or by the seller himself, and in either
event the amount charged is equivalent to a direct tax upon the
goods or commodities. [
Footnote
7]
Imposed as the exaction is upon persons not permanent residents
in the state, it is not possible to deny that the tax is
discriminating with any hope that the proposition could be
sustained by the court. Few cases have arisen in which
Page 79 U. S. 430
this Court has found it necessary to apply the guaranty ordained
in the clause of the Constitution under consideration. [
Footnote 8]
Attempt will not be made to define the words "privileges and
immunities" or to specify the rights which they are intended to
secure and protect, beyond what may be necessary to the decision of
the case before the Court. Beyond doubt those words are words of
very comprehensive meaning, but it will be sufficient to say that
the clause plainly and unmistakably secures and protects the right
of a citizen of one state to pass into any other state of the Union
for the purpose of engaging in lawful commerce, trade, or business
without molestation; to acquire personal property; to take and hold
real estate; to maintain actions in the courts of the state; and to
be exempt from any higher taxes or excises than are imposed by the
state upon its own citizens. [
Footnote 9]
Comprehensive as the power of the states is to lay and collect
taxes and excises, it is nevertheless clear, in the judgment of the
Court, that the power cannot be exercised to any extent in a manner
forbidden by the Constitution; and inasmuch as the Constitution
provides that the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all
privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states, it
follows that the defendant might lawfully sell, or offer or expose
for sale, within the district described in the indictment, any
goods which the permanent residents of the state might sell, or
offer or expose for sale in that district, without being subjected
to any higher tax or excise than that exacted by law of such
permanent residents. [
Footnote
10]
Grant that the states may impose discriminating taxes against
the citizens of other states and it will soon be found that the
power conferred upon Congress to regulate interstate commerce is of
no value, as the unrestricted power of
Page 79 U. S. 431
the states to tax will prove to be more efficacious to promote
inequality than any regulations which Congress can pass to preserve
the equality of right contemplated by the Constitution among the
citizens of the several states. Excise taxes, it is everywhere
conceded, may be imposed by the states if not in any sense
discriminating; but it should not be forgotten that the people of
the several states live under one common Constitution, which was
ordained to establish justice, and which, with the laws of
Congress, and the treaties made by the proper authority, is the
supreme law of the land, and that that supreme law requires
equality of burden and forbids discrimination in state taxation
when the power is applied to the citizens of the other states.
Inequality of burden, as well as the want of uniformity in
commercial regulations, was one of the grievances of the citizens
under the Confederation; and the new Constitution was adopted,
among other things, to remedy those defects in the prior
system.
Evidence to show that the framers of the Constitution intended
to remove those great evils in the government is found in everyone
of the sections of the Constitution already referred to, and also
in the clause which provides that no preference shall be given by
any regulation of commerce or revenue to the ports of one state
over those of another, showing that Congress, as well as the
states, is forbidden to make any discrimination in enacting
commercial or revenue regulations. Strong support to the same view
is also derived from the succeeding clause in the same section of
the Constitution, which provides that vessels bound to or from a
state shall not be obliged to enter, clear, or pay duties in
another.
Important as these provisions have been supposed to be, still it
is clear that they would become comparatively valueless if it
should be held that each state possesses the power in levying taxes
for the support of its own government to discriminate against the
citizens of every other state of the Union.
Much consideration was given to those clauses of the
Constitution
Page 79 U. S. 432
in the
Passenger Cases, [
Footnote 11] and they were there regarded as limitations
upon the power of Congress to regulate commerce, and as intended to
secure entire commercial equality, and also as prohibitions upon
the states to destroy such equality by any legislation prescribing
any conditions upon which vessels bound from one state to another
shall be permitted to enter the ports of another state. Congress,
said Mr. Justice Grier, has regulated commerce by willing that it
shall be free, and it is therefore not left to the discretion of
each state either to refuse a right of passage through her
territory or to exact a duty for permission to exercise such a
privilege.
Viewed in any light, the Court is of the opinion that the
statute in question imposes a discriminating tax upon all persons
trading in the manner described in the district mentioned in the
indictment who are not permanent residents in the state, and that
the statute is repugnant to the federal Constitution and invalid
for that reason.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded with directions to
the court below to conform its judgment to the opinion of this
Court.
[
Footnote 1]
Code of Public Law, article 56, title "License."
[
Footnote 2]
1 Stat. at Large 85.
[
Footnote 3]
Sessions Acts, 1868, p. 786.
[
Footnote 4]
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 424.
[
Footnote 5]
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 199;
Nathan
v. Louisiana, 8 How. 82.
[
Footnote 6]
Woodruff v.
Parham, 8 Wall. 139;
Hinson
v. Lott, 8 Wall. 151.
[
Footnote 7]
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 444;
People v. Maring,
3 Keyes 374.
[
Footnote 8]
Conner v.
Elliott, 18 How. 593.
[
Footnote 9]
Cooley on Constitutional Limits 16;
Brown
v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 449.
[
Footnote 10]
State v. North, 27 Mo. 467;
Fire Department v.
Wright, 8 E.D.Smith 478;
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 177.
[
Footnote 11]
48 U. S. 7 How.
400 to 414.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY:
I concur in the opinion of the court, that the act of the
Legislature of Maryland complained of in this case discriminates in
favor of residents and against nonresidents of the state, and
consequently is in violation of the fourth article of the
Constitution of the United States, and therefore
pro tanto
void. But I am further of opinion that the act is in violation of
the commercial clause of the Constitution, which confers upon
Congress the power to regulate commerce among the several states,
and it would be so although it imposed upon residents the same
burden for selling goods by sample as is imposed on nonresidents.
Such a law would effectually prevent the manufactures of the
manufacturing states from selling their goods in other states
unless they established commercial houses therein or sold to
resident merchants who chose to send them orders. It is in fact
a
Page 79 U. S. 433
duty upon importation from one state to another under the name
of a tax. I therefore dissent from any expression in the opinion of
the Court which in any way implies that such a burden, whether in
the shape of a tax or a penalty, if made equally upon residents and
nonresidents, would be constitutional.