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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 13–1032
_________________
DIRECT MARKETING ASSOCIATION, PETITIONER
v.BARBARA BROHL,
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for
the tenth circuit
[March 3, 2015]
Justice Thomas delivered the opinion of the Court.
In an effort to improve the collection of sales and use taxes
for items purchased online, the State of Colorado passed a law
requiring retailers that do not collect Colo-rado sales or use tax
to notify Colorado customers of their use-tax liability and to
report tax-related information to customers and the Colorado
Department of Revenue. We must decide whether the Tax Injunction
Act, which provides that federal district courts “shall not enjoin,
suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax
under State law,”28 U. S. C. §1341, bars a suit to enjoin
the enforcement of this law. We hold that it does not.
I
A
Like many States, Colorado has a complementary sales-and-use tax
regime. Colorado imposes both a 2.9 percent tax on the sale of
tangible personal property within the State, Colo. Rev. Stat.
§§39–26–104(1)(a), 39–26–106(1)(a)(II) (2014), and an equivalent
use tax for any prop-erty stored, used, or consumed in Colorado on
which a sales tax was not paid to a retailer, §§39–26–202(1)(b),
39–26–204(1). Retailers with a physical presence in Colorado must
collect the sales or use tax from consumers at the point of sale
and remit the proceeds to the Colorado Department of Revenue
(Department). §§39–26–105(1), 39–26–106(2)(a). But under our
negative Commerce Clause precedents, Colorado may not require
retailers who lack a physical presence in the State to collect
these taxes on behalf of the Department. See
Quill Corp. v.
North Da-kota,504 U. S. 298–318 (1992). Thus, Colorado
requires its consumers who purchase tangible personal property from
a retailer that does not collect these taxes (a “noncollecting
retailer”) to fill out a return and remit the taxes to the
Department directly. §39–26–204(1).
Voluntary compliance with the latter requirement is relatively
low, leading to a significant loss of tax revenue, especially as
Internet retailers have increasingly displaced their
brick-and-mortar kin. In the decade before this suit was filed in
2010, e-commerce more than tripled. App. 28. With approximately 25
percent of taxes unpaid on Internet sales, Colorado estimated in
2010 that its revenue loss attributable to noncompliance would grow
by more than $20 million each year. App. 30–31.
In hopes of stopping this trend, Colorado enacted legislation in
2010 imposing notice and reporting obligations on noncollecting
retailers whose gross sales in Colorado exceed $100,000. Three
provisions of that Act, along with their implementing regulations,
are at issue here.
First, noncollecting retailers must “notify Colorado purchasers
that sales or use tax is due on certain purchases . . .
and that the state of Colorado requires the purchaser to file a
sales or use tax return.” §39–21–112(3.5)(c)(I); see also 1 Colo.
Code Regs. §201–1:39–21–112.3.5(2) (2014), online at
http://www.sos.co.us/CRR (as visited Feb. 27, 2015, and available
in the Clerk of Court’s case file). The retailer must provide this
notice during each transaction with a Colorado purchaser,
ibid., and is subject to a penalty of $5 for each
transaction in which it fails to do so, Colo. Rev. Stat.
§39–21–112(3.5)(c)(II).
Second, by January 31 of each year, each noncollecting retailer
must send a report to all Colorado purchasers who bought more than
$500 worth of goods from the retailer in the previous year.
§39–21–112(3.5)(d)(I); 1 Colo. Code Regs.
§§201–1:39–21–112.3.5(3)(a), (c). That report must list the dates,
categories, and amounts of those purchases. Colo. Rev. Stat.
§39–21–112(3.5)(d)(I); see also 1 Colo. Code Regs.
§§201–1:39–21–112.3.5(3)(a), (c). It must also contain a notice
stating that Colorado “requires a sales or use tax return to be
filed and sales or use tax paid on certain Colorado purchases made
by the purchaser from the retailer.” Colo. Rev. Stat.
§39–21–112(3.5)(d)(I)(A). The retailer is subject to a penalty of
$10 for each report it fails to send. §39–21–112(3.5)(d)(III)(A);
see also 1 Colo. Code Regs. §201–1:39–21–112.3.5(3)(d).
Finally, by March 1 of each year, noncollecting retailers must
send a statement to the Department listing the names of their
Colorado customers, their known addresses, and the total amount
each Colorado customer paid for Colorado purchases in the prior
calendar year. Colo. Rev. Stat. §39–21–112(3.5)(d)(II)(A); 1 Colo.
Code Regs. §201–1:39–21–112.3.5(4). A noncollecting retailer that
fails to make this report is subject to a penalty of $10 for each
customer that it should have listed in the report. Colo. Rev. Stat.
§39–21–112(3.5)(d)(III)(B); see also 1 Colo. Code Regs.
§201–1:39–21–112.3.5(4)(f).
B
Petitioner Direct Marketing Association is a trade association
of businesses and organizations that market products directly to
consumers, including those in Colorado, via catalogs, print
advertisements, broadcast media, and the Internet. Many of its
members have no physical presence in Colorado and choose not to
collect Colorado sales and use taxes on Colorado purchases. As a
result, they are subject to Colorado’s notice and reporting
requirements.
In 2010, Direct Marketing Association brought suit in the United
States District Court for the District of Colo-rado against the
Executive Director of the Department, alleging that the notice and
reporting requirements violate provisions of the United States and
Colorado Constitutions. As relevant here, Direct Marketing
Association alleged that the provisions (1) discriminate against
interstate commerce and (2) impose undue burdens on interstate
commerce, all in violation of this Court’s negative Commerce Clause
precedents. At the request of both parties, the District Court
stayed all challenges except these two, in order to facilitate
expedited consideration. It then granted partial summary judgment
to Direct Marketing Association and permanently enjoined
enforcement of the notice and reporting requirements. App. to Pet.
for Cert. B–1 to B–25.
Exercising appellate jurisdiction under28 U. S. C.
§1292(a)(1), the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth
Circuit reversed. Without reaching the merits, the Court of Appeals
held that the District Court lacked jurisdiction over the suit
because of the Tax Injunction Act (TIA),28 U. S. C.
§1341. Acknowledging that the suit “differs from the prototypical
TIA case,” the Court of Appeals nevertheless found it barred by the
TIA because, if successful, it “would limit, restrict, or hold back
the state’s chosen method of enforcing its tax laws and generating
revenue.” 735 F. 3d 904, 913 (2013).
We granted certiorari, 573 U. S. ___ (2014), and now
reverse.
II
Enacted in 1937, the TIA provides that federal district courts
“shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or
collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and
efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.” §1341.
The question before us is whether the relief sought here would
“enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of
any tax under State law.” Because we conclude that it would not, we
need not consider whether “a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may
be had in the courts of” Colorado.
A
The District Court enjoined state officials from enforcing the
notice and reporting requirements. Because an injunction is clearly
a form of equitable relief barred by the TIA, the question becomes
whether the enforcement of the notice and reporting requirements is
an act of “assessment, levy or collection.” We need not
comprehensively define these terms to conclude that they do not
encompass enforcement of the notice and reporting requirements at
issue.
In defining the terms of the TIA, we have looked to federal tax
law as a guide. See,
e.g., Hibbs v.
Winn,542
U. S. 88,100 (2004). Although the TIA does not concern federal
taxes, it was modeled on the Anti-Injunction Act (AIA), which does.
See
Jefferson County v.
Acker,527 U. S. 423–435
(1999). The AIA provides in relevant part that “no suit for the
purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax
shall be maintained in any court by any person.”26
U. S. C. §7421(a). We assume that words used in both Acts
are generally used in the same way, and we discern the meaning of
the terms in the AIA by reference to the broader Tax Code.
Hibbs,
supra, at 102–105;
id., at 115
(Kennedy, J., dissenting). Read in light of the Federal Tax Code at
the time the TIA was enacted (as well as today), these three terms
refer to discrete phases of the taxation process that do not
include informational notices or private reports of information
relevant to tax liability.
To begin, the Federal Tax Code has long treated information
gathering as a phase of tax administration procedure that occurs
before assessment, levy, or collection. See §§6001–6117;
§§1500–1524 (1934 ed.); see also §1533 (“All provisions of law for
the ascertainment of liability to any tax, or the assessment or
collection thereof, shall be held to apply . . . ”).
This step includes private reporting of information used to
determine tax liability, see,
e.g., §1511(a), including
reports by third parties who do not owe the tax, see,
e.g.,
§6041
et seq. (2012 ed.); see also §§1512(a)–(b) (1934
ed.) (authorizing a collector or the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, when a taxpayer fails to file a return, to make a return
“from his own knowledge and from such information as he can obtain
through testimony or otherwise”).
“Assessment” is the next step in the process, and it refers to
the official recording of a taxpayer’s liability, which occurs
after information relevant to the calculation of that liability is
reported to the taxing authority. See §1530. In
Hibbs, the
Court noted that “assessment,” as used in the Internal Revenue
Code, “involves a ‘recording’ of the amount the taxpayer owes the
Government.” 542 U. S.
, at 100 (quoting §6203 (2000
ed.)). It might also be understood more broadly to encompass the
process by which that amount is calculated. See
United
States v.
Galletti,541 U. S. 114,122 (2004); see
also
Hibbs,
supra, at 100, n. 3. But even understood
more broadly, “assessment” has long been treated in the Tax Code as
an official action taken based on information already reported to
the taxing authority. For example, not many years before it passed
the TIA, Congress passed a law providing that the filing of a
return would start the running of the clock for a timely
assessment. See,
e.g., Revenue Act of 1924, Pub. L. 68–176,
§277(a),43Stat.299. Thus, assessment was understood as a step in
the taxation process that occurred after, and was distinct from,
the step of reporting information pertaining to tax liability.
“Levy,” at least as it is defined in the Federal Tax Code,
refers to a specific mode of collection under which the Secretary
of the Treasury distrains and seizes a recalcitrant taxpayer’s
property. See26 U. S. C. §6331 (2012 ed.); §1582 (1934
ed.). Because the word “levy” does not appear in the AIA, however,
one could argue that its meaning in the TIA is not tied to the
meaning of the term as used in federal tax law. If that were the
case, one might look to contemporaneous dictionaries, which defined
“levy” as the legislative function of laying or imposing a tax and
the executive functions of assessing, recording, and collecting the
amount a taxpayer owes. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1093 (3d ed.
1933) (Black’s); see also Webster’s New International Dictionary
1423 (2d ed. 1939) (“To raise or collect, as by assessment,
execution, or other legal process, etc.; to exact or impose by
authority . . . ”); §§1540, 1544 (using “levying”
and “levied” in the more general sense of an executive imposition
of a tax liability). But under any of these definitions, “levy”
would be limited to an official governmental action imposing,
determining the amount of, or securing payment on a tax.
Finally, “collection” is the act of obtaining payment of taxes
due. See Black’s 349 (defining “collect” as “to obtain payment or
liquidation” of a debt or claim). It might be understood narrowly
as a step in the taxation process that occurs after a formal
assessment. Consistent with this understanding, we have previously
described it as part of the “enforcement process . . .
that ‘assessment’ sets in motion.”
Hibbs,
supra, at
102, n. 4. The Federal Tax Code at the time the TIA was
enacted provided for the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to
certify a list of assessments “to the proper collectors
. . . who [would] proceed to collect and account for the
taxes and penalties so certified.” §1531. That collection process
began with the collector “giv[ing] notice to each person liable to
pay any taxes stated [in the list] . . . stating the
amount of such taxes and demanding payment thereof.” §1545(a). When
a person failed to pay, the Government had various means to collect
the amount due, including liens, §1560, distraint, §1580,
forfeiture, and other legal proceedings, §1640. Today’s Tax Code
continues to authorize collection of taxes by these methods. §6302
(2012 ed.). “Collection” might also be understood more broadly to
encompass the receipt of a tax payment before a formal assessment
occurs. For example, at the time the TIA was enacted, the Tax Code
provided for the assessment of money already received by a person
“required to
collect or withhold any internal-revenue tax
from any other person,” suggesting that at least some act of
collection might occur before a formal assessment. §1551 (1934 ed.)
(emphasis added). Either way, “collection” is a separate step in
the taxation process from assessment and the reporting on which
assessment is based.
So defined, these terms do not encompass Colorado’s enforcement
of its notice and reporting requirements. The Executive Director
does not seriously contend that the provisions at issue here
involve a “levy”; instead she portrays them as part of the process
of assessment and collection. But the notice and reporting
requirements precede the steps of “assessment” and “collection.”
The notice given to Colorado consumers, for example, informs them
of their use-tax liability and prompts them to keep a record of
taxable purchases that they will report to the State at some future
point. The annual summary that the retailers send to consumers
provides them with a reminder of that use-tax liability and the
information they need to fill out their annual returns. And the
report the retailers file with the Department facilitates audits to
determine tax deficiencies. After each of these notices or reports
is filed, the State still needs to take further action to assess
the taxpayer’s use-tax liability and to collect payment from him.
See Colo. Rev. Stat. §39–26–204(3) (describing the procedure for
“assessing and collecting [use] taxes” on the basis of returns
filed by consumers and collecting retailers). Colorado law provides
for specific assessment and collection procedures that are
triggered after the State has received the returns and made the
deficiency determinations that the notice and reporting
requirements are meant to facilitate. See §39–26–210; 1 Colo. Code
Regs. §201–1:39–21–107(1) (“The statute of limitations on
assessments of . . . sales [and] use . . . tax
. . . shall be three years from the date the return was
filed . . . ”).
Enforcement of the notice and reporting requirements may improve
Colorado’s ability to assess and ultimately collect its sales and
use taxes from consumers, but the TIA is not keyed to all
activities that may improve a State’s ability to assess and collect
taxes. Such a rule would be inconsistent not only with the text of
the statute, but also with our rule favoring clear boundaries in
the interpretation of jurisdictional statutes. See
Hertz
Corp. v.
Friend,559 U. S. 77,94 (2010). The TIA is
keyed to the acts of assessment, levy, and collection themselves,
and enforcement of the notice and reporting requirements is none of
these.[
1]
B
Apparently concluding that enforcement of the notice and
reporting requirements was not itself an act of “assessment, levy
or collection,” the Court of Appeals did not rely on those terms to
hold that the TIA barred the suit. Instead, it adopted a broad
definition of the word “restrain” in the TIA, which bars not only
suits to “enjoin . . . assessment, levy or collection” of
a state tax but also suits to “suspend or restrain” those
activities. Specifically, the Court of Appeals concluded that the
TIA bars any suit that would “limit, restrict, or hold back” the
assessment, levy, or collection of state taxes. 735 F. 3d, at
913. Because the notice and reporting requirements are intended to
facilitate collection of taxes, the Court of Appeals reasoned that
the relief Direct Marketing Association sought and received would
“limit, restrict, or hold back” the Department’s collection
efforts. That was error.
“Restrain,” standing alone, can have several meanings. One is
the broad meaning given by the Court of Appeals, which captures
orders that merely
inhibit acts of “assessment, levy and
collection.” See Black’s 1548. Another, narrower meaning, however,
is “[t]o prohibit from action; to put compulsion upon
. . . to enjoin,”
ibid., which captures only those
orders that stop (or perhaps compel) acts of “assessment, levy and
collection.”
To resolve this ambiguity, we look to the context in which the
word is used.
Robinson v.
Shell Oil Co.,519
U. S. 337,341 (1997). The statutory context provides several
clues that lead us to conclude that the TIA uses the word
“restrain” in its narrower sense. Looking to the company “restrain”
keeps,
Jarecki v.
G. D. Searle & Co.,367
U. S. 303,307 (1961), we first note that the words “enjoin”
and “suspend” are terms of art in equity, see
Fair Assessment in
Real Estate Assn., Inc. v.
McNary,454 U. S. 100,
and n. 13 (1981) (Brennan, J., concurring). They refer to different
equitable remedies that restrict or stop official action to varying
degrees, strongly suggesting that “restrain” does the same. See
Hibbs, 524 U. S.
, at 118 (Kennedy, J.,
dissenting); see also
Jefferson County, 572 U. S., at
433.
Additionally, as used in the TIA, “restrain” acts on a carefully
selected list of technical terms—“assessment, levy, collection”—not
on an all-encompassing term, like “taxation.” To give “restrain”
the broad meaning selected by the Court of Appeals would be to
defeat the precision of that list, as virtually any court action
related to any phase of taxation might be said to “hold back”
“collection.” Such a broad construction would thus render
“assessment [and] levy”—not to mention “enjoin [and] suspend”—mere
surplusage, a result we try to avoid. See
Hibbs,
supra, at 101 (interpreting the terms of the TIA to avoid
superfluity).
Assigning the word “restrain” its meaning in equity is also
consistent with our recognition that the TIA “has its roots in
equity practice.”
Tully v.
Griffin, Inc.,429
U. S. 68,73 (1976). Under the comity doctrine that the TIA
partially codifies,
Levin v.
Commerce Energy,
Inc.,560 U. S. 413–432 (2010), courts of equity exercised
their “sound discretion” to withhold certain forms of extraordinary
relief,
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v.
Huffman,319 U. S. 293,297 (1943); see also
Dows
v.
Chicago, 11 Wall. 108, 110 (1871). Even while refusing to
grant certain forms of equitable relief, those courts did not
refuse to hear every suit that would have a negative impact on
States’ revenues. See,
e.g.,
Henrietta Mills v.
Rutherford County,281 U. S. 121,127 (1930); see also 5
R. Paul & J. Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation §42.139
(1934) (discussing the word “restraining” in the AIA in its
equitable sense). The Court of Appeals’ definition of “restrain,”
however, leads the TIA to bar every suit with such a negative
impact. This history thus further supports the conclusion that
Congress used “restrain” in its narrower, equitable sense, rather
than in the broad sense chosen by the Court of Appeals.
Finally, adopting a narrower definition is consistent with the
rule that “[j]urisdictional rules should be clear.”
Grable &
Sons Metal Products, Inc. v.
Darue Engineering &
Mfg.,545 U. S. 308,321 (2005) (Thomas, J., concurring);
see also
Hertz Corp.,
supra, at 94. The question—at
least for negative injunctions—is whether the relief to some degree
stops “assessment, levy or collection,” not whether it merely
inhibits them. The Court of Appeals’ definition of “restrain,” by
contrast, produces a “ ‘vague and obscure’ ” boundary
that would result in both needless litigation and uncalled-for
dismissal,
Sisson v.
Ruby,497 U. S. 358,375
(1990) (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment), all in the name of a
jurisdictional statute meant to protect state resources.
Applying the correct definition, a suit cannot be understood to
“restrain” the “assessment, levy or collection” of a state tax if
it merely inhibits those activities.[
2]
III
We take no position on whether a suit such as this one might
nevertheless be barred under the “comity doctrine,” which “counsels
lower federal courts to resist engagement in certain cases falling
within their jurisdiction.”
Levin,
supra, at 421.
Under this doctrine, federal courts refrain from “interfer[ing]
. . . with the fiscal operations of the state governments
. . . in all cases where the Federal rights of the
persons could otherwise be preserved unimpaired. ”
Id.,
at 422 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Unlike the TIA, the comity doctrine is nonjurisdictional. And
here, Colorado did not seek comity from either of the courts below.
Moreover, we do not understand the Court of Appeals’ footnote
concerning comity to be a holding that comity compels dismissal.
See 735 F. 3d, at 920, n. 11 (“Although we remand to
dismiss [petitioner’s] claims pursuant to the TIA, we note that the
doctrine of comity also militates in favor of dismissal”).
Accordingly, we leave it to the Tenth Circuit to decide on remand
whether the comity argument remains available to Colorado.
* * *
Because the TIA does not bar petitioner’s suit, we reverse the
judgment of the Court of Appeals. Like the Court of Appeals, we
express no view on the merits of those claims and remand the case
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.