Hylton v. United
States, 3 Dall. 171, further considered, and, in
view of the historical evidence cited, shown to have only decided
that the tax on carriages involved was an excise, and was therefore
an indirect tax.
In distributing the power of taxation, the Constitution retained
to the State the absolute power of direct taxation, but granted to
the Federal government the power of the same taxation upon
condition that, in its exercise, such taxes should be apportioned
among the several State according to number, and this was done in
order to protect to the States, who were surrendering to the
Federal government so many sources of income, the power of direct
taxation, which was their principal remaining resource.
It is the duty of the court in this case simply to determine
whether the income tax now before it does or does not belong to the
class of direct taxes, and if it does, to decide the constitutional
question which follow accordingly, unaffected by considerations not
pertaining to the case in hand.
Taxes on real estate being indisputably direct taxes, taxes on
the rents or income of real estate are equally direct taxes.
Taxes on personal property, or on the income of personal
property, are likewise direct taxes.
The tax imposed by sections twenty-seven to thirty-seven,
inclusive, of the act of 1894, so far as it falls on the income of
real estate and of personal property, being a direct tax within the
meaning of the Constitution, and therefore unconstitutional and
void became not apportioned according to representation, all those
sections, constituting one entire scheme of taxation, are
necessarily invalid.
These cases were decided on the 8th of April, 1895,
157 U. S. 157 U.S.
429. Thereupon the appellants filed a petition for a rehearing as
follows, entitled in the two cases:
Page 158 U. S. 602
"
To the Honorable the Justices of the Supreme Court of the
United States:"
"Charles Pollock and Lewis E. Hyde, the appellants in these
causes, respectfully present their petition for rehearing, and
submit the following reasons why their prayer should be
granted:"
"I. The question involved in these cases was as to the
constitutionality of the provisions of the tariff act of August 15,
1894 (sections 27 to 37), purporting to impose a tax upon incomes.
The court has held that the same are unconstitutional so far as
they purport to impose a tax upon the rent or income of real estate
and income derived from municipal bonds. It has, however, announced
that it was equally divided in opinion as to the following
questions, and has expressed no opinion in regard to them:"
"(1) Whether the void provisions invalidate the whole act."
"(2) Whether, as to the income from personal property as such,
the act is unconstitutional as laying direct taxes."
"(3) Whether any part of the tax, if not considered as a direct
tax, is invalid for want of uniformity."
"The court has reversed the decree of the Circuit Court and
remanded the case with directions to enter a decree in favor of
complainant in respect only of the voluntary payment of the tax on
the rents and income of defendant's real estate and that which it
holds in trust, and on the income from the municipal bonds owned or
so held by it."
"While, therefore, the two points above stated have been
decided, there has been no decision of the remaining questions
regarding the constitutionality of the act, and no judgment has
been announced authoritatively establishing any principle for
interpretation of the statute in those respects.
Etting v. Bank of the
United States, 11 Wheat. 59,
24 U. S.
78;
Durant v. Essex Co., 7 Wall.
107,
74 U. S. 113."
"This court, having been established by the Constitution, and
its judicial power extending to all cases in law and equity arising
under the Constitution and laws of the United States, must
necessarily be the ultimate tribunal for the determination of these
questions. In all cases in which such questions
Page 158 U. S. 603
may arise, there can, therefore, be no authoritative decision in
reference to the same except by this court."
"II. The court early in its history adopted the practice of
requiring, if practicable, constitutional questions to be heard by
a full court in order that the judgment in such case might, if
possible, be the decision of the majority of the whole court."
"In
Briscoe v. Commonwealth
Bank, 8 Pet. 118, and
City of New York v.
Miln, 8 Pet. 120,
33 U. S.
122, this rule was announced by Chief Justice Marshall
in the following language:"
" The practice of this court is not (except in cases of absolute
necessity) to deliver any judgment in cases where constitutional
questions are involved unless four judges concur in opinion, thus
making the decision that of a majority of the whole court. In the
present cases, four judges do not concur in opinion as to the
constitutional questions which have been argued. The court
therefore directs these cases to be reargued at the next term,
under the expectation that a larger number of the judges may then
be present."
"The same cases were again called at the next term of the court,
and the Chief Justice said the court could not know whether there
would be a full court during the term, but, as the court was then
composed, the constitutional cases would not be taken up (9 Pet.
34 U.
S. 8). In a note to the cases upon that page, it is
stated that, during that term, the court was composed of six
judges, the full court at the time being seven; there was then a
vacancy, occasioned by the resignation of Mr. Justice Duval, which
had not yet been filled."
"The rule laid down by Chief Justice Marshall has been
frequently followed. Reference may be made to the case of
Home
Insurance Company v. New York, 119 U. S.
129,
119 U. S. 148. Mr. Chief Justice
Waite there announced that the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
State of New York was affirmed by a divided court. At the time, Mr.
Justice Woods was ill, and absent during the whole of the term, and
took no part in any of the cases argued at that term. There were,
therefore, only eight members of the court present. A petition for
reargument was presented upon the ground that the principle
announced by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall should be followed,
Page 158 U. S. 604
and that the constitutional question involved was sufficiently
important to demand a decision concurred in by a majority of the
whole court. The petition was granted, 122 U.S. 636, and the case
was not reargued until the bench was full.
134 U. S.
94, 97. This practice is recognized as established in
Phillips' Practice at page 380."
"III. It is respectfully submitted that no case could arise more
imperatively requiring the application of the rule than the
present. The precise question involved is the constitutionality of
an act of Congress affecting the citizens of the country generally.
That act has been held unconstitutional in important respects; its
constitutionality has not been authoritatively decided as to the
remaining portions. These complainants and appellants may well urge
that these serious constitutional questions should be finally
decided before their trustee expends their funds in voluntary
payment of the tax. In addition, it is manifest that, until some
decision is reached, the courts will be overwhelmed with litigation
upon these questions, and the payment and collection of the tax
will be most seriously embarrassed."
"Every taxpayer to any considerable extent will pay the tax
under protest and sue to recover the same back, and if necessary
sue out his writ of error to this court. The court will of
necessity be burdened with rearguments of these questions without
number until they are finally settled. Still further, as the matter
now stands, it has been decided that a tax upon the income of land
is unconstitutional, while the court has made no decision as to the
validity of the tax upon income of personal property. Serious
questions have therefore already arisen as to what is, in fact, to
be deemed the income of real estate, and what is the income of real
and what of personal property, in cases where both are employed in
the production of the same income."
"Your petitioners therefore respectfully pray that these cases
be restored to the docket and a reargument be ordered as to the
questions upon which the court was evenly divided in opinion. In
case, however, this motion should be denied, your petitioners pray
that the mandate be amended by ordering
Page 158 U. S. 605
a new trial in the court below, so that the court below may now
determine the questions (1) whether or not the invalidity of the
statute in the respects already specified renders the same
altogether invalid, and (2) whether or not the act is
constitutional in the respects not decided by this court."
"The undersigned, members of the bar of this honorable court,
humbly conceive that it is proper that the appeals herein should be
reheard by this court, if this court shall see fit so to order, and
they therefore respectfully certify accordingly."
"Washington, April 15, 1895."
JOSEPH H. CHOATE WILLIAM D. GUTHRIE
CLARENCE A. SEWARD DAVID WILLCOX
BENJAMIN H. BRISTOW CHARLES STEELE
Of counsel for appellants
To this petition,
Mr. Attorney General made the
following suggestion on the part of the United States:
"The United States respectfully represents that, if a rehearing
is granted in the above-entitled cases, the rehearing should cover
all the legal and constitutional questions involved, and not merely
those as to which the court are equally divided."
"I. Whether a tax on incomes generally, inclusive of rents and
interest or dividends from investments of all kinds, is or is not a
direct tax within the meaning of the Federal Constitution is a
matter upon which, as an original question, the government has
really never been heard."
"Its position at the argument was that the question had been
settled -- by an exposition of the Constitution practically
contemporaneous with its adoption -- by a subsequent unbroken line
of judicial precedents -- by the concurring and repeated action of
all the departments of the government -- and by the consensus of
all text writers and authorities by whom the subject has heretofore
been considered."
"II. The importance to the government of the new views of its
taxing power, announced in the opinion of the Chief Justice, can
hardly be exaggerated."
"First. Pushed to their logical conclusion, they practically
Page 158 U. S. 606
exclude from the direct operation of the power all the real
estate of the country and all its invested personal property. They
exclude it because, if realty and personalty are taxable only by
the rule of apportionment, the inevitable inequalities resulting
from such a plan of taxation are so gross and flagrant as to
absolutely debar any resort to it."
"That such inequalities must result is practically admitted, the
only suggestion in reply being that the power to directly tax
realty and personalty was not meant for use as an ordinary,
everyday power; that the United States was expected to rely for its
customary revenues upon duties, imposts, and excises, and that it
was meant it should impose direct taxes only in extraordinary
emergencies and as a sort of
dernier resort."
"It is submitted that a construction of the Constitution of such
vital importance, in itself, and requiring in its support an
imputation to its framers of a specific purpose which nothing in
the text of the Constitution has any tendency to reveal, cannot be
too carefully considered before being finally adopted."
"Second. Though of minor consequence, it is certainly relevant
to point out that, if the new exposition of the Constitution
referred to is to prevail, the United States has, under previous
income tax laws, collected vast sums of money which, on every
principle of justice, it ought to refund, and which it must be
assumed that Congress will deem itself bound to male provision for
refunding by appropriate legislation."
"Respectfully submitted."
RICHARD OLNEY
Attorney General
Thereupon, the following announcement was made, May 6, 1895.
"THE CHIEF JUSTICE. In these cases, appellants made application
for a rehearing as to those propositions upon which the court was
equally divided, whereupon the Attorney General presented a
suggestion that, if any rehearing were granted, it should embrace
the whole case. Treating this suggestion as amounting, in itself,
to an application for a rehearing, and not desiring to restrict the
scope of the argument, we set down
Page 158 U. S. 607
both applications to be heard today before a full bench, which
the anticipated presence of our brother Jackson, happily realized,
enabled us to do. No further argument will be desired. We were
obliged, however, to limit the number of counsel to two on each
side; but as to the time, we await the suggestions of counsel."
Five hours were then granted to each side in the argument of
these cases, on motion of
Mr. Joseph H. Choate for the
appellants. �158 U.S. �
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the court.
Whenever this court is required to pass upon the validity of an
act of Congress as tested by the fundamental law enacted by the
people, the duty imposed demands in its discharge the utmost
deliberation and care, and invokes the deepest sense of
responsibility. And this is especially so when the question
involves the exercise of a great governmental power, and brings
into consideration, as vitally affected by the decision, that
complex system of government so sagaciously framed to secure and
perpetuate "an indestructible Union, composed of indestructible
States."
We have, therefore, with an anxious desire to omit nothing which
might in any degree tend to elucidate the questions submitted, and
aided by further able arguments embodying the fruits of elaborate
research, carefully reexamined these cases, with the result that,
while our former conclusions remain unchanged, their scope must be
enlarged by the acceptance of their logical consequences.
The very nature of the Constitution, as observed by Chief
Justice Marshall in one of his greatest judgments,
"requires that only its great outlines should be marked, its
important objects designated, and the minor ingredients which
compose those objects be deduced from the nature of the objects
themselves. . . . . In considering this question, then, we must
never forget that it is a
Constitution that we are
expounding."
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S.
407.
As heretofore stated, the Constitution divided Federal
taxation
Page 158 U. S. 618
into two great classes, the class of direct taxes, and the class
of duties, imposts, and excises, and prescribed two rules which
qualified the grant of power as to each class.
The power to lay direct taxes apportioned among the several
States in proportion to their representation in the popular branch
of Congress, a representation based on population as ascertained by
the census, was plenary and absolute; but to lay direct taxes
without apportionment was forbidden. The power to lay duties,
imposts, and excises was subject to the qualification that the
imposition must be uniform throughout the United States.
Our previous decision was confined to the consideration of the
validity of the tax on the income from real estate, and on the
income from municipal bonds. The question thus limited was whether
such taxation was direct or not, in the meaning of the
Constitution, and the court went no farther, as to the tax on the
income from real estate, than to hold that it fell within the same
class as the source whence the income was derived, that is, that a
tax upon the realty and a tax upon the receipts therefrom were
alike direct, while, as to the income from municipal bonds, that
could not be taxed because of want of power to tax the source, and
no reference was made to the nature of the tax as being direct or
indirect.
We are now permitted to broaden the field of inquiry, and to
determine to which of the two great classes a tax upon a person's
entire income, whether derived from rents or products or otherwise,
of real estate, or from bonds, stocks, or other forms of personal
property, belongs, and we are unable to conclude that the enforced
subtraction from the yield of all the owner's real or personal
property, in the manner prescribed, is so different from a tax upon
the property itself that it is not a direct, but an indirect, tax
in the meaning of the Constitution.
The words of the Constitution are to be taken in their obvious
sense, and to have a reasonable construction. In
Gibbons v.
Ogden, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, with his usual felicity,
said:
"As men whose intentions require no concealment generally employ
the words which most directly and aptly
Page 158 U. S. 619
express the ideas they intend to convey, the enlightened
patriots who framed our Constitution, and the people who adopted
it, must be understood to have employed words in their natural
sense, and to have intended what they have said."
22 U. S. 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 188. And
in
Rhode Island v. Massachusetts, where the question was
whether a controversy between two States over the boundary between
them was within the grant of judicial power, Mr. Justice Baldwin,
speaking for the court, observed:
"The solution of this question must necessarily depend on the
words of the Constitution; the meaning and intention of the
convention which framed and proposed it for adoption and
ratification to the conventions of the people of and in the several
States; together with a reference to such sources of judicial
information as are resorted to by all courts in construing
statutes, and to which this court has always resorted in construing
the Constitution."
1 Pet. 6 [argument of counsel -- omitted],
26 U. S. 71.
We know of no reason for holding otherwise than that the words
"direct taxes," on the one hand, and "duties, imposts and excises,"
on the other, were used in the Constitution in their natural and
obvious sense. Nor, in arriving at what those terms embrace, do we
perceive any ground for enlarging them beyond, or narrowing them
within, their natural and obvious import at the time the
Constitution was framed and ratified.
And, passing from the text, we regard the conclusion reached as
inevitable, when the circumstances which surrounded the convention
and controlled its action and the views of those who framed and
those who adopted the Constitution are considered.
We do not care to retravel ground already traversed, but some
observations may be added.
In the light of the struggle in the convention as to whether or
not the new Nation should be empowered to levy taxes directly on
the individual until after the States had failed to respond to
requisitions -- a struggle which did not terminate until the
amendment to that effect, proposed by Massachusetts and concurred
in by South Carolina, New Hampshire, New York, and Rhode Island,
had been rejected -- it would seem beyond
Page 158 U. S. 620
reasonable question that direct taxation, taking the place as it
did of requisitions, was purposely restrained to apportionment
according to representation, in order that the former system as to
ratio might be retained, while the mode of collection was
changed.
This is forcibly illustrated by a letter of Mr. Madison of
January 29, 1789, recently published,
* written after
the ratification of the Constitution, but before the organization
of the government and the submission of the proposed amendment to
Congress, which, while opposing the amendment as calculated to
impair the power only to be exercised in extraordinary emergencies,
assigns adequate ground for its rejection as substantially
unnecessary, since, he says,
"every State which chooses to collect its own quota may always
prevent a Federal collection by keeping a little beforehand in its
finances and making its payment at once into the Federal
treasury."
The reasons for the clauses of the Constitution in respect of
direct taxation are not far to seek. The States, respectively,
possessed plenary powers of taxation. They could tax the property
of their citizens in such manner and to such extent as they saw
fit; they had unrestricted powers to impose duties or imposts on
imports from abroad, and excises on manufactures, consumable
commodities, or otherwise. They gave up the great sources of
revenue derived from commerce; they retained the concurrent power
or levying excises, and duties if covering anything other than
excises; but, in respect of them, the range of taxation was
narrowed by the power granted over interstate commerce, and by the
danger of being put at disadvantage in dealing with excises on
manufactures. They retained the power of direct taxation, and to
that they looked as their chief resource; but, even in respect of
that, they granted the concurrent power, and if the tax were placed
by both governments on the same subject, the claim of the United
States had preference. Therefore, they did not grant the power of
direct taxation without regard to their own condition
Page 158 U. S. 621
and resources as States; but they granted the power of
apportioned direct taxation, a power just as efficacious to serve
the needs of the general government, but securing to the States the
opportunity to pay the amount apportioned, and to recoup from their
own citizens in the most feasible way, and in harmony with their
systems of local self-government. If, in the changes of wealth and
population in particular States, apportionment produced inequality,
it was an inequality stipulated for, just as the equal
representation of the States, however small, in the Senate, was
stipulated for. The Constitution ordains affirmatively that each
State shall have two members. of that body, and negatively that no
State shall by amendment be deprived of its equal suffrage in the
Senate without its consent. The Constitution ordains affirmatively
that representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among
the several States according to numbers, and negatively that no
direct tax. shall be laid unless in proportion to the
enumeration.
The founders anticipated that the expenditures of the States,
their counties, cities, and towns, would chiefly be met by direct
taxation on accumulated property, while they expected that those of
the Federal government would be, for the most part, met by indirect
taxes. And in order that the power of direct taxation by the
general government should not be exercised, except on necessity,
and, when the necessity arose, should be so exercised as to leave
the States at liberty to discharge their respective obligations,
and should not be so exercised, unfairly and discriminatingly, as
to particular States or otherwise, by a mere majority vote,
possibly of those whose constituents were intentionally not
subjected to any part of the burden, the qualified grant was made.
Those who made it knew that the power to tax involved the power to
destroy and that, in the language of Chief Justice Marshall, in
McCulloch v. Maryland,
"the only security against the abuse of this power is found in
the structure of the government itself. In imposing a tax, the
legislature acts upon its constituents. This is, in general, a
sufficient security against erroneous and oppressive taxation."
4 Wheat.
17 U. S. 428.
And they retained this security by providing that direct taxation
and representation in
Page 158 U. S. 622
the lower house of Congress should be adjusted on the same
measure.
Moreover, whatever the reasons for the constitutional
provisions, there they are, and they appear to us to speak in plain
language.
It is said that a tax on the whole income of property is not a
direct tax in the meaning of the Constitution, but a duty, and, as
a duty, leviable without apportionment, whether direct or indirect.
We do not think so. Direct taxation was not restricted in one
breath, and the restriction blown to the winds in another.
Cooley (On Taxation, p. 3) says that the word "
duty"
ordinarily "means an indirect tax imposed on the importation,
exportation or consumption of goods," having "a broader meaning
than
custom, which is a duty imposed on imports or
exports;" that
"the term
impost also signifies any tax, tribute or
duty, but it is seldom applied to any but the indirect taxes. An
excise duty is an inland impost, levied upon articles of
manufacture or sale, and also upon licenses to pursue certain
trades or to deal in certain commodities."
In the Constitution, the words "duties, imposts and excises" are
put in antithesis to direct taxes. Gouverneur Morris recognized
this in his remarks in modifying his celebrated motion, as did
Wilson in approving of the motion as modified. 5 Ell.Deb. (Madison
Papers) 302. And Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on the
Constitution (§ 92), expresses the view that it is not unreasonable
to presume that the word "duties" was used as equivalent to
"customs" or "imposts" by the framers of the Constitution, since in
other clauses it was provided that "No tax or duty shall be laid on
articles exported from any State," and that
"No State shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any
imposts or duties on imports or exports except what may be
absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws;"
and he refers to a letter of Mr. Madison to Mr. Cabell, of
September 18, 1828, to that effect. 3 Madison's Writings, 636.
In this connection, it may be useful, though at the risk of
repetition, to refer to the views of Hamilton and Madison as
Page 158 U. S. 623
thrown into relief in the pages of the Federalist, and in
respect of the enactment of the carriage tax act, and again to
briefly consider the
Hylton case, 3
Dall. 171, so much dwelt on in argument.
The act of June 5, 1794, c. 45, 1 Stat. 373, laying duties upon
carriages for the conveyance of persons was enacted in a time of
threatened war. Bills were then pending in Congress to increase the
military force of the United States and to authorize increased
taxation in various directions. It was, therefore, as much a part
of a system of taxation in wartimes as was the income tax of the
war of the rebellion. The bill passed the House on the twenty-ninth
of May, apparently after a very short debate. Mr. Madison and Mr.
Ames are the only speakers on that day reported in the Annals. "Mr.
Madison objected to this tax on carriages as an unconstitutional
tax; and, as an unconstitutional measure, he would vote against
it." Mr. Ames said:
"It was not to be wondered at if he, coming from so different a
part of the country, should have a different idea of this tax from
the gentleman who spoke last. In Massachusetts, this tax had been
long known, and there, it was called an excise. It was difficult to
define whether a tax is direct or not. He had satisfied himself
that this was not so."
Annals, 3d Cong. 730.
On the first of June, 1794, Mr. Madison wrote to Mr. Jefferson:
"The carriage tax, which only struck at the Constitution, has
passed the House of Representatives." 3 Madison's Writings 18. The
bill then went to the Senate, where, on the third day of June, it
"was considered and adopted," Annals, 3d Cong. 119, and, on the
following day, it received the signature of President Washington.
On the same third day of June, the Senate considered
"an act laying certain duties upon snuff and refined sugar; . .
. an act making further provisions for securing and collecting the
duties on foreign and domestic distilled spirits, stills, wines,
and teas; . . . an act for the more effectual protection of the
Southwestern frontier; . . . an act laying additional duties on
goods, wares and merchandise, etc.; . . . an act laying duties on
licenses for selling wine and foreign distilled spirituous liquors
by retail; . . ."
and "an act laying duties on property sold at auction."
Page 158 U. S. 624
It appears then that Mr. Madison regarded the carriage tax bill
as unconstitutional, and accordingly gave his vote against it,
although it was to a large extent, if not altogether, a war
measure.
Where did Mr. Hamilton stand? At that time, he was Secretary of
the Treasury, and it may therefore be assumed, without proof, that
he favored the legislation. But upon what ground? He must, of
course, have come to the conclusion that it was not a direct tax.
Did he agree with Fisher Ames, his personal and political friend,
that the tax was an excise? The evidence is overwhelming that he
did.
In the thirtieth number of the Federalist, after depriving the
helpless and hopeless condition of the country growing out of the
inability of the confederation to obtain from the States the moneys
assigned to its expenses, he says:
"The more intelligent adversaries of the new Constitution admit
the force of this reasoning; but they qualify their admission, by a
distinction between what they call
internal and
external taxations. The former they would reserve to the
state governments; the latter, which they explain into commercial
imposts, or rather duties on imported articles, they declare
themselves willing to concede to the Federal head."
In the thirty-sixth number, while still adopting the division of
his opponents, he says:
"The taxes intended to be comprised under the general
denomination of internal taxes may be subdivided into those of the
direct and those of the
indirect kind. . . . As
to the latter,
by which must be understood duties and excise on
articles of consumption, one is at a loss to conceive what can
be the nature of the difficulties apprehended."
Thus, we find Mr. Hamilton, while writing to induce the adoption
of the Constitution,
first, dividing the power of taxation
into
external and
internal, putting into the
former the power of imposing duties on imported articles and into
the latter all remaining powers; and,
second, dividing the
latter into
direct and
indirect, putting into the
latter duties and excises on articles of consumption.
It seems to us to inevitably follow that, in Mr. Hamilton's
judgment at that time all internal taxes, except duties and
Page 158 U. S. 625
excises on articles of consumption, fell into the category of
direct taxes.
Did he, in supporting the carriage tax bill, change his views in
this respect? His argument in the
Hylton case in support
of the law enables us to answer this question. It was not reported
by Dallas, but was published in 1851 by his son in the edition of
all Hamilton's writings except the Federalist. After saying that we
shall seek in vain for any legal meaning of the respective terms
"direct and indirect taxes," and after forcibly stating the
impossibility of collecting the tax if it is to be considered as a
direct tax, he says, doubtingly:
"The following are presumed to be the only direct taxes.
Capitation or poll taxes. Taxes on lands and buildings. General
assessments, whether on the whole property of individuals or on
their whole real or personal estate; all else must of necessity be
considered as indirect taxes. . . .
Duties, imposts and
excises appear to be contradistinguished from
taxes.
. . . If the meaning of the word
excise is to be sought in
the British statutes, it will be found to include the duty on
carriages, which is there considered as an
excise. . . .
Where so important a distinction in the Constitution is to be
realized, it is fair to seek the meaning of terms in the statutory
language of that country from which our jurisprudence is
derived."
7 Hamilton's Works, 848. Mr. Hamilton therefore clearly
supported the law which Mr. Madison opposed, for the same reason
that his friend Fisher Ames did, because it was an excise, and, as
such, was specifically comprehended by the Constitution. Any loose
expressions in definition of the word "direct," so far as
conflicting with his well considered views in the Federalist, must
be regarded as the liberty which the advocate usually thinks
himself entitled to take with his subject. He gives, however, it
appears to us, a definition which covers the question before us. A
tax upon one's whole income is a tax upon the annual receipts from
his whole property, and as such falls within the same class as a
tax upon that property, and is a direct tax in the meaning of the
Constitution. And Mr. Hamilton, in his report on the public credit,
in referring to contracts with citizens of a foreign country,
said:
"This principle, which seems critically correct,
Page 158 U. S. 626
would exempt as well the income as the capital of the property.
It protects the use as effectually as the thing. What, in fact, is
property but a fiction without the beneficial use of it? In many
cases, indeed, the
income or
annuity is the
property itself."
3 Hamilton's Works 34.
We think there is nothing in the
Hylton case in
conflict with the foregoing. The case is badly reported. The report
does not give the names of both the judges before whom the case was
argued in the Circuit Court. The record of that court shows that
Mr. Justice Wilson was one, and District Judge Griffin of Virginia
was the other. Judge Tucker, in is appendix to the edition of
Blackstone published in 1803 (Tucker's Blackstone, vol. 1, part 1,
p. 294), says:
"The question was tried in this State, in the case of
United
States v. Hylton, and the court being divided in opinion, was
carried to the Supreme Court of the United States by consent. It
was there argued by the proposer of it, (the first Secretary of the
Treasury) on behalf of the United States and by the present Chief
Justice of the United States on behalf of the defendant. Each of
those gentlemen was supposed to have defended his own private
opinion. T hat of the Secretary of the Treasury prevailed, and the
tax was afterwards submitted to, universally, in Virginia."
We are not informed whether Mr. Marshall participated in the two
days' hearing at Richmond, and there is nothing of record to
indicate that he appeared in the case in this court, but it is
quite probable that Judge Tucker was aware of the opinion which he
entertained in regard to the matter.
Mr. Hamilton's argument is left out of the report, and, in place
of it, it is said that the argument turned entirely upon the point
whether the tax was a direct tax, while his brief shows that, so
far as he was concerned, it turned upon the point whether it was an
excise, and therefore not a direct tax.
Mr. Justice Chase thought that the tax was a tax on expense,
because a carriage was a consumable commodity, and in that view,
the tax on it was on the expense of the owner. He expressly
declined to give an opinion as to what were the
Page 158 U. S. 627
direct taxes contemplated by the Constitution. Mr. Justice
Paterson said: "All taxes on expenses or consumption are indirect
taxes; a tax on carriages is of this kind." He quoted copiously
from Adam Smith in support of his conclusions, although it is now
asserted that the justices made small account of that writer. Mr.
Justice Iredell said:
"There is no necessity or propriety in determining what is or is
not a direct or indirect tax in all cases. It is sufficient on the
present occasion for the court to be satisfied that this is not a
direct tax contemplated by the Constitution."
What was decided in the
Hylton case was, then, that a
tax on carriages was an excise, and, therefore, an indirect tax.
The contention of Mr. Madison in the House was only so far
disturbed by it that the court classified it where he himself would
have held it constitutional, and he subsequently, as President,
approved a similar act. 3 Stat. 40. The contention of Mr. Hamilton
in the Federalist was not disturbed by it in the least. In our
judgment, the construction given to the Constitution by the authors
of the Federalist (the five numbers contributed by Chief Justice
Jay related to the danger from foreign force and influence, and to
the treatymaking power) should not and cannot be disregarded
The Constitution prohibits any direct tax unless in proportion
to numbers as ascertained by the census, and, in the light of the
circumstances to which we have referred, is it not an evasion of
that prohibition to hold that a general unapportioned tax, imposed
upon all property owners as a body for or in respect of their
property, is not direct in the meaning of the Constitution because
confined to the income therefrom?
Whatever the speculative views of political economists or
revenue reformers may be, can it be properly held that the
Constitution, taken in its plain and obvious sense, and with due
regard to the circumstances attending the formation of the
government, authorizes a general unapportioned tax on the products
of the farm and the rents of real estate, although imposed merely
because of ownership, and with no possible means of escape from
payment, as belonging to a
Page 158 U. S. 628
totally different class from that which includes the property
from whence the income proceeds?
There can be but one answer, unless the constitutional
restriction is to be treated as utterly illusory and futile, and
the object of its framers defeated. We find it impossible to hold
that a fundamental requisition, deemed so important as to be
enforced by two provisions, one affirmative and one negative, can
be refined away by forced distinctions between that which gives
value to property and the property itself.
Nor can we perceive any ground why the same reasoning does not
apply to capital in personalty held for the purpose of income or
ordinarily yielding income, and to the income therefrom. All the
real estate of the country, and all its invested personal property,
are open to the direct operation of the taxing power if an
apportionment be made according to the Constitution. The
Constitution does not say that no direct tax shall be laid by
apportionment on any other property than land; on the contrary, it
forbids all unapportioned direct taxes, and we know of no warrant
for excepting personal property from the exercise of the power, or
any reason why an apportioned direct tax cannot be laid and
assessed, as Mr. Gallatin said in his report when Secretary of the
Treasury in 1812, "upon the same objects of taxation on which the
direct taxes levied under the authority of the State are laid and
assessed."
Personal property of some kind is of general distribution, and
so are incomes, though the taxable range thereof might be narrowed
through large exemptions.
The Congress of the Confederation found the limitation of the
sources of the contributions of the States to "land, and the
buildings and improvements thereon," by the eighth article of July
9, 1778, so objectionable that the article was amended April 28,
1783, so that the taxation should be apportioned in proportion to
the whole number of white and other free citizens and inhabitants,
including those bound to servitude for a term of years and
three-fifths of all other persons, except Indians not paying taxes,
and Madison, Ellsworth, and Hamilton, in their address in sending
the amendment
Page 158 U. S. 629
to the States, said: "This rule, although not free from
objections, is liable to fewer than any other that could be
devised." 1 Ell.Deb. 93, 95, 98.
Nor are we impressed with the contention that, because in the
four instances in which the power of direct taxation has been
exercised, Congress did not see fit, for reasons of expediency, to
levy a tax upon personalty, this amounts to such a practical
construction of the Constitution that the power did not exist that
we must regard ourselves bound by it. We should regret to be
compelled to hold the powers of the general government thus
restricted, and certainly cannot accede to the idea that the
Constitution has become weakened by a particular course of inaction
under it.
The stress of the argument is thrown, however, on the assertion
that an income tax is not a property tax at all; that it is not a
real estate tax, or a crop tax, or a bond tax; that it is an
assessment upon the taxpayer on account of his money-spending power
as shown by his revenue for the year preceding the assessment; that
rents received, crops harvested, interest collected, have lost all
connection with their origin, and, although once not taxable, have
become transmuted in their new form into taxable subject matter; in
other words, that income is taxable irrespective of the source from
whence it is derived.
This was the view entertained by Mr. Pitt, as expressed in his
celebrated speech on introducing his income tax law of 1799, and he
did not hesitate to carry it to its logical conclusion. The English
loan acts provided that the public dividends should be paid "free
of all taxes and charges whatever;" but Mr. Pitt successfully
contended that the dividends, for the purposes of the income tax,
were to be considered simply in relation to the recipient as so
much income, and that the fund holder had no reason to complain.
And this, said Mr. Gladstone, fifty-five years after, was the
rational construction of the pledge. Financial Statements 32.
The dissenting justices proceeded in effect upon this ground in
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, but the court rejected it.
That was a state tax, it is true; but the States have power to
Page 158 U. S. 630
lay income taxes, and if the source is not open to inquiry,
constitutional safeguards might be easily eluded.
We have unanimously held in this case that, so far as this law
operates on the receipts from municipal bonds, it cannot be
sustained, because it is a tax on the power of the States, and on
their instrumentalities to borrow money, and consequently repugnant
to the Constitution. But if, as contended, the interest when
received has become merely money in the recipient's pocket, and
taxable as such without reference to the source from which it came,
the question is immaterial whether it could have been originally
taxed at all or not. This was admitted by the Attorney General with
characteristic candor, and it follows that, if the revenue derived
from municipal bonds cannot be taxed because the source cannot be,
the same rule applies to revenue from any other source not subject
to the tax, and the lack of power to levy any but an apportioned
tax on real and personal property equally exists as to the revenue
therefrom.
Admitting that this act taxes the income of property
irrespective of its source, still we cannot doubt that such a tax
is necessarily a direct tax in the meaning of the Constitution.
In England, we do not understand that an income tax has ever
been regarded as other than a direct tax. In Dowell's History of
Taxation and Taxes in England, admitted to be the leading
authority, the evolution of taxation in that country is given, and
an income tax is invariably classified as a direct tax. 3 Dowell
(1884) 103, 126. The author refers to the grant of a fifteenth and
tenth and a graduated income tax in 1435, and to many subsequent
comparatively ancient statutes as income tax laws. 1 Dowell, 121. I
t is objected that the taxes imposed by these acts were not,
scientifically speaking, income taxes at all, and that, although
there was a partial income tax in 1758, there was no general income
tax until Pitt's of 1799. Nevertheless, the income taxes levied by
these modern acts, Pitt's, Addington's, Petty's, Peel's, and by
existing laws are all classified as direct taxes; and, so far as
the income tax we are considering is concerned, that view is
concurred in by the cyolopaedists, the lexicographers, and
Page 158 U. S. 631
the political economists, and generally by the classification of
European governments wherever an income tax obtains.
In
Attorney General v. Queen Insurance Co., 3 App.Cas.
1090, which arose under the British North America act of 1867 (30
and 31 Vict. c. 3, § 9) which provided that the provincial
legislatures could only raise revenue for provincial purposes
within each province (in addition to licenses) by direct taxation,
an act of the Quebec legislature laying a stamp duty came under
consideration, and the judicial committee of the Privy Council,
speaking by Jessel, M.R., held that the words "direct taxation"
had
"either a technical meaning, or a general, or, as it is
sometimes called, a popular meaning. One or the other meaning the
words must have, and, in trying to find out their meaning, we must
have recourse to the usual sources of information, whether regarded
as technical words, words of art, or words used in popular
language."
And considering "their meaning either as words used in the sense
of political economy or as words used in jurisprudence of the
courts of law," it was concluded that stamps were not included in
the category of direct taxation, and that the imposition was not
warranted.
In
Attorney General v. Reed, 10 App.Cas. 141, 144, Lord
Chancellor Selbourne said, in relation to the same act of
Parliament:
"The question whether it is a direct or an indirect tax cannot
depend upon those special events which may vary in particular
cases; but the best general rule is to look to the time of payment,
and if at the time the ultimate incidence is uncertain, then, as it
appears to their lordships, it cannot, in this view, be called
direct taxation within the meaning of the second section of the
ninety-second clause of the act in question."
In
Bank of Toronto v. Lambe, 12 App.Cas. 575, 582, the
Privy Council, discussing the same subject, in dealing with the
argument much pressed at the bar, that a tax, to be strictly
direct, must be general, said that they had no hesitation in
rejecting it for legal purposes.
"It would deny the character of a direct tax to the income tax
of this country, which is always spoken of as such, and is
generally looked upon as a
Page 158 U. S. 632
direct tax of the most obvious kind, and it would run counter to
the common understanding of men on this subject, which is one main
clue to the meaning of the legislature."
At the time the Constitution was framed and adopted, under the
systems of direct taxation of many of the States, taxes were laid
on incomes from professions, business, or employments, as well as
from "offices and places of profit;" but if it were the fact that
there had then been no income tax law such as this, it would not be
of controlling importance. A direct tax cannot be taken out of the
constitutional rule because the particular tax did not exist at the
time the rule was prescribed. As Chief Justice Marshall said in the
Dartmouth College case:
"It is not enough to say that this particular case was not in
the mind of the convention when the article was framed, nor of the
American people when it was adopted. It is necessary to go further,
and to say that, had this particular case been suggested, the
language would have been so varied as to exclude it, or it would
have been made a special exception. The case, being within the
words of the rule, must be within its operation likewise unless
there be something in the literal construction so obviously absurd
or mischievous or repugnant to the general spirit of the instrument
as to justify those who expound the Constitution in making it an
exception."
17 U. S. 4 Wheat.
518,
17 U. S.
644.
Being direct, and therefore to be laid by apportionment, is
there any real difficulty in doing so? Cannot Congress, if the
necessity exist of raising thirty, forty, or any other number of
million dollars for the support of the government, in addition to
the revenue from duties, imposts, and excises, apportion the quota
of each State upon the basis of the census, and thus advise it of
the payment which must be made, and proceed to assess that amount
on all the real and personal property and the income of all persons
in the State, and collect the same if the State does not in the
meantime assume and pay its quota and collect the amount according
to its own system and in its own way? Cannot Congress do this as
respects either or all these subjects of taxation, and deal with
each in such manner as might be deemed expedient, as indeed was
done in the act of July 14, 1798, c. 75, 1 Stat. 597?
Inconveniences might possibly
Page 158 U. S. 633
attend the levy of an income tax, notwithstanding the listing of
receipts, when adjusted, furnishes its own valuation; but that it
is apportionable is hardly denied, although it is asserted that it
would operate so unequally as to be undesirable
In the disposition of the inquiry whether a general
unapportioned tax on the income of real and personal property can
be sustained under the Constitution, it is apparent that the
suggestion that the result of compliance with the fundamental law
would lead to the abandonment of that method of taxation altogether
because of inequalities alleged to necessarily accompany its
pursuit, could not be allowed to influence the conclusion; but the
suggestion not unnaturally invites attention to the contention of
appellants' counsel that the want of uniformity and equality in
this act is such as to invalidate it. Figures drawn from the census
are given showing that enormous assets of mutual insurance
companies, of building associations, of mutual savings banks, large
productive property of ecclesiastical organizations are exempted,
and it is claimed that the exemptions reach so many hundred
millions that the rate of taxation would perhaps have been reduced
one-half if they had not been made. We are not dealing with the act
from that point of view; but, assuming the data to be substantially
reliable, if the sum desired to be raised had been apportioned, it
may be doubted whether any State which paid its quota and collected
the amount by its own methods would, or could under its
constitution, have allowed a large part of the property alluded to
to escape taxation. If so, a better measure of equality would have
been attained than would be otherwise possible, since, according to
the argument for the government, the rule of equality is not
prescribed by the Constitution as to Federal taxation, and the
observance of such a rule as inherent in all just taxation is
purely a matter of legislative discretion.
Elaborate argument is made as to the efficacy and merits of an
income tax in general as, on the one hand, equal and just, and on
the other, elastic and certain, not that it is not open to abuse by
such deductions and exemptions as might make taxation under it so
wanting in uniformity and equality as in
Page 158 U. S. 634
substance to amount to deprivation of property without due
process of law, not that it is not open to fraud and evasion and is
inquisitorial in its methods, but because it is preeminently a tax
upon the rich, and enables the burden of taxes on consumption and
of duties on imports to be sensibly diminished. And it is said that
the United States, as
"the representative of an indivisible nationality, as a
political sovereign equal in authority to any other on the face of
the globe, adequate to all emergencies, foreign or domestic, and
having at its command for offence and defence and for all
governmental purposes all the resources of the nation,"
would be "but a maimed and crippled creation after all" unless
it possesses the power to lay a tax on the income of real and
personal property throughout the United States without
apportionment.
The power to tax real and personal property and the income from
both, there being an apportionment, is conceded; that such a tax is
a direct tax in the meaning of the Constitution has not been, and,
in our judgment, cannot be, successfully denied, and yet we are
thus invited to hesitate in the enforcement of the mandate of the
Constitution, which prohibits Congress from laying a direct tax on
the revenue from property of the citizen without regard to state
lines, and in such manner that the States cannot intervene by
payment in regulation of their own resources lest a government of
delegated powers should be found to be, not less powerful, but less
absolute, than the imagination of the advocate had supposed.
We are not here concerned with the question whether an income
tax be or be not desirable, nor whether such a tax would enable the
government to diminish taxes on consumption and duties on imports,
and to enter upon what may be believed to be a reform of its fiscal
and commercial system. Questions of that character belong to the
controversies of political parties, and cannot be settled by
judicial decision. In these cases, our province is to determine
whether this income tax on the revenue from property does or does
not belong to the class of direct taxes. If it does, it is, being
unapportioned, in violation of the Constitution, and we must so
declare.
Differences have often occurred in this court -- differences
Page 158 U. S. 635
exist now. -- but there has never been a time in its history
when there has been a difference of opinion as to its duty to
announce its deliberate conclusions unaffected by considerations
not pertaining to the case in hand.
If it be true that the Constitution should have been so framed
that a tax of this kind could be laid, the instrument defines the
way for its amendment. In no part of it was greater sagacity
displayed. Except that no State, without its consent, can be
deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate, the Constitution may
be amended upon the concurrence of two-thirds of both houses, and
the ratification of the legislatures or conventions of the several
States, or through a Federal convention when applied for by the
legislatures of two-thirds of the States, and upon like
ratification. The ultimate sovereignty may be thus called into play
by a slow and deliberate process, which gives time for mere
hypothesis and opinion to exhaust themselves, and for the sober
second thought of every part of the country to be asserted.
We have considered the act only in respect of the tax on income
derived from real estate, and from invested personal property, and
have not commented on so much of it as bears on gains or profits
from business, privileges, or employments, in view of the instances
in which taxation on business, privileges, or employments has
assumed the guise of an excise tax and been sustained as such.
Being of opinion that so much of the sections of this law as
lays a tax on income from real and personal property is invalid, we
are brought to the question of the effect of that conclusion upon
these sections as a whole.
It is elementary that the same statute may be in part
constitutional and in part unconstitutional, and, if the parts are
wholly independent of each other, that which is constitutional may
stand while that which is unconstitutional will be rejected. And,
in the case before us, there is no question as to the validity of
this act, except sections twenty-seven to thirty-seven, inclusive,
which relate to the subject which has been under discussion, and as
to them, we think the rule laid down by Chief Justice Shaw in
Warren v. Charlestown, 2 Gray 84, is
Page 158 U. S. 636
applicable, that, if the different parts
"are so mutually connected with and dependent on each other, as
conditions, considerations or compensations for each other, as to
warrant a belief that the legislature intended them as a whole, and
that, if all could not be carried into effect, the legislature
would not pass the residue independently, and some parts are
unconstitutional, all the provisions which are thus dependent,
conditional or connected, must fall with them."
Or, as the point is put by Mr. Justice Matthews in
Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 270,
114 U. S.
304:
"It is undoubtedly true that there may be vases where one part
of a statute may be enforced as constitutional, and another be
declared inoperative and void, because unconstitutional; but these
are cases where the parts are so distinctly separable that each can
stand alone, and where the court is able to see, and to declare,
that the intention of the legislature was that the part pronounced
valid should be enforceable, even though the other part should
fail. To hold otherwise would be to substitute, for the law
intended by the legislature, one they may never have been willing
by itself to enact."
And again, as stated by the same eminent judge in
Spraigue
v. Thompson, 118 U. S. 90,
118 U. S. 95,
where it was urged that certain illegal exceptions in a section of
a statute might be disregarded, but that the rest could stand:
"The insuperable difficulty with the application of that
principle of construction to the present instance is that, by
rejecting the exceptions intended by the legislature of Georgia,
the statute is made to enact what confessedly the legislature never
meant. It confers upon the statute a positive operation beyond the
legislative intent, and beyond what anyone can say it would have
enacted in view of the illegality of the exceptions."
According to the census, the true valuation of real and personal
property in the United States in 1890 was $65,037,091,197, of which
real estate with improvements thereon made up $39,544,544,333. Of
course, from the latter must be deducted, in applying these
sections, all unproductive property and all property whose net
yield does not exceed four thousand dollars; but, even with such
deductions, it is evident that the income from realty formed a
vital part of the scheme for taxation embodied
Page 158 U. S. 637
therein. If that be stricken out, and also the income from all
invested personal property, bonds, stocks, investments of all
kinds, it is obvious that by far the largest part of the
anticipated revenue would be eliminated, and this would leave the
burden of the tax to be borne by professions, trades, employments,
or vocations, and in that way what was intended as a tax on capital
would remain in substance a tax on occupations and labor. We cannot
believe that such was the intention of Congress. We do not mean to
say that an act laying by apportionment a direct tax on all real
estate and personal property, or the income thereof, might not also
lay excise taxes on business, privileges, employments, and
vocations. But this is not such an act, and the scheme must be
considered as a whole. Being invalid as to the greater part, and
falling, as the tax would if any part were held valid, in a
direction which could not have been contemplated except in
connection with the taxation considered as an entirety, we are
constrained to conclude that sections twenty-seven to thirty-seven,
inclusive, of the act, which became a law without the signature of
the President on August 28, 1894, are wholly inoperative and
void.
Our conclusions may, therefore, be summed up as follows:
First. We adhere to the opinion already announced,
that, taxes on real estate being indisputably direct taxes, taxes
on the rents or income of real estate are equally direct taxes.
Second. We are of opinion that taxes on personal
property, or on the income of personal property, are likewise
direct taxes.
Third. The tax imposed by sections twenty-seven to
thirty-seven, inclusive, of the act of 1894, so far as it falls on
the income of real estate and of personal property, being a direct
tax within the meaning of the Constitution, and therefore
unconstitutional and void because not apportioned according to
representation, all those sections, constituting one entire scheme
of taxation, are necessarily invalid.
The decrees hereinbefore entered in the court will be
vacated, the decrees below will be reversed, and the case remanded,
with instruction to grant the relief prayed.
Page 158 U. S. 638
* By Mr. Worthington C. Ford in The action, April 25, 1895;
republished in 51 Albany Law Journal, 292.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissenting.
At the former hearing of these causes, it as adjudged that,
within the meaning of the Constitution, a duty on incomes arising
from rents was a direct tax on the lands from which such rents were
derived, and therefore must be apportioned among the several States
on the basis of population, and not by the rule of uniformity
throughout the United States, as prescribed in the case of duties,
imposts, and excises. And the Court, eight of its members being
present, was equally divided upon the question whether
all
the other provisions of the statute relating to incomes would fall
in consequence of that judgment.
It is appropriate now to say that however objectionable the law
would have been, after the provision for taxing incomes arising
from rents was stricken out, I did not then, nor do I now, think it
within the province of the court to annul the provisions relating
to incomes derived from other specified sources, and take from the
government the entire revenue contemplated to be raised by the
taxation of incomes, simply because the clause relating to rents
was held to be unconstitutional. The reasons for this view will be
stated in another connection.
From the judgment heretofore rendered, I dissented, announcing
my entire concurrence in the views expressed by Mr. Justice White
in his very able opinion. I stated at that time some general
conclusions reached by me upon the several questions covered by the
opinion of the majority.
In dissenting from the opinion and judgment of the court on the
present application for a rehearing, I alluded to particular
questions discussed by the majority, and stated that, in a
dissenting opinion to be subsequently filed, I would express my
views more fully than I could then do as to what, within the
meaning of the Constitution, and looking at the practice of the
government as well as the decisions of this court, was a "direct"
tax to be levied only by apportioning it among the States according
to their respective numbers.
By section 7 of the act of August 8, 1894, known as the
Page 158 U. S. 639
Wilson Tariff act and entitled "An act to reduce taxation, to
provide revenue for the government, and for other purposes," it was
provided:
"That from and after the first day of January, eighteen hundred
and ninety-five, and until the first day of January, nineteen
hundred, there shall be assessed, levied, collected, and paid
annually upon the gains, profits, and income received in the
preceding calendar year by every citizen of the United States,
whether residing at home or abroad, and every person residing
therein, whether said gains, profits, or income be derived from any
kind of property, rents, interest, dividends, or salaries, or from
any profession, trade, employment, or vocation carried on in the
United States or elsewhere, or from any other source whatever, a
tax of two percentum on the amount so derived over and above four
thousand dollars, and a like tax shall be levied, collected, and
paid annually upon the gains, profits, and income from all property
owned and of every business, trade, or profession carried on in the
United States by persons residing without the United States."
Section 28 declares what shall be included and what excluded in
estimating the gains, profits, and income of any person.
The Constitution declares that
"the Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common
defence and general welfare of the United States; but all duties,
imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States."
Art. I, Sec. 8.
The only other clauses in the Constitution, at the time of its
adoption, relating to taxation by the general government were the
following:
"Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the
several States which may be included within this Union, according
to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to
the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service
for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths
of all other person. The actual enumeration shall be made within
three years after the first meeting of the Congress of the United
States, and
Page 158 U. S. 640
within every subsequent term of ten years, in such manner as
they shall by law direct."
Art. I, Sec. .
"No capitation, or other direct, tax shall.be laid, unless in
proportion to the census or enumeration hereinbefore directed to be
taken."
Art. I, Sec. 9.
"No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any
State."
Art. I, Sec. 9.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that
"representatives shall be apportioned among the several States
according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of
persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed."
It thus appears that the primary object of all taxation by the
general government is to pay the debts and provide for the common
defence and general welfare of the United States, and that, with
the exception of the inhibition upon taxes or duties on articles
exported from the States, no restriction is in terms imposed upon
national taxation except that direct taxes must be apportioned
among the several States on the basis of numbers (excluding Indians
not taxed), while duties, imposts and excises must be uniform
throughout the United States.
What are "direct taxes" within the meaning of the Constitution?
In the convention of 1787, Rufus King asked what was the precise
meaning of
direct taxation, and no one answered. Madison
Papers, Elliott's Debates 451. The debates of that famous body do
not show that any delegate attempted to give a clear, succinct
definition of what, in his opinion, was a direct tax. Indeed, the
report of those debates upon the question now before us is very
meagre and unsatisfactory. An illustration of this is found in the
case of Gouverneur Morris. It is stated that, on the 12th of July,
1787, he moved to add to a clause empowering Congress to vary
representation according to the principles of "wealth and numbers
of inhabitants," a proviso "that taxation shall be in proportion to
representation." And he is reported to have remarked on that
occasion, that, while some objections lay against his motion, he
supposed "they would be removed by restraining the rule to
direct taxation." Elliott's Debates 30. But, on the 8th of
August, 1787, the work of the Committee on Detail being before
Page 158 U. S. 641
the convention, Mr. Morris is reported to have remarked, "let it
not be said that direct taxation is to be proportioned to
representation." Elliott's Debates 393.
If the question propounded by Rufus King had been answered in
accordance with the interpretation now given, it is not at all
certain that the Constitution, in its present form, would have been
adopted by the convention, nor, if adopted, that it would have been
accepted by the requisite number of States.
A question so difficult to be answered by able statesmen and
lawyers directly concerned in the organization of the present
government can now, it seems, be easily answered, after a
reexamination of documents, writings, and treatises on political
economy, all of which, without any exception worth noting, have
been several times directly brought to the attention of this court.
And whenever that has been done, the result always, until now, has
been that a duty on incomes, derived from taxable subjects, of
whatever nature, was held not to be a direct tax within the meaning
of the Constitution, to be apportioned among the States on the
basis of population, but could be laid, according to the rule of
uniformity, upon individual citizens, corporations, and
associations without reference to numbers in the particular States
in which such citizens, corporations, or associations were
domiciled. Hamilton, referring to the distinction between direct
and indirect taxes, said it was "a matter of regret that terms so
uncertain and vague in so important a point are to be found in the
Constitution," and that it would be vain to seek "
for any
antecedent settled legal meaning to the respective terms." 7
Hamilton's Works, (orig. ed.) 845.
This court is again urged to consider this question in the light
of the theories advanced by political economists. But Chief Justice
Chase, delivering the judgment of this court in
Veazie
Bank v. Fenno, 8 Wall. 533,
75 U. S. 542,
observed that the enumeration of the different kinds of taxes that
Congress was authorized to impose was probably made with very
little reference to the speculations of political economists, and
that there was nothing in the great work of Adam Smith, published
shortly before the meeting of the convention of 1787, that
Page 158 U. S. 642
gave any light on the meaning of the words "direct taxes" in the
Constitution.
From the very necessity of the case, therefore, we are compelled
to look at the practice of the government after the adoption of the
Constitution, as well as to the course of judicial decision.
By an act of Congress, passed June , 1794, c. 4, 1 Stat. 373,
specified duties were laid "upon all carriages for the conveyance
of persons," that should be kept by or for any person for his use,
or to be let out to hire, or for the conveying of passengers. The
case of
Hylton v. United
States, 3 Dall. 171, decided in 1796, distinctly
presented the question whether the duties laid upon carriages by
that act was a direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution.
If it was a tax of that character, it was conceded that the statute
was unconstitutional for the reason that the duties imposed by it
were not apportioned among the States on the basis of numbers. As
the case involved an important constitutional question, each of the
Justices who heard the argument delivered a separate opinion. Chief
Justice Ellsworth was sworn into office on the day the decision was
announced, but, not having heard the whole of the argument,
declined to take any part in the judgment. It can scarcely be
doubted that he approved the decision, for, while a Senator in
Congress from Connecticut, he voted more than once for a bill
laying duties on carriages, and, with Rufus King, Robert Morris,
and other distinguished statesmen, voted in the Senate for the act
of June 5, 1794. Annals of Congress, 3d Sess., 1793-1795, pp. 120,
849. .
It is well to see what the Justices who delivered opinions in
the
Hylton case said as to the meaning of the words
"direct taxes" in the Constitution.
Mr. Justice Chase said:
"As it was incumbent on the plaintiff's counsel in error, so
they took great pains to prove that the tax on carriages was a
direct tax; but they did not satisfy my mind. I think at least it
may be doubted, and if I only doubted, I should affirm the judgment
of the Circuit Court. The deliberate decision of the national
legislature (who did not consider a tax on carriages a direct tax,
but
Page 158 U. S. 643
thought it was within the description of a duty) would determine
me, if the case was doubtful, to receive the construction of the
legislature. But I am inclined to think that a tax on carriages is
not a direct tax within the letter or meaning of the Constitution.
The great object of the Constitution was to give Congress a power
to lay taxes adequate to the exigencies of government; but they
were to observe two rules in imposing them, namely, the rule of
uniformity, when they laid duties, imposts, or excises, and the
rule of apportionment according to the census, when they laid any
direct tax. . . . The Constitution evidently contemplated no taxes
as direct taxes, but only such as Congress could lay in proportion
to the
census. The rule of apportionment is only to be
adopted in such cases where it can reasonably apply, and the
subject taxed must ever determine the application of the rule. If
it is proposed to tax any specific article by the rule of
apportionment, and it would evidently create great inequality and
injustice, it is unreasonable to say that the Constitution intended
such tax should be laid by that rule. It appears to me that a tax
on carriages cannot be laid by the rule of apportionment without
very great inequality and injustice. For example, suppose two
States, equal in census, to pay $80,000 each by a tax on carriages
of eight dollars on every carriage, and in one State there are 100
carriages, and in the other 1000. The owners of carriages in one
State would pay ten times the tax of owners in the other. A in one
State would pay for his carriage eight dollars, but B, in the other
State, would pay for his carriage eighty dollars. . . . I think an
annual tax on carriages for the conveyance of persons may be
considered as within the power granted to Congress to lay duties.
The term
duty is the most comprehensive next to the
general term
tax, and practically in Great Britain (whence
we take our general ideas of taxes, duties, imposts, excises,
customs, etc.) embraces taxes on stamps, tolls for passage, etc.,
and is not confined to taxes on importation only. . . . I am
inclined to think, but of this I do not give a judicial opinion,
that the direct taxes contemplated by the Constitution are only
two, to-wit, a capitation or poll tax, simply, without
Page 158 U. S. 644
regard to property, profession, or any other circumstance, and a
tax on land. I doubt whether a tax, by a general assessment of
personal property within he United States is included within the
term 'direct tax.'"
Mr. Justice Paterson:
"What is the natural and common or technical and appropriate
meaning of the words 'duty' and 'excise' it is not easy to
ascertain. They present no clear and precise idea to the mind.
Different persons will annex different significations to the terms.
It was, however, obviously the intention of the framers of the
Constitution that Congress should possess full power over every
species of taxable property, except exports. The term 'taxes' is
generical, and was made use of to vest in Congress plenary
authority in all cases of taxation. The general division of taxes
is into direct and indirect. Although the latter term is not to be
found in the Constitution, yet the former necessarily implies it.
Indirect stands opposed to direct. There may, perhaps, be an
indirect tax on a particular article that cannot be comprehended
within the description of duties, or imposts, or excises; in such
case, it will be comprised under the general denomination of taxes;
for the term 'tax' is the
genus, and includes: 1. Direct
taxes. 2. Duties, imposts, and excises. 3. All other classes of an
indirect kind, and not within any of the classifications enumerated
under the preceding heads. The question occurs how is such tax to
be laid, uniformly or apportionately? The rule of uniformity will
apply, because it is an indirect tax, and direct taxes only are to
be apportioned. What are direct taxes within the meaning of the
Constitution? The Constitution declares that a capitation tax is a
direct tax, and, both in theory and practice, a tax on land is
deemed to be a direct tax. In this way, the terms direct taxes and
capitation and other direct tax are satisfied. . . . I never
entertained a doubt that the principal, I will not say the only,
objects that the framers of the Constitution contemplated a falling
within the rule of apportionment were a capitation tax and a tax on
land. Local considerations and the particular circumstances and
relative situation of the States naturally lead to this view of the
subject. The provision was made
Page 158 U. S. 644
in favor of the Southern States. They possessed a large number
of slaves; they had extensive tracts of territory, thinly settled
and not very productive. A majority of the States had but few
slaves, and several of them a limited territory, well settled, and
in a high state of cultivation. The Southern States, if no
provision had been introduced in the Constitution, would have been
wholly at the mercy of the other States. Congress, in such case,
might tax slaves at discretion or arbitrarily, and land in every
part of the Union after the same rate or measure: so much a head in
the first instance, and so much an acre in the second. To guard
them against imposition in these particulars was the reason of
introducing the clause in the Constitution which directs that
representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the
States according to their respective numbers. On the part of the
plaintiff in error, it has been contended that the rule of
apportionment is to be favored, rather than the rule of uniformity,
and, of course, that the instrument is to receive such a
construction as will extend the former and restrict the latter. I
am not of that opinion. The Constitution has been considered as an
accommodating system; it was the effect of mutual sacrifices and
concessions; it was the work of compromise. The rule of
apportionment is of this nature; it is radically wrong; it cannot
be supported by any solid reasoning. Why should slaves, who are a
species of property, be represented more than any other property?
The rule, therefore, ought not to be extended by construction.
Again, numbers do not afford a just estimate or rule of wealth. It
is, indeed, a very uncertain and incompetent sign of opulence. . .
. If a tax upon land, where the object is simple and uniform
throughout the States, is scarcely practicable, what shall we say
of a tax attempted to be apportioned among, and raised and
collected from, a number of dissimilar objects? The difficulty will
increase with the number and variety of the things proposed for
taxation. We shall be obliged to resort to intricate and endless
valuations and assessments, in which everything will be arbitrary
and nothing certain. There will be no rule to walk by. The rule of
uniformity, on the contrary, implies certainty, and leaves nothing
to the will and pleasure of the assessor. In such case, the object
and the sum coincide, the rule and thing unite, and, of course,
there can be no imposition. The truth is that the articles taxed in
one State should be taxed in another; in this way, the spirit of
jealousy is appeased, and tranquillity preserved; in this way, the
pressure on industry will be equal in the several States, and the
relation between the different objects of taxation duly preserved.
Apportionment is an operation on States, and involves valuations
and assessments, which are arbitrary and should not be resorted to
but in case of necessity. Uniformity is an instant operation on
individuals, without the intervention of assessments or any regard
to States, and is at once easy, certain, and efficacious. All taxes
on expenses or consumption are indirect taxes."
Mr. Justice Iredell:
"1. All direct taxes must be apportioned. 2. All duties,
imposts, and excises must be uniform. If the carriage tax be a
direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution, it must be
apportioned. If it be a duty, impost, or excise, within the meaning
of the Constitution, it must be uniform. If it can be considered as
a tax, neither direct within the meaning of the Constitution nor
comprehended within the term 'duty, impost, or excise,' there is no
provision in the Constitution one way or another, and then it must
be left to such an operation of the power, as if the authority to
lay taxes had been given generally in all instances, without saying
whether they should be apportioned or uniform, and, in that case, I
should presume the tax ought to be uniform, because the present
Constitution was particularly intended to affect individuals, and
not States, except in particular cases specified, and this is the
leading distinction between the articles of Confederation and the
present Constitution. As all direct taxes must be apportioned, it
is evident that the Constitution contemplated none as direct but
such as could be apportioned. If this cannot be apportioned, it is,
therefore, not a direct tax in the sense of the Constitution. That
this tax cannot be apportioned is evident. . . . Such an arbitrary
method of taxing different States differently is a suggestion
Page 158 U. S. 647
altogether new, and would lead, if practised, to such dangerous
consequences that it will require very powerful arguments to show
that that method of taxing would be in any manner compatible with
the Constitution, with which at present I deem it utterly
irreconcilable, it being altogether destructive of the notion of a
common interest, upon which the very principles of the Constitution
are founded, so far as the condition of the United States will
admit. . . . Some difficulties may occur which we do not at present
foresee. Perhaps a direct tax in the sense of the Constitution can
mean nothing but a tax on something inseparably annexed to the
soil; something capable of apportionment under all such
circumstances. . . . It is sufficient, on the present occasion, for
the court to be satisfied that this is not a direct tax
contemplated by the Constitution, in order to affirm the present
judgment, since, if it cannot be apportioned, it must necessarily
be uniform. I am clearly of opinion this is not a direct tax in the
sense of the Constitution, and therefore that the judgment ought to
be affirmed."
Mr. Justice Wilson:
"As there were only four judges, including myself, who attended
the argument of this cause, I should have thought it proper to join
in the decision though I had before expressed a judicial opinion on
the subject, in the Circuit Court of Virginia, did not the
unanimity of the other three judges relieve me from the necessity.
I shall now, how.ever, only add that my sentiments in favor of the
constitutionality of the tax in question have not been
changed."
The scope of the decision in the
Hylton case will
appear from what this court has said in later cases to which I will
hereafter refer.
It is appropriate to observe in this connection that the
importance of the
Hylton case was not overlooked by the
statesmen of that day. It was argued by eminent lawyers, and we may
well assume that nothing was left unsaid that was necessary to a
full understanding of the question involved. Edmund Pendleton, of
Virginia, concurring with Madison that a tax on carriages was a
direct tax, within the meaning of the Constitution, prepared a
paper on the subject, and
Page 158 U. S. 648
enclosed it to Mr. Giles, then a Senator from Virginia. Under
date of February 7, 1796, Madison wrote to Pendleton:
"I read with real pleasure the paper you put into the hands of
Mr. Giles, which is unquestionably a most simple and lucid view of
the subject, and well deserving the attention of the court which is
to determine on it. The paper will be printed in the newspapers
in time for the judges to have the benefit of it. I did
not find that it needed any of those corrections which you so
liberally committed to my hand. It has been thought unnecessary to
prefix your name; but Mr. Giles will let
an intimation
appear, along with the remarks, that they proceed
from a
quarter that claims attention to them. . . . There never was a
question on which my mind was more satisfied, and yet I have very
little expectation that it will be viewed by the court in the same
light it is by me."
2 Madison's Writings 77. And on March 6, 1796, two days before
the
Hylton case was decided, Madison wrote to Jefferson:
"The court has not given judgment yet on the carriage tax. It is
said the Judges will be unanimous for its constitutionality." 2
Madison's Writings 87. Mr. Justice Iredell, in his Diary, said:
"At this term, Oliver Ellsworth took his seat as Chief Justice.
The first case that came up was that of
Hylton. v. The United
States. This was a very important cause, as it involved a
question of Constitutional law. The point was the constitutionality
of the law of Congress of 1794 laying duties upon carriages. If a
direct tax, it could only be laid in proportion to the
census, which has not as yet been taken. The counsel of Hylton,
Campbell and Ingersoll, contended that the tax was a
direct
tax, and were opposed by Lee aud Hamilton. The court
unanimously agreed that the tax was constitutional, and
delivered their opinions '
seriatim.'"
Again:
"The day before yesterday, Mr. Hamilton spoke in our court,
attended by the most crowded audience I ever saw there, both Houses
of Congress being almost deserted on the occasion. Though he was in
very ill health, he spoke with astonishing ability and in a most
pleasing manner, and was listened to with the profoundest
attention. His speech lasted about three hours. It was on the
question whether the carriage tax, as laid, was a constitutional
one."
2 McRee's Life of Iredell 459, 461.
Turning now to the acts of Congress passed after the decision in
the
Hylton case, we find that, by the acts of July 14,
1798, c. 75, 1 Stat. 597; August 2, 1813, c. 37, 3 Stat. 53;
January 9, 1815, c. 21, 3 Stat. 164, and arch 5, 1816, c. 24, 3
Stat. 255,
direct taxes were assessed upon
lands,
improvement, dwelling-houses, and
slaves, and
apportioned among the several States. And by the act of August 5,
1861, c. 45, 12 Stat. 294, 297, entitled "An act to provide
increased revenues from imports, to pay interest on the debt, and
for other purposes," a
direct tax was assessed and
apportioned among the States on
lands, improvements, and
dwelling-houses only.
Instances of duties upon tangible personal property are found in
the act of January 18, 1815, c. 22, 3 Stat. 180, imposing duties
upon certain goods, wares, and merchandise manufactured or made for
sale within the United States or the Territories thereof, namely,
upon pig iron, castings of iron, bar iron, rolled or slit iron,
nails, brads or sprigs, candles of white wax, mould candles of
tallow, hats, caps, umbrellas and parasols, paper, playing and
visiting cards, saddles, bridles, books, beer, ale, porter, and
tobacco, and also in the act of January 18, 1815, c. 23, 3 Stat.
186, which laid a duty graduated by value upon "all household
furniture kept for use," and upon gold and silver watches.
It may be observed in passing that the above statutes, with one
exception, were all enacted during the administration of President
Madison, and were approved by him.
Instances of duties upon intangible personal property are
afforded by the Stamp Act of July 6, 1797, c. 11, 1 Stat. 527,
which, among other things, levied stamp duties upon bonds, notes,
and certificates of stock. Similar duties had been made familiar to
the American people by the British Stamp Act of 1765, 5 Geo. 3, c.
12, 26. Pickering's Statutes at Large, 179, and were understood by
the delegates to the Convention of 1787 to be included among the
duties mentioned in the Constitution. 1 Elliott's Deb. 368; 5
id. 432.
The reason slaves were included in the earlier acts as
proper
Page 158 U. S. 650
subjects of direct taxation is thus explained by this court in
Veazie Bank v. Fenno, above cited:
"As persons, slaves were proper subjects of a capitation tax,
which is described in the Constitution as a direct tax; as
property, they were, by the laws of some, if not most, of the
States, classed as real property, descendible to heirs. Under the
first view, they would be subject to the tax of 1798, as a
capitation tax; under the latter, they would be subject to the
taxation of the other years as realty. That the latter view was
that taken by the framers of the acts after 1798 becomes highly
probable when it is considered that, in the States where slaves
were held, much of the value which would otherwise have attached to
land passed into the slaves. If, indeed, the land only had been
valued without the slaves, the land would have been subject to much
heavier proportional imposition in those States than in States
where there were no slaves, for the proportion of tax imposed on
each State was determined by population, without reference to the
subjects on which it was to be assessed. The fact, then, that
slaves were valued, under the act referred to, far from showing, as
some have supposed, that Congress regarded personal property as a
proper object of direct taxation under the Constitution, shows only
that Congress, after 1798, regarded slaves, for the purpose of
taxation, as realty."
8 Wall.
75 U. S.
543.
Recurring to the course of legislation, it will be found that,
by the above act of August , 1861, c. 4, Congress not only laid and
apportioned among the States a direct tax of $20,000,000 upon
lands, improvements, and dwelling-houses, but it provided that
there should be
"levied, collected, and paid upon the annual
income of
every person residing in the United States, whether such income is
derived
from any kind of property, or from any profession,
trade, employment, or vocation carried on in the United States or
elsewhere,
or from any source whatever, if such annual
income exceeds the sum of eight hundred dollars, a tax of three
percentum on the amount of such excess of each income above eight
hundred dollars,"
etc. 12 Stat. 292, 309.
Subsequent statutes greatly extended the area of taxation. By
the act of July 1, 1862, c. 119, a duty was imposed on
Page 158 U. S. 651
the gross amount of all receipts for the transportation of
passengers by railroads, steam vessels, and ferry boats; on all
dividends in scrip or money declared due or paid by banks trust
companies, insurance companies, and upon
"the annual gains, profits, or income of every person residing
in the United States, whether derived
from any kind of
property, rents, interest, dividends, salaries, or from any
profession, trade, employment, or vocation carried on in the United
States or elsewhere,
or from any source whatever,"
etc. 12 Stat. 432, 473. The act of June 30, 1864, c. 173, as did
the previous act of 1862, imposed a duty on gains, profits, or
income from whatever kind of property or from whatever source
derived, including "rents." 13 Stat. 223, 281. The act of March 3,
1865, c. 78, increased the amount of such duty. 13 Stat. 479. All
subsequent acts of Congress retained the provision imposing a duty
on income derived from rents and from every kind of property. Act
of March 10, 1866, c. 15, 14 Stat. 4, 5; act of March 2, 1867, c.
169, 14 Stat. 471, 477, 480; act of July 14, 1870, c. 255, 16 Stat.
256.
What has been the course of judicial decision touching the
clause of the Constitution that relates to direct taxes? And,
particularly, what, in the opinion of this court, was the scope and
effect of the decision in
Hylton v. United States?
In
Pacific Ins. Co. v. Soule, 7 Wall. 433,
74 U. S. 446,
the question was presented whether the duty imposed by the act of
June 30, 1864, as amended by that of July 13, 1866, on the
dividends and undistributed sums, that is, on the incomes, from
whatever source, of insurance companies, was a direct tax that
could only be laid by apportionment among the States. The point was
distinctly made in argument that
"an income tax is, and always heretofore has been, regarded as
being a direct tax, as much so as a poll tax or a land tax. If it
be a direct tax, then the Constitution is imperative that it shall
be apportioned."
Mr. Justice Swayne, delivering the unanimous judgment of this
court, said
"what are
direct taxes was elaborately argued and
considered by this court in
Hylton v. United States,
decided in the year 1796. . . . The views expressed in this [that]
case are adopted by Chancellor Kent and Justice
Page 158 U. S. 652
Story in their examination of the subject. . . . The taxing
power is given in the most comprehensive terms. The only
limitations imposed are that
direct taxes, including the
capitation tax, shall be apportioned; that duties, imposts, and
excises shall be uniform, and that no duties shall be imposed upon
articles exported from any State. With these exceptions, the
exercise of the power is, in all respects, unfettered. If a tax
upon carriages, kept for his own use by the owner, is not a direct
tax, we can see no ground upon which a tax upon the business of an
insurance company can be held to belong to that class of revenue
charges. . . . The consequences which would follow the
apportionment of the tax in question among the States and
Territories of the Union in the manner prescribed by the
Constitution must not be overlooked. They are very obvious. Where
such corporations are numerous and rich, it might be light; where
none exists, it could not be collected; where they are few and
poor, it would fall upon them with such weight as to involve
annihilation. It cannot be supposed that the framers of the
Constitution intended that any tax should be apportioned the
collection of which on that principle would be attended with such
results. The consequences are fatal to the proposition. To the
question under consideration it must be answered that the tax to
which it relates is not a direct tax, but a duty or excise; that it
was obligatory on the plaintiff to pay it."
In
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533,
75 U. S. 543,
75 U. S. 544,
75 U. S. 546,
the principal question was whether a tax on state bank notes issued
for circulation was a direct tax. On behalf of the bank, it was
contended by distinguished counsel that the tax was a direct one,
and that it was. invalid because not apportioned among the States
agreeably to the Constitution. In explanation of the nature of
direct taxes, they relied largely (so the authorized report of the
case states) on the writings of Adam Smith and on other treatises,
English and American, on political economy. In the discussion of
the case, reference was made by counsel to the former decisions in
Hylton v. United States and
Pacific Ins. Co. v.
Soule. Chief Justice Chase, delivering the judgment of the
court, after observing (as I have
Page 158 U. S. 653
already stated) that the works of political economists gave no
valuable light on the question as to what, in the
constitutional sense, were direct taxes, entered upon an
examination of the numerous acts of Congress imposing taxes. That
examination, he announced on behalf of this court, showed
"that
personal property, contracts, occupations, and
the like, have never been regarded by Congress as proper subjects
of
direct tax. . . . It may be rightly affirmed,
therefore, that, in the practical construction of the Constitution
by Congress, direct taxes have been limited to taxes on land and
appurtenances, and taxes on polls, or capitation taxes. And this
construction is entitled to great consideration, especially in the
absence of anything adverse to it in the discussions of the
convention which framed, and of the conventions which ratified, the
Constitution."
Referring to certain observations of Madison, King, and
Ellsworth in the convention of 1787, he said:
"All this doubtless shows uncertainty as to the true meaning of
the term 'direct tax,' but it indicates also an understanding that
direct taxes were such as may be levied by capitation, and on lands
and appurtenances, or, perhaps, by valuation and assessment of
personal property upon general lists. For these were the subjects
from which the States at that time usually raised their principal
supplies. This view received the sanction of this court two years
before the enactment of the first law imposing direct taxes
eo
nomine."
The case last referred to was
Hylton v. United States.
After a careful examination of the opinions in that case, Chief
Justice Chase proceeded:
"It may be safely assumed, therefore, as the unanimous judgment
of the court [in the
Hylton case] that a tax on carriages
is not a direct tax. And it may further be taken as established
upon the testimony of Paterson, that the words 'direct taxes,' as
used in the Constitution, comprehended only capitation taxes, and
taxes on land, and perhaps taxes on personal property by general
valuation and assessment of the various descriptions possessed
within the several States. It follows necessarily that
the
power to tax without apportionment extends to all other objects.
Taxes on other objects are included under the heads of taxes not
direct, duties, imposts, and exercises, and must
Page 158 U. S. 654
be laid and collected by the rule of uniformity. The
tax under consideration is a tax on bank circulation, and may very
well be classed under the head of duties. Certainly it is not, in
the sense of the Constitution, a direct tax. It may be said to come
within the same category of taxation as the tax on
incomes
of insurance companies, which this court, at the last term, in the
case of
Pacific Company v. Soule, 7
Wall. 433, held
not to be a direct tax."
In
Scholey v.
Rew, 23 Wall. 331,
90 U. S. 346,
90 U. S. 347,
the question was, whether a duty laid by the act of June 30, 1864,
as amended, 14 Stat. 140, 141, upon successions was a direct tax
within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States. The
act provided that the duty shall be paid at the time when the
successor, or any person in his right or on his behalf, shall
become
entitled in possession to his succession, or to the
receipt of the income and profits thereof. The act further provided
that
"the term 'real estate' should include 'all lands, tenements,
and hereditaments, corporeal and incorporeal,' and that the term
'succession' should denote 'the
devolution of title to any
real estate.'"
Also:
"That every past or future disposition of real estate by will,
deed, or laws of descent, by reason whereof any person shall become
beneficially entitled, in possession or expectancy, to any real
estate, or the income thereof, upon the death of any person
entitled by reason of any such disposition, a 'succession;'"
and that
"the interest of any successor in moneys to arise from the sale
of real estate, under any trust for the sale thereof, shall be
deemed to be a succession chargeable with duty under this act, and
the said duty shall be paid by the trustee, executor, or other
person having control of the funds."
It is important also to observe that this succession tax was
made a
lien on the land "in respect whereof" it was laid,
and was to be "collected by the same officers, in the same manner,
and by the same processes as direct taxes upon lands, under the
authority of the United States." A duty was also imposed by the
same act on legacies and distributive shares of personal
property.
It would seem that this case was one that involved directly
Page 158 U. S. 655
the meaning of the words "direct taxes" in the Constitution. In
the argument of that case, it was conceded by the counsel for the
taxpayer that the opinions in the
Hylton case recognized a
tax on land and a capitation tax to be the
only direct
taxes contemplated by the Constitution. But counsel said:
"The present is a tax
on land, if ever one was. No
doubt it is to be paid by the owner of the land, if he can be made
to pay it; but that is true of any tax that ever was or ever can be
imposed on property. And as if to prove how directly the property,
and not the property owner, is aimed at, the duty is made a
specific lien and charge upon the land 'in respect whereof' it is
assessed. More than this: as if to show how identical, in the
opinion of Congress, this duty was with the avowedly direct tax
upon lands which it had levied but a year or two before, it enacts
that this succession tax alone, out of a great revenue system,
should be collected by the same officers, in the same manner, and
by the same processes as direct taxes upon lands under the
authority of the United States."
This interpretation of the Constitution was rejected by every
member of this court. Mr. Justice Clifford, delivering the
unanimous judgment of the court, said:
"Support to the first objection is attempted to be drawn from
that clause of the Constitution which provides that direct taxes
shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included
within the Union, according to their respective numbers, and also
from the clause which provides that no capitation or other direct
tax shall be laid unless in proportion to the census or amended
enumeration; but it is clear that the tax or duty levied by the act
under consideration is not a direct tax within the meaning of
either of those provisions. Instead of that it, is plainly an
excise tax or duty, authorized by section eight of article one,
which vests power in Congress to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises to pay the debts and provide for the common
defence and general welfare. Such a tax or duty is neither a tax on
land nor a capitation exaction, as subsequently appears from the
language of the section imposing the tax or duty, as well as from
the preceding section, which provides that the term 'succession'
shall denote the devolution
Page 158 U. S. 656
of real estate, and the section which imposes the tax or duty
also contains a corresponding clause, which provides the term
'successor' shall denote the person so entitled, and that the term
'predecessor' shall denote the grantor, testator, ancestor, or
other person from whom the interest of the successor has been or
shall be derived."
Again:
"Whether direct taxes, in the sense of the Constitution,
comprehend any other tax than a capitation tax and a tax on land is
a question not absolutely decided, nor is it necessary to determine
it in the present case, as it is expressly decided that the term
does not include the tax
on income, which cannot
be distinguished in principle from a succession tax such as the one
involved in the present controversy.
Insurance Company v.
Soule, 7 Wall. 446;
Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 546;
Clark v. Sickel, 14
Int.L.Rev.Rec. 6. Neither duties nor excises were regarded as
direct taxes by the authors of The Federalist, No. 36, p. 161;
Hamilton's Works 847;
License Tax Cases, 5 Wall.
462. . . . . Exactions for the support of the government may assume
the form of duties, imposts, or excises, or they may also assume
the form of license fees for permission to carry on particular
occupations or to enjoy special franchises, or they may be specific
in form, as when levied upon corporations in reference to the
amount of capital stock or to the business done or profits earned
by the individual or corporation. Cooley, Const.Lim. 495*;
Provident Institution v.
Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611;
Bank v.
Apthorp, 12 Mass. 252. Sufficient appears in the prior
suggestions to define the language employed and to point out what
is the true intent and meaning of the provision, and to make it
plain that the exaction is not a tax upon the land, and that it was
rightfully levied, if the findings of the court show that the
plaintiff became entitled, in the language of the section, or
acquired the estate or the right to the income thereof by the
devolution of the title to the same, as assumed by the United
States."
The meaning of the words "direct taxes" was again the subject of
consideration by this court in
Springer v. United States,
102 U. S. 586,
102 U. S. 599,
102 U. S. 600,
102 U. S. 602.
A reference to the printed arguments in that case will show that
this question was most
Page 158 U. S. 657
thoroughly examined, every member of the court participating in
the decision. The question presented was as to the
constitutionality of the act of June 30, 1864, c. 172, 13 Stat.
218, as amended by the act of March 3, 1865, c. 78, 13 Stat. 469,
so far as it levied a duty upon gains, profits, and income derived
from every kind of property, and from every trade, profession, or
employment. The contention of Mr. Springer was that such a tax was
a direct tax that could not be levied except by apportioning the
same among the States on the basis of numbers. In support of his
position, he cited numerous authorities, among them all or most of
the leading works on political economy and taxation. Mr. Justice
Swayne, again delivering the unanimous judgment of this court,
referred to the proceedings and debates in the convention of 1787,
to The Federalist, to all the acts of Congress imposing taxation,
and to the previous cases of
Hylton v. United States, Pacific
Ins. Co. v. Soule, Veazie Bank v. Fenno, and
Scholey v.
Rew. Among other things, he said:
"It does not appear that any tax like the one here in question
was ever regarded or treated by Congress as a direct tax. This
uniform practical construction of the Constitution touching so
important a point, through so long a period, by the legislative and
executive departments of the government, though not conclusive, is
a consideration of great weight."
Alluding to the observations by one of the Judges in the
Hylton case as to the evils of an apportioned tax on
specific personal property, he said:
"It was well held that, where such evils would attend the
apportionment of a tax, the Constitution could not have intended
that an apportionment should be made. This view applies with even
greater force to the tax in question in this case. Where the
population is large and the incomes are few and small,
it would
be intolerably oppressive."
After examining the cases above cited, he concludes, speaking
for the entire court:
"All these cases are undistinguishable in principle from the
case now before us, and they are decisive against the plaintiff in
error. The question what is a direct tax is one exclusively in
American jurisprudence. The text writers of the country are in
entire accord upon the subject. Mr. Justice Story says
Page 158 U. S. 658
that all taxes are usually divided into two classes -- those
which are
direct and those which are
indirect --
and that 'under the former denomination are included taxes on land
or real property, and, under the latter, taxes on consumption.' 1
Story Const. § 950. Chancellor Kent, speaking of the case of
Hylton v. United States, says:"
"The better opinion seems to be that the direct taxes
contemplated by the Constitution were only two,
viz., a
capitation or poll tax and a tax on land."
"1 Kent Com. 257.
See also Cooley, Taxation, p. 5, note
2; Pomeroy, Const.Law, 157, p. 230, 9th ed.; Sharwood's Blackstone
308, note; Rawle, Const. 30; Sergeant, Const. 305. We are not aware
that any writer, since
Hylton v. United States was
decided, has expressed a view of the subject different from that of
these authors. Our conclusions are that
direct taxes,
within the meaning of the Constitution, are
only capitation
taxes, as expressed in that instrument, and
taxes on real
estate, and that the tax of which the plaintiff in error
complains is within the category of an excise or duty."
One additional authority may be cited --
Clarke v. Sickel
etc., reported in 14 Int.Rev.Rec. 6, and referred to in the
opinion of this court in
Scholey v. Rew. It as decided by
Mr. Justice Strong at the circuit in 1871. That case involved the
validity of a tax on income derived from an annuity bequeathed by
the will of the plaintiff's husband,
and charged (as the
record of that case shows)
upon his entire estate, real and
personal. The eminent jurist who decided the case said:
"The pleadings in all those cases raise the question whether the
act of Congress of June 30, 1864, c. 171, and its supplements, so
far as they impose a tax upon the annual gains, profits, or income
of every person residing in the United States, or of any citizen of
the United States residing abroad, are within the power conferred
by the Constitution upon Congress. If it be true, as has been
argued, that the income tax is a 'capitation or other direct tax'
within the meaning of the Constitution, it is undoubtedly
prohibited by the first and ninth sections of the first article,
for it is not 'apportioned among the States.' But I am of opinion
that it is not a 'capitation or other direct tax' in the sense in
which the
Page 158 U. S. 659
framers of the Constitution and the people of the States who
adopted it understood such taxes."
The significance of this language is manifest when the fact is
recalled that the act of 1864 provided, among other things, that
(with certain specified exceptions) a tax should be levied,
collected, and paid annually upon the annual gains, profits, or
income of every person residing in the United States, or of any
citizen of the United States residing abroad, whether derived from
any kind of property, rents, interest, dividends, salaries, or from
any profession, trade, employment, or vocation, carried on in the
United States or elsewhere, or
from any other source
whatever. 13 Stat. 281.
From this history of legislation and of judicial decisions, it
is manifest --
That, in the judgment of the members of this court as
constituted when the
Hylton case was decided -- all of
whom were statesmen and lawyers of distinction, two, Wilson and
Paterson, being recognized as great leaders in the convention of
1787 -- the only taxes that could certainly be regarded as direct
taxes, within the meaning of the Constitution, were capitation
taxes and taxes on lands;
That, in their opinion, a tax on real estate was properly
classified as a direct tax because, in the words of Justice
Iredell, it was "a tax on something inseparably annexed to the
soil," "something capable of apportionment," though, in the opinion
of Mr. Justice Paterson, apportionment even of a tax on land was
"scarcely practicable;"
That, while the
Hylton case did not, in terms, involve
a decision in respect of lands, what was said by the judges on the
subject was not, strictly speaking,
obiter dicta, because
the principle or rule that would determine whether a tax on
carriages was a direct tax would necessarily indicate whether a tax
on lands belonged to that class;
That, in the judgment of all the judges in the
Hylton
case, no tax was a direct one that could not be apportioned among
the States on the basis of numbers with some approach to justice
and equality among the people of the several States who owned the
property or subject taxed, for the reason, in
Page 158 U. S. 660
the words of Mr. Justice Chase, that the framers of the
Constitution cannot be supposed to have contemplated taxation by a
rule that "would evidently create great inequality and injustice;"
or, in the words of Mr. Justice Paterson, would be "absurd and
inequitable;" or, in the words of Mr. Justice Iredell, would lead,
if practised, to "dangerous consequences," and be " altogether
destructive of the notion of a common interest, upon which the very
principles of the Constitution are founded;"
That, by the judgment in the
Hylton case, a tax on
specific personal property, owned by the taxpayer and used or let
to hire, was not a direct tax to be apportioned among the States on
the basis of numbers;
That from the foundation of the government until 1861, Congress
following the declarations of the judges in the
Hylton
case, restricted direct taxation to real estate and slaves, and in
1861 to real estate exclusively, and has never, by any statute,
indicated its belief that personal property, however assessed or
valued, was the subject of "direct taxes" to be apportioned among
the States;
That, by the above two acts of January 18, 1815, the validity of
which has never been questioned, Congress, by laying duties
according to the rule of uniformity upon the numerous articles of
personal property mentioned in those acts, indicated its belief
that duties on personal property were not direct taxes to be
apportioned among the States on the basis of numbers, but were
duties to be laid by the rule of uniformity, and without regard to
the population of the respective States;
That, in 1861 and subsequent years, Congress imposed, without
apportionment among the States on the basis of numbers, but by the
rule of uniformity, duties on
income derived
from
every kind of property, real and personal, including income
derived from
rents, and from trades, professions, and
employments, etc.; and, lastly,
That, upon every occasion when it has considered the question
whether a duty on incomes was a direct tax within the meaning of
the Constitution, this court has,
without a dissenting
Page 158 U. S. 661
voice, determined it in the negative, always proceeding
on the ground that capitation taxes and taxes on land were the only
direct taxes contemplated by the framers of the Constitution.
The view I have given of
Hylton v. United States is
sustained by Mr. Justice Story's statement of the grounds upon
which the court proceeded in that case. He says:
"The grounds of this decision, as stated in the various opinions
of the judges, were, first, the doubt whether an taxes were direct
in the sense of the Constitution, but capitation and land taxes, as
has been already suggested; secondly, that, in case of doubt, the
rule of apportionment ought not to be favored, because it was a
matter of compromise, and, in itself, radically indefensible and
wrong; thirdly, the monstrous inequality and injustice of the
carriage tax, if laid by the rule of apportionment, which would
show that no tax of this sort could have been contemplated by the
convention as within the rule of apportionment; fourthly, that the
terms of the Constitution were satisfied by confining the clause
respecting direct taxes to capitation and land taxes; fifthly,
that, accurately speaking, all taxes on expenses or consumption are
indirect taxes, and a tax on carriages is of this kind;
and, sixthly (what is probably of most cogency and force, and of
itself decisive) that no tax could be a direct one, in the sense of
the Constitution, which was not capable of apportionment according
to the rule laid down in the Constitution."
1 Story Const. 705, § 96.
If the above summary as to the practice of the government and
the course of decision in this court fairly states what was the
situation, legislative and judicial, at the time the suits now
before us were instituted, it ought not to be deemed necessary, in
determining a question which this court has said was "exclusively
in American jurisprudence," to ascertain what were the views and
speculations of European writers and theorists in respect of the
nature of taxation and the principle by which taxation should be
controlled, nor as to what, on merely economic or scientific
grounds and under the systems of government prevailing in Europe,
should be deemed direct
Page 158 U. S. 662
taxes, and what indirect taxes. Nor ought this court to be
embarrassed by the circumstance that statesmen of the early period
of our history differed as to the principles or methods of national
taxation or as to what should be deemed direct taxes to be
apportioned among the States aud what indirect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises, that must be laid by some rule of uniformity
applicable to the whole country without reference to the relative
population of particular States. Undoubtedly, as already observed,
Madison was of opinion that a tax on carriages was a direct tax
within the meaning of the Constitution, and should be apportioned
among the States on the basis of numbers. But this court, in the
Hylton case, rejected his view of the Constitution,
sustained that of Hamilton, and, subsequently, Madison, as
President, approved acts of Congress imposing taxes upon personal
property without apportioning the same among the States. The taxes
which, in the opinion of Hamilton, ought to be apportioned among
the States were not left by him in doubt, for, in a draft of the
Constitution prepared by him in 1787, it was provided that
"taxes on lands, houses, and other real estate, and capitation
taxes, shall be proportioned in each State by the whole number of
free persons, except Indians not taxed, and by three-fifths of all
other persons."
Art. VII, Sec. 4. 2 Hamilton's Works 406. The practice of a
century in harmony with the decisions of this court under which
uncounted millions have been collected by taxation ought to be
sufficient to close the door against further inquiry based upon the
speculations of theorists, and the varying opinions of statesmen
who participated in the discussions, sometimes very bitter,
relating to the form of government to be established in place of
the Articles of Confederation under which, it has been well said,
Congress could declare everything and do nothing.
But this view has not been accepted in the present cases, and
the questions involved in them have been examined just as if they
had not been settled by the long practice of the government as well
as by judicial decisions covering the entire period since 1796 and
giving sanction to that practice. It seems to me that the court has
not given to the maxim of
stare decisis
Page 158 U. S. 663
the full effect to which it is entitled. While obedience to that
maxim is not expressly enjoined by the Constitution, the principle
that decisions, resting upon a particular interpretation of that
instrument, should not be lightly disregarded where such
interpretation has been long accepted and acted upon by other
branches of the government and by the public, underlies our
American jurisprudence. There are many constitutional questions
which were earnestly debated by statesmen and lawyers in the early
days of the Republic. But having been determined by the judgments
of this Court, they have ceased to be the subjects of discussion.
While, in a large sense, constitutional questions may not be
considered as finally settled unless settled rightly, it is certain
that a departure by this court from a settled course of decisions
on grave constitutional questions under which vast transactions
have occurred and under which the government has been administered
during great crises, will shake public confidence in the stability
of the law.
Since the
Hylton case was decided, this country has
gone through two great wars under legislation based on the
principles of constitutional law previously announced by this
Court. The recent civil war, involving the very existence of the
nation, was brought to a successful end, and the authority of the
Union restored, in part, by the use of vast amounts of money raised
under statutes imposing duties on incomes derived from every kind
of property, real and personal, not by the unequal rule of
apportionment among the States on the basis of numbers, but by the
rule of uniformity, operating upon individuals and corporations in
all the States, and we are now asked to declare -- and the judgment
this day rendered in elect declares -- that the enormous sums thus
taken from the people, and so used were taken in violation of the
supreme law of the land. The supremacy of the nation was
reestablished against armed rebellion seeking to destroy its life,
but it seems that that consummation, so devoutly wished and to
effect which so many valuable lives were sacrificed, was attended
with a disregard of the Constitution by which the Union was
ordained.
Page 158 U. S. 664
The policy of the government in the matter of taxation for its
support, as well as the decisions of this court, have been in
harmony with the views expressed by Oliver Ellsworth before he
became the Chief Justice of this court. In the Connecticut
Convention of 1788, when considering that clause of the proposed
constitution giving Congress power to lay and collect taxes,
duties, imposts, and excises, in order to pay the debts and provide
for the common defence and general welfare of the United States,
that far-seeing statesman -- second to none of the Revolutionary
period, and whom John Adams declared to be the firmest pillar of
Washington's administration in the Senate -- said:
"The first objection is that this clause extends to all the
objects of taxation. . . . The state debt, which now lies heavy
upon us, arose from the want of powers in the Federal system. Give
the necessary powers to the National Government, and the State will
not be again necessitated to involve itself in debt for its defence
in war. It will lie upon the National Government to defend all the
States, to defend all its members from hostile attacks. The United
States will bear the whole burden of war. It is necessary that the
power of the general legislature should extend to all the objects
of taxation; that government should be able to command all the
resources of the country, because no man can tell what our
exigencies may be. Wars have now become rather wars of the purse
than of the sword. Government must, therefore, be able to command
the whole power of the purse; otherwise, a hostile nation may look
into our Constitution, see what resources are in the power of
government, and calculate to go a little beyond us; thus, they may
obtain a decided superiority over us and reduce us to the utmost
distress. A government which can command but half its resources is
like a man with but one arm to defend himself."
Flanders' Chief Justices, 150, 2d Series.
Let us examine the grounds upon which the decision of the
majority rests, and look at some of the consequences that may
result from the principles now announced. I have a deep, abiding
conviction, which my sense of duty compels me to express, that it
is not possible for this court to have
Page 158 U. S. 665
rendered any judgment more to be regretted than the one just
rendered.
Assuming it to be the settled construction of the Constitution
that the general government cannot tax
lands eo nomine
except by apportioning the tax among the States according to their
respective numbers, does it follow that a tax on
incomes
derived from
rents is a
direct tax
on the
real estate from which such rents arise?
In my judgment, a tax on income derived from real property ought
not to be, and, until now, has never been, regarded by any court as
a direct tax on such property within the meaning of the
Constitution. As the great mass of lands in most of the States do
not bring any rents, and as incomes from rents vary in the
different States, such a tax cannot possibly be apportioned among
the States on the basis merely of numbers with any approach to
equality of right among taxpayers, any more than a tax on carriages
or other personal property could be so apportioned. And, in view of
former adjudications, beginning with the
Hylton case and
ending with the
Springer case, a decision now that a tax
on income from real property can be laid and collected only by
apportioning the same among the States on the basis of numbers may,
not improperly, be regarded as a judicial revolution that may sow
the seeds of hate and distrust among the people of different
sections of our common country.
The principal authorities relied upon to prove that a tax on
rents is a direct tax on the lands from which such rents are
derived are the decisions of this court holding that the States
cannot,
in any form, directly or indirectly, burden the
exercise by Congress of the powers committed to it by the
Constitution,* and those which hold that the national government
cannot,
in any form, directly or indirectly, burden the
agencies
Page 158 U. S. 666
or instrumentalities employed by the States in the exercise of
their powers.* No one of the cases of either class involved any
question as to what were "direct taxes" within the meaning of the
Constitution. They were cases in which it was held that the
governmental power in question could not be burdened or impaired
at all or in any mode, directly or indirectly, by the
government that attempted to do so. Everyone must concede that
those cases would have been decided just as they were decided if
there were no provision whatever in the Constitution relating to
direct taxes or to taxation in any other mode. All property in this
country, except the property and the agencies and instrumentalities
of the States, may be taxed, in some form, by the national
government in order to pay the debts and provide for the common
defence and general welfare of the United States, some by direct
taxation apportioned among the States on the basis of numbers,
other kinds by duties, imposts, and excises, under the rule of
uniformity applicable throughout the United States to individuals
and corporations, and without reference to population in any State.
Decisions, therefore, which hold that a State can neither directly
nor indirectly obstruct the execution by the general government of
the powers committed to it, nor burden with taxation the property
and agencies of the United States, and decisions that the United
States can neither directly nor indirectly burden nor tax the
property or agencies of the State, nor interfere with the
governmental powers belonging to the States, do not even tend to
establish the proposition that a duty which, by its indirect
operation, may affect the value or the use of particular property
is a direct tax on such property within the meaning of the
Constitution.
In determining whether a tax on income from rents is a direct
tax within the meaning of the Constitution, the inquiry is not
whether it may in some way indirectly affect the land or the land
owner, but whether it is a
direct tax
on the
thing
Page 158 U. S. 667
taxed, the land. The circumstance that such a tax may
possibly have the effect to diminish the value of the use of the
land is neither decisive of the question nor important. While a tax
on the land itself, whether at a fixed rate applicable to all lands
without regard to their value or by the acre or according to their
market value, might be deemed a direct tax within the meaning of
the Constitution as interpreted in the
Hylton case, a duty
on rents is a duty on something distinct and entirely separate
from, although issuing out of, the land.
At the original hearing of this cause, we were referred on this
point to the statement by Coke to the effect that,
"if a man seized of land in fee by his deed granteth to another
the profits of those lands, to have and to hold to him and his
heirs, and maketh livery
secundum formam chartae, the
whole land itself doth pass. For what is the land but the profits
thereof; for thereby vesture, herbage, trees, mines, all
whatsoever, parcel of that land doth pass."
Co.Lit. 45 (4
b) 1 Har. & But. ed. § 1.
Of course, a grant, without limitation as to time, to a
particular person and his
heirs, of the
profits
of certain lands, accompanied by
livery of seizin, would
be construed as passing the lands themselves unless a different
interpretation were required by some statute. In this connection,
Jarman on Wills (Vol. 1, 5th ed. 798*) is cited in support of the
general proposition that a devise of the rents and profits or of
the income of lands passes the land itself both at law and equity.
But the editor, after using this language, adds:
"And since the act 1 Vict. c. 26, such a devise carries a fee
simple; but before that act, it carried no more than an estate for
life unless
words of inheritance were added."
Among the authorities cited by the editor in reference to
devises of the incomes of lands are
Humphrey v. Humphrey,
1 Sim. (N.S.) 536, 540, and
Mannox v. Greener, L.R. 14 Eq.
456, 462. In the first of those cases, the court held that " an
unlimited gift of the income of a fund" passed the
capital; in the other, that "a gift of the income of the land,
unrestricted, is simply a gift of the fee simple of the
land." So, in
Fox v. Phelps, 17 Wend. 393, 402, Justice
Bronson, speaking for the court, said:
"An
Page 158 U. S. 668
unlimited disposition of rents and profits or income of
an estate will sometimes carry the estate itself.
Kerry v.
Derrick, Cro.Jac. 104;
Phillips v. Chamberlaine, 4
Ves. 1. In
Newland v. Shepard, 2 P. Wms. 194, a devise of
the produce and interest of the estate to certain grandchildren for
a limited period was held to pass the estate itself. But the
authority of this case was denied by Lord Hardwicke in
Fonereau
v. Fonereau, 3 Atk. 315. The rule cannot apply where, as in
this case, the rents and profits are only given
for a limited
period. Earl v. Grim, 1 Johns.Ch. 494."
But who will say that a devise of rent already due, or profits
already earned, is a devise of the land itself? Or who would say
that a devise of rents, profits, or income of land for any period
expressly limited would pass the fee or the ownership of the land
itself? The statute under examination in these causes expires by
its own terms at the end of five years. It imposes an annual tax on
the income of lands
received the preceding year. It does
not touch the lands themselves, nor interfere with their sale at
the pleasure of the owner. It does not apply to lands from which no
rent is derived. It gives no lien upon the lands to secure the
payment of the duty laid on rents that may accrue to the landlord
from them. It does not apply to rents due and payable by contract,
and not collected, but only to such as are received by the
taxpayer. But whether a grant or devise, with or without limitation
or restriction as to time, of the rents and profits or of the
income of land passes the land itself is wholly immaterial in the
present causes. We are dealing here with questions relating to
taxation for public purposes of income from rents, and not with any
question as to the passing of title, by deed or will, to the real
estate from which such rents may arise.
It has been well observed, on behalf of the government, that
rents have nothing in common with land; that taking wrongful
possession of land is trespass, while the taking of rent may, under
some circumstances, be stealing; that the land goes to the heir
while the rent money goes to the personal representative; one has a
fixed
situs; that of the other may be determined by law,
but generally is that of the owner;
Page 158 U. S. 669
that one is taxed, and can be taxed only, by the sovereignty
within which it lies, while the other may be taxed, and can be
taxed only by the sovereignty under whose dominion the owner is;
that a tax on land is generally a
lien on the land, while
that on personalty almost universally is not, and that, in their
nature, lands and rents arising from land have not a single
attribute in common. A tax on land reaches the land itself, whether
it is rented or not. The citizen's residence may be reached by a
land tax, although he derives no rent from it. But a duty on rents
will not reach him unless he rents his residence to someone else
and receives the rent. A tax with respect to the money that a
landlord receives for rent is personal to him, because it relates
to his revenue from a designated source, and does not, in any sense
-- unless it be otherwise provided by statute -- rest on the land.
The tax in question was laid without reference to the land of the
taxpayer; for the amount of rent is a subject of contract, and is
not always regulated by the intrinsic value of the source from
which the rent arises. In its essence, it is a tax with reference
only to income received.
But the Court, by its judgment just rendered, goes far in
advance not only of its former decisions, but of any decision
heretofore rendered by an American court. Adhering to what was
heretofore adjudged in these cases in respect of the taxation of
income arising from real estate, it now adjudges, upon the same
grounds on which it proceeds in reference to real estate and the
income derived therefrom, that a tax "on personal property," or on
the yield or income of personal property, or on capital in
personalty held for the purpose of income or ordinarily yielding
income, and on the income therefrom, or on the income from
"
invested personal property, bonds, stocks, investments of
all kinds," is a direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution,
which cannot be imposed by Congress unless it be apportioned among
the States on the basis of population.
I cannot assent to the view that visible, tangible personal
property is not subject to a national tax under the rule of
uniformity, whether such uniformity means only territorial
uniformity
Page 158 U. S. 670
or equality of right among all taxpayers of the same class. When
direct taxes are restricted to capitation taxes and taxes on land,
taxation, in either form, is limited to subjects always found
wherever population is found, and which cannot be consumed or
destroyed. They are subjects which can always be seen and inspected
by the assessor, and have immediate connection with the country and
its soil throughout its entire limits. Not so with personal
property. In
Veazie Bank v. Fenno, above cited, it was
said that personal property had never been regarded by Congress as
subject to "direct taxes," although it was said that, in the
opinion of some statesmen at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution, direct taxes "
perhaps" included such as
might be levied "by valuation and assessment of personal property
upon
general lists," or, as expressed by Hamilton in his
argument in the
Hylton case, " general assessments,
whether on the whole property of individuals, or on their whole
real or personal estate." 7 Hamilton's Works 848. The statute now
before us makes no provision for the taxation of personal property
by valuation and assessment upon general lists.
In the
Hylton case, this court -- proceeding, as I
think, upon a sound interpretation of the Constitution and in
accordance with historical evidence of great cogency -- unanimously
held that an act imposing a specific duty on carriages for the
conveyance of persons was a valid exercise of the power to lay and
collect
duties, as distinguished from direct taxes. The
majority of the court now sustain the position taken by Madison,
who insisted that such a duty was a direct tax within the meaning
of the Constitution. So much pains would not have been taken to
bring out his view of direct taxes, unless to indicate this court's
approval of them, notwithstanding a contrary interpretation of the
Constitution had been announced and acted upon for nearly one
hundred years. It must be assumed, therefore, that the court, as
now constituted, would adjudge to be unconstitutional not only any
act like that of 1794 laying specific duties on carriages without
apportioning the same among the States, but acts similar to those
of 1815, laying duties, according to the rule of uniformity,
upon
Page 158 U. S. 671
specific personal property owned or manufactured in this
country.
In my judgment -- to say nothing of the disregard of the former
adjudications of this court, and of the settled practice of the
government -- this decision may well excite the gravest
apprehensions. It strikes at the very foundations of national
authority, in that it denies to the general government a power
which is, or may become, vital to the very existence and
preservation of the Union in a national emergency, such as that of
war with a great commercial nation, during which the collection of
all duties upon imports will cease or be materially diminished. It
tends to reestablish that condition of helplessness in which
Congress found itself during the period of the Articles of
Confederation, when it was without authority by laws operating
directly upon individuals, to lay and collect, through its own
agents, taxes sufficient to pay the debts and defray the expenses
of government, but was dependent, in all such matters, upon the
good will of the States and their promptness in meeting
requisitions made upon them by Congress.
Why do I say that the decision just rendered impairs or menaces
the national authority? The reason is so apparent that it need only
be stated. In its practical operation, this decision withdraws from
national taxation not only all incomes derived from real estate,
but tangible personal property, "invested, personal property,
bonds, stocks, investments of all kinds," and the income that may
be derived from such property. This results from the fact that, by
the decision of the court, all such personal property and all
incomes from real estate and personal property, are placed beyond
national taxation otherwise than by
apportionment among
the States
on the basis simply
of population. No
such apportionment can possibly be made without doing gross
injustice to the many for the benefit of the favored few in
particular States. Any attempt upon the part of Congress to
apportion among the States, upon the basis simply of their
population, taxation of personal property or of incomes would tend
to arouse such indignation among the freemen of America that it
would never
Page 158 U. S. 672
be repeated. When, therefore, this court adjudges, as it does
now adjudge, that Congress cannot impose a duty or tax upon
personal property, or upon income arising either from rents of real
estate or from personal property, including invested personal
property, bonds, stocks, and investments of all kinds, except by
apportioning the sum to be so raised among the States according to
population, it
practically decides that,
without an
amendment of the Constitution -- two-thirds of both Houses of
Congress and three-fourths of the States concurring -- such
property and incomes can never be made to contribute to the support
of the national government.
But this is not all. The decision now made may provoke a contest
in this country from which the American people would have been
spared if the court had not overturned its former adjudications,
and had adhered to the principles of taxation under which our
government, following the repeated adjudications of this court, has
always been administered. Thoughtful, conservative men have
uniformly held that the government could not be safely administered
except upon principles of right, justice, and equality -- without
discrimination against any part of the people because of their
owning or not owning visible property or because of their having or
not having incomes from bonds and stocks. But, by its present
construction of the Constitution the court, for the first time in
all its history, declares that our government has been so framed
that, in matters of taxation for its support and maintenance, those
who have incomes derived from the renting of real estate or from
the leasing or using of tangible personal property, or who own
invested personal property, bonds, stocks and investments of
whatever kind, have privileges that cannot be accorded to those
having incomes derived from the labor of their hands, or the
exercise of their skill, or the use of their brains. Let me
illustrate this. In the large cities or financial centres of the
country, there are persons deriving enormous incomes from the
renting of houses that have been erected not to be occupied by the
owner, but for the sole purpose of being rented. Near by are other
persons, trusts, combinations, and corporations, possessing vast
quantities of personal property, including bonds and
Page 158 U. S. 673
stocks of railroad, telegraph, mining, telephone, banking, coal,
oil, gas, and sugar refining corporations, from which millions upon
millions of income are regularly derived. In the same neighborhood
are others who own neither real estate, nor invested personal
property, nor bonds, nor stocks of any kind, and whose entire
income arises from the skill and industry displayed by them in
particular callings, trades, or professions, or from the labor of
their hands, or the use of their brains. And it is now the law, as
this day declared, that, under the Constitution, however urgent may
be the needs of the Government, however sorely the administration
in power may be pressed to met the moneyed obligations of the
nation, Congress cannot tax the personal property of the country,
nor the income arising either from real estate or from invested
personal property, except by a tax apportioned among the States, on
the basis of their population, while it
may compel the
merchant, the artisan, the workman, the artist, the author, the
lawyer, the physician, even the minister of the Gospel, no one of
whom happens to own real estate, invested personal property, stocks
or bonds, to contribute directly from their respective earnings,
gains, and profits, and, under the rule of uniformity or equality,
for the support of the government.
The Attorney General of the United States very appropriately
said that the constitutional exemption from taxation of incomes
arising from the rents of real estate, otherwise than by a direct
tax, apportioned among the States on the basis of numbers, was a
new theory of the Constitution, the importance of which to the
whole country could not be exaggerated. If anyone has questioned
the correctness of that view of the decision rendered on the
original hearing, it ought not again to be questioned, now that
this court has included in the constitutional exemption from the
rule of uniformity the personal property of the country and incomes
derived from invested personal property. If Congress shall
hereafter impose an income tax in order to meet the pressing debts
of the nation and to provide for the necessary expenses of the
government, it is advised, by the judgment now rendered, that it
cannot touch the income from real estate nor the income from
personal property, invested
Page 158 U. S. 674
or uninvested, except by apportionment among the States on the
basis of population. Under that system, the people of a State,
containing 1,000,000 of inhabitants, who receive annually
$20,000,000 of income from real and personal property would pay no
more than would be exacted from the people of another State, having
the same number of inhabitants, but who receive income from the
same kind of property of only $5,000,000. If this new theory of the
Constitution, as I believe it to be, if this new departure from the
safe way marked out by the fathers and so long followed by this
court, is justified by the fundamental law, the American people
cannot too soon amend their Constitution.
It was said in argument that the passage of the statute imposing
this income tax was an assault by the poor upon the rich, and, by
much eloquent speech, this court has been urged to stand in the
breach for the protection of the just rights of property against
the advancing hosts of socialism. With the policy of legislation of
this character, this court has nothing to do. That is for the
legislative branch of the government. It is for Congress to
determine whether the necessities of the government are to be met,
or the interests of the people subserved, by the taxation of
incomes. With that determination, so far as it rests upon grounds
of expediency or public policy, the courts can have no rightful
concern. The safety and permanency of our institutions demand that
each department of government shall keep within its legitimate
sphere as defined by the supreme law of the land. We deal here only
with questions of law. Undoubtedly, the present law contains
exemptions that are open to objection, but, for reasons to be
presently stated, such exemptions may be disregarded without
invalidating the entire law, and the property so exempted may be
reached under the general provisions of the statute.
Huntington
v. Worthen, 120 U. S. 97,
120 U. S.
102.
If it were true that this legislation, in its important aspects
and in its essence discriminated against the rich because of their
wealth, the court, in vindication of the equality of all before the
law, might well declare that the statute was not an exercise of the
power of taxation, but was repugnant to those
Page 158 U. S. 675
principles of natural right upon which our free institutions
rest, and, therefore, was legislative spoliation under the guise of
taxation. But it is not of that character. There is no foundation
for the charge that this statute was framed in sheer hostility to
the wealth of the country. The provisions most liable to objection
are those exempting from taxation large amounts of accumulated
capital, particularly that represented by savings banks, mutual
insurance companies, and loan associations. Surely such exemptions
do not indicate sympathy on the part of the legislative branch of
the government with the pernicious theories of socialism, nor show
that Congress had any purpose to despoil the rich.
In this connection, and as a ground for annulling the provisions
taxing incomes, counsel for the appellant refers to the exemption
of incomes that do not exceed $4,000. It is said that such an
exemption is too large in amount. That may be conceded. But the
court cannot for that reason alone declare the exemption to be
invalid. Everyone, I take it, will concede that Congress, in taxing
incomes, may rightfully allow an exemption in some amount. That was
done in the income tax laws of 1861 and in subsequent laws, and was
never questioned. Such exemptions rest upon grounds of public
policy, of which Congress must judge, and of which this court
cannot rightfully judge, and that determination cannot be
interfered with by the judicial branch of the government unless the
exemption is of such a character and is so unreasonably large as to
authorize the court to say that Congress, under the pretence merely
of legislating for the general good, has put upon a few persons
burdens that, by every principle of justice and under every sound
view of
taxation, ought to have been placed upon all or
upon the great mass of the people. If the exemption had been placed
at $1,500 or even $2,000, few, I think, would have contended that
Congress, in so doing, had exceeded its powers. In view of the
increased cost of living at this day, as compared with other times,
the difference between either of those amounts and $,4000 is not so
great as to justify the courts in striking down all of the income
tax provisions. The basis upon which such exemptions rest is
that
Page 158 U. S. 676
the general welfare requires that, in taxing incomes, such
exemption should be made as will fairly cover the annual expenses
of the average family, and thus prevent the members of such
families becoming a charge upon the public. The statute allows
corporations, when making returns of their net profits or income,
to deduct actual operating and business expenses. Upon like
grounds, as I suppose, Congress exempted incomes under $4,000.
I may say, in answer to the appeals made to this court to
vindicate the constitutional rights of citizens owning large
properties and having large incomes, that the real friends of
property are not those who would exempt the wealth of the country
from bearing its fair share of the burdens of taxation, but rather
those who seek to have everyone, without reference to his locality,
contribute from his substance, upon terms of equality with all
others, to the support of the government. There is nothing in the
nature of an income tax
per se that justifies
judicial opposition to it upon the ground that it
illegally discriminates against the rich or imposes undue burdens
upon that class. There is no tax which, in its essence, is more
just and equitable than an income tax if the statute imposing it
allows only such exemptions as are demanded by public
considerations and are consistent with the recognized principles of
the equality of all persons before the law, and, while providing
for its collection in ways that do not unnecessarily irritate and
annoy the taxpayer, reaches the earnings of the entire property of
the country, except governmental property and agencies, and compels
those, whether individuals or corporations, who receive such
earnings, to contribute therefrom a reasonable amount for the
support of the common government of all.
We are told in argument that the burden of this income tax, if
collected, will fall, and was imposed that it might fall, almost
entirely upon the people of a few States, and that it has been
imposed by the votes of Senators and Representatives of States
whose people will pay relatively a very small part of it. This
suggestion, it is supposed, throws light upon the construction to
be given to the Constitution, and constitutes
Page 158 U. S. 677
a sufficient reason why this court should strike down the
provision that Congress has made for an income tax. It is a
suggestion that ought never to have been made in a court of
justice. But it seems to have received some consideration; for it
is said that the grant of the power to lay and collect direct taxes
was, in the belief of the framers of the Constitution, that it
would not be exercised
"unfairly and discriminately, as to particular States or
otherwise, by a mere majority vote, possibly of those whose
constituents were intentionally not subjected to any part of the
burden."
It is cause for profound regret that it has been deemed
appropriate to intimate that the law now before had it origin in a
desire upon the part of a majority in the two Houses of Congress to
impose undue burdens upon the people of particular States.
I am unable to perceive that the performance of our duty should
depend in any degree upon an inquiry as to the residence of the
persons who are required by the statute to pay this income tax. If,
under the bounty of the United States, or the beneficent
legislation of Congress, or for any other reason, some parts of the
country have outstripped other parts in population and wealth, that
surely is no reason why people of the more favored States should
not share in the burdens of government alike with the people of all
the States of the Union. Is a given body of people in one part of
the United States, although owning vast properties, from which many
millions are regularly derived, of more consequence in the eye of
the Constitution or of the judicial tribunals than the like number
of people in other parts of the country who do not enjoy the same
prosperity? Arguments that rest upon favoritism by the lawmaking
power to particular sections of the country and to mere property,
or to particular kinds of property, do not commend themselves to my
mind, for they cannot but tend to arouse a conflict that may result
in giving life, energy, and power as well to those in our midst who
are eager to array section against section as to those, unhappily
not few in number, who are without any proper idea of our free
institutions, and who have neither respect for the rights of
property nor any conception of what is liberty regulated by
law.
Page 158 U. S. 678
It is said that, if the necessity exists for the general
government to raise by direct taxation a given sum of money, in
addition to the revenue from duties, imposts, and excises, the
quota of each State can be apportioned on the basis of the census,
and the government can proceed to assess the amount to be raised on
all the real and personal property, as well as the income, of all
persons in the State, and collect the tax, if the State does not in
the meantime pay its quota, and reimburse itself by collecting the
amount paid by it according to its own system and in its own way.
Of course, it is not difficult to understand that a direct tax,
when assessed, may be collected by the general government without
waiting for the States to pay the sum apportioned to their people,
or that time may be given to the States to pay such amounts. But
that view does not meet the argument that the assessment and
collection of a direct tax on incomes -- such tax being apportioned
on the basis merely of numbers in the respective States -- was
never contemplated by the framers of the Constitution. Whether such
a tax be collected by the general government through its own
agents, or by the State, from such of the people
as have
incomes subject to the tax imposed, is immaterial to the
discussion. In either case, the gross injustice that would result
would be the same.
If Congress should lay a tax of a given aggregate amount on
incomes (above a named sum) from every taxable source, and
apportion the same among the States on the basis of numbers, could
any State be expected to assume and pay the sum assigned to it, and
then proceed to reimburse itself by taxing all the property, real
and personal, within its limits, thereby compelling those who have
no taxable incomes to contribute from their means to pay taxes
assessed upon those who have taxable incomes? Would any State use
money belonging to all of its people for the purpose of discharging
taxes due from, or assessed against, a part of them? Is it not
manifest that a national tax laid on incomes or on specific
personal property, if apportioned among the States on the basis of
population, might be ruinous to the people of those States in which
the number having taxable incomes, or
Page 158 U. S. 679
who owned that particular kind of property, were relatively few
when the entire population of the State is taken into account? So
diversified are the industries of the States composing the Union
that, if the government should select particular subjects or
products for taxation and apportion the sum to be raised among the
States according to their population, the amount paid by some of
the States would be out of all proportion to the quantity or value
of such products within their respective limits.
It has been also said, or rather it is intimated, that the
framers of the Constitution intended that the power to lay direct
taxes should only be exercised in time of war, or in great
emergencies, and that a tax on incomes is not justified in times of
peace. Is it to be understood that the courts may annul an act of
Congress imposing a tax on incomes whenever in their judgment such
legislation is not demanded by any public emergency or pressing
necessity? Is a tax on incomes permissible in a time of war, but
unconstitutional in a time of peace? Is the judiciary to supervise
the action of the legislative branch of the government upon
questions of public policy? Are they to override the will of the
people, as expressed by their chosen servants, because, in their
judgment, the particular means employed by Congress in execution of
the powers conferred by the Constitution are not the best that
could have been devised, or are not absolutely necessary to
accomplish the objects for which the government was
established?
It is further said that the withdrawal from national taxation,
except by apportionment among the States on the basis of numbers,
of personal property, bonds, stocks, and investments of all kinds,
and the income arising therefrom, as well as the income derived
from real estate, is intrinsically just, because all such property
and all such incomes can be made to bear, and do bear, their share
of the burdens that come from state taxation. But those who make
this argument forget that all the property which, by the decision
now rendered, remains subject to national taxation by the rule of
uniformity is also subject to be taxed by the respective
Page 158 U. S. 680
States. Incomes arising from trades, employments, callings, and
professions can be taxed, under the rule of uniformity or equality,
by both the national government and the respective state
governments, while incomes from property, bonds, stocks, and
investments cannot, under the present decision, be taxed by the
national government except under the impracticable rule of
apportionment among the States according to population. No sound
reason for such a discrimination has been or can be suggested.
I am of opinion that, with the exception of capitation and land
taxes and taxes on exports from the States and on the property and
instrumentalities of the States, the government of the Union, in
order to pay its debts and provide for the common defence and the
general welfare, and under its power to lay and collect taxes,
duties, imposts, and excises, may reach, under the rule of
uniformity, all property and property rights in whatever State they
may be found. This is as it should be, and as it must be, if the
national government is to be administered upon principles of right
and justice, and is to accomplish the beneficent ends for which it
was established by the People of the United States. The authority
to sustain itself, and, by its own agents and laws, to execute the
powers granted to it, are the features that particularly
distinguish the present government from the Confederation which
Washington characterized as "a half-starved, limping government"
that was "always moving upon crutches, and tottering at every
step." The vast powers committed to the present government may be
abused, and taxes may be imposed by Congress which the public
necessities do not, in fact, require, or which may be forbidden by
a wise policy. But the remedy for such abuses is to be found at the
ballot box, and in a wholesome public opinion which the
representatives of the people will not long, if at all, disregard,
and not in the disregard by the judiciary of powers that have been
committed to another branch of the government.
I turn now to another part of these cases. The majority having
decided that the income tax provisions of the statute in question
are unconstitutional insofar as they impose a tax on
Page 158 U. S. 681
income derived from rents, or on income derived from personal
property, including invested personal property, the conclusion has
been reached that all the income tax provision of the statute,
those that are valid as well as those held to be invalid, must be
held inoperative and void. And so the judgment now to be entered
takes from the government the entire revenue that Congress expected
to raise by the taxation of incomes. This revenue, according to all
the estimates submitted to us in argument, would not have been less
than $30,000,000. Some have estimated that it would amount to
$40,000,000 or $50,000,000.
The ground upon which the court now strikes down all the
provisions of the statute relating in anywise to incomes is that it
cannot be assumed that Congress would have provided for income tax
at all if it had been known or believed that the provisions taxing
incomes from rents and from invested personal property were
unconstitutional and void.
In
Allen v. Louisiana, 103 U. S.
80,
103 U. S. 84,
this court said that it was an elementary principle
"that the same statute may be in part constitutional and in part
unconstitutional, and that, if the parts are wholly independent of
each other, that which is constitutional may stand, while that
which is unconstitutional will be rejected. . . . The point to be
determined in all such cases,"
the court further said,
"is whether the unconstitutional provisions are so connected
with the general scope of the law as to make it impossible, if they
are stricken out, to give effect to what appears to have been the
intent of the legislature."
A leading case on this subject is
Huntington v.
Worthen, 120 U. S. 97,
120 U. S. 102.
The constitution of Arkansas of 1874 provided that all property
subject to taxation should be taxed according to its value, to be
ascertained in such manner as the general assembly might direct,
making the same equal and uniform throughout the State, and that no
one species of property from which a tax may be collected should be
taxed higher than another species of property of equal value. The
Constitution of the State further declared that all laws exempting
property from taxation other than as provided in that instrument
should be void. No part of the property of railroad
Page 158 U. S. 682
companies was exempted by the constitution from taxation. A
subsequent statute provided for the taxation of the property of
railroad companies, excepting however, from the schedule of
property required to be returned "embankments turnouts, cuts, ties,
trestles, or bridges." This court held that the exemption of these
items of railroad property was invalid, and the question arose
whether the statute could be enforced. This court said:
"The unconstitutional part of the statute was separable from the
remainder. The statute declared that, in making its statement of
the value of its property, the railroad company should omit certain
items; that clause being held invalid, the rest remained
unaffected, and could be fully carried out. An exemption, which was
invalid, was alone taken from it. It is only when different clauses
of an act are so dependent upon each other that it is evident the
legislature would not have enacted one of them without the other --
as when the two things provided are necessary parts of one system
-- the whole act will fall with the invalidity of one clause. When
there is no such connection and dependency, the act will stand
though different parts of it are rejected."
It should be observed that the legislature of Arkansas evinced a
purpose not to tax embankments, turnouts, cuts, ties, trestles, or
bridges, and yet their exemption of those items was disregarded,
and such property was taxed. T he same rule could be applied to the
present statute.
The opinion and judgment of the court on the original hearing of
these cases annulled only so much of the statute as laid a duty on
incomes derived from rents. The opinion and judgment on this
rehearing annuls also so much of the statute as lays a duty on the
yield or income derived from personal property, including invested
personal property, bonds, stocks, investments of all kinds. I
recognize that, with all these parts of the statute stricken out,
the law would operate unequally and unjustly upon many of the
people. But I do not feel at liberty to say that the balance of the
act relating to incomes from other and distinct sources must
fall.
It seems to me that the cases do not justify the conclusion
Page 158 U. S. 683
that
all the income tax sections of the statute must
fall because some of them are declared to be invalid. Those
sections embrace a large number of taxable subjects that do not
depend upon, and have no necessary connection whatever with, the
sections or clauses relating to income from rents of land and from
personal property. As the statute in question states that its
principal object was to reduce taxation and provide revenue, it
must be assumed that such revenue is needed for the support of the
government, and therefore its sections, so far as they are valid,
should remain, while those that are invalid should be disregarded.
The rule referred to in the cases above cited should not be applied
with strictness where the law in question is a general law
providing a revenue for the government. Parts of the statute being
adjudged to be void, the injustice done to those whose incomes may
be reached by those provisions of the statute that are not declared
to be, in themselves, invalid, could, in some way, be compensated
by subsequent legislation.
If the sections of the statute relating to a tax upon incomes
derived from other sources than rents and invested personal
property are to fall because and only because those relating to
rents and to income from invested personal property are invalid,
let us see to what result such a rule may logically lead. There is
no distinct, separate
statute providing for a tax upon
incomes. The income tax is prescribed by certain sections of a
general statute known as the Wilson Tariff act. The judgment just
rendered defeats the purpose of Congress by taking out of the
revenue not less than thirty millions, and possibly fifty millions,
of dollars expected to be raised by the duty on incomes. We know
from the official journals of both Houses of Congress that taxation
on imports would not have been reduced to the extent it was by the
Wilson act except for the belief that that could be safely done if
the country had the benefit of revenue derived from a tax on
incomes. We know from official sources that each House of Congress
distinctly refused to strike out the provision imposing a tax on
incomes. The two Houses indicated in every possible way that it
must be a part of any scheme for
Page 158 U. S. 684
the reduction of taxation and for raising revenue for the
support of the government, that (with certain specified exceptions)
incomes arising from every kind of property and from every trade
and calling should bear some of the burdens of the taxation
imposed. If the court knows, or is justified in believing, that
Congress would not have provided an income tax that did not include
a tax on incomes from real estate and personal property, we are
more justified in believing that no part of the Wilson act would
have become a law without provision being made in it for an income
tax. If, therefore, all the income tax sections of the Wilson act
must fall because some of them are invalid, does not the judgment
this day rendered furnish ground for the contention that the entire
act falls when the court strikes from it all of the income tax
provisions, without which, as every one knows, the act would never
have been passed?
But the court takes care to say that there is no question as to
the validity of any part of the Wilson act except those sections
providing for a tax on incomes. Thus, something is saved for the
support and maintenance of the government. It nevertheless results
that those parts of the Wilson act that survive the new theory of
the Constitution evolved by these cases are those imposing burdens
upon the great body of the American people who derive no rents from
real estate, .and who are not so fortunate as to own invested
personal property, such as the bonds or stocks of corporations,
that hold within their control almost the entire business of the
country.
Such a result is one to be deeply deplored. It cannot be
regarded otherwise than as a disaster to the country. The decree
now passed dislocates -- principally for reasons of an economic
nature -- a sovereign power expressly granted to the general
government and long recognized and fully established by judicial
decisions and legislative actions. It so interprets constitutional
provisions, originally designed to protect the slave property
against oppressive taxation, as to give privileges and immunities
never contemplated by the founders of the government.
Page 158 U. S. 685
If the decision of the majority had stricken down all the income
tax sections, either because of unauthorized exemptions or because
of defects that could have been remedied by subsequent legislation,
the result would not have been one to cause anxiety or regret; for,
in such a case, Congress could have enacted a new statute that
would not have been liable to constitutional objections. But the
serious aspect of the present decision is that, by a new
interpretation of the Constitution, it so ties the hands of the
legislative branch of the government that, without an amendment of
that instrument, or unless this court at some future time should
return to the old theory of the Constitution, Congress cannot
subject to taxation -- however great the needs or pressing the
necessities of the government -- either the invested personal
property of the country, bonds, stocks, and investments of all
kinds, or the income arising from the renting of real estate, or
from the yield of personal property, except by the grossly unequal
and unjust rule of apportionment among the States. Thus, undue and
disproportioned burdens are placed upon the many while the few,
safely entrenched behind the rule of apportionment among the States
on the basis of numbers, are permitted to evade their share of
responsibility for the support of the government ordained for the
protection of the rights of all.
I cannot assent to an interpretation of the Constitution that
impairs and cripples the just powers of the National Government in
the essential matter of taxation, and at the same time
discriminates against the greater part of the people of our
country.
The practical effect of the decision today is to give to certain
kinds of property a position of favoritism and advantage
inconsistent with the fundamental principles of our social
organization, and to invest them with power and influence that may
be perilous to that portion of the American people upon whom rests
the larger part of the burdens of the government, and who ought not
to be subjected to the dominion of aggregated wealth any more than
the property of the country should be at the mercy of the
lawless.
Page 158 U. S. 686
I dissent from the opinion and judgment of the court.
*
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 444;
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449;
Dobbins v. Erie County
Commissioners, 16 Pet. 436;
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169;
Railroad
Company v. Jackson, 7 Wall. 262;
Cook v.
Pennsylvania, 97 U. S. 566;
Philadelphia & Southern Steamship Co. v. Pennsylvania,
122 U. S. 326;
Leloup v. Mobile, 127 U. S. 640;
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Adams, 155 U.
S. 688.
*
Collector v.
Day, 11 Wall. 113;
United
States v. Railroad Co., 17 Wall. 322,
84 U. S. 332;
Van Brocklin v. Tennessee, 117
U. S. 161,
117 U. S. 178;
Mercantile Bank v New York, 121 U.
S. 138,
121 U. S.
162.
MR. JUSTICE BROW dissenting.
If the question what is, and what is not, a direct tax, were
now, for the first time, presented, I should entertain a grave
doubt whether, in view of the definitions of a direct tax given by
the courts and writers upon political economy during the present
century, it ought not to be held to apply not only to an income
tax, but to every tax the burden of which is borne, both
immediately and ultimately, by the person paying it. It does not,
however, follow that this is the definition had in mind by the
framers o the Constitution. The clause that direct taxes shall be
apportioned according to the population was adopted, as was said by
Mr. Justice Paterson, in
Hylton v. United States, to meet
a demand on the part of the Southern States, that representatives
and direct taxes should be apportioned among the States according
to their respective numbers. In this connection, he observes:
"The provision was made in favor of the Southern States. They
possessed a large number of slaves; they had extensive tracts of
territory, thinly settled and not very productive. A majority of
the States had but few slaves, and several of them a limited
territory, well settled and in a high state of cultivation. The
Southern States, if no provision had been introduced in the
Constitution, would have been wholly at the mercy of the other
States. Congress, in such case, might tax slaves at discretion or
arbitrarily, and land in every part of the Union at the same rate
or measure, so much a head in the first instance and so much an
acre in the second. To guard them against imposition in these
particulars was the reason for introducing the clause in the
Constitution which directs that representatives and direct taxes
shall be apportioned among the States according to their respective
numbers."
3 Dall.
3 U. S. 177.
In view of the fact that the great burden of taxation among the
several States is assessed upon real estate at a valuation, and
that a similar tax was apparently an important part of the revenue
of such States at the time the Constitution was
Page 158 U. S. 687
adopted, it is not unreasonable to suppose that this is the only
undefined direct tax the framers of the Constitution had in view
when they incorporated this clause into that instrument. The
significance of the words "direct taxes" was not so well understood
then as it is now, and it is entirely probable that these words
were used with reference to a generally accepted method of raising
a revenue by tax upon real estate.
That the rule of apportionment was adopted for a special and
temporary purpose that passed away with the existence of slavery,
and that it should be narrowly construed, is also evident from the
opinion of Mr. Justice Paterson, wherein he says that
"the Constitution has been considered as an accommodating
system; it was the effect of mutual sacrifices and concessions; it
was the work of compromise. The rule of apportionment is of this
nature; it is radically wrong; it cannot be supported by any solid
reasoning. Why should slaves, who are a species of property, be
represented more than any other property? The rule ought not,
therefore, to be extended by construction. Again, numbers do not
afford a just estimate or rule of wealth. It is, indeed, a very
uncertain and incompetent sign of opulence. There is another reason
against the extension of the principle laid down in the
Constitution."
But, however this may be, I regard it as very clear that the
clause requiring direct taxes to be apportioned to the population
has no application to taxes which are not capable of apportionment
according to population. It cannot be supposed that the convention
could have contemplated a practical inhibition upon the power of
Congress to tax in some way all taxable property within the
jurisdiction of the Federal government for the purposes of a
national revenue. And if the proposed tax were such that, in its
nature, it could not be apportioned according to population, it
naturally follows that it could not have been considered a direct
tax, within the meaning of the clause in question. This was the
opinion of Mr. Justice Iredell in the
Hylton case, wherein
he shows at considerable length the fact that the tax upon
carriages, in question in that case, was not such as could be
apportioned, and, therefore, was not a direct tax in the sense of
the Constitution. "Suppose," he said,
"ten dollars
Page 158 U. S. 688
contemplated as a tax .on each chariot, or post chaise, in the
United States, and the number of both in all the States be computed
at 10 -- the number of Representatives in Congress -- this would
produce in the whole one thousand and fifty dollars; the share of
Virginia, being 19/105 parts, would be $190; the share of
Connecticut, being 7/105 parts, would be $70; then suppose Virginia
had fifty carriages, Connecticut two, the share of Virginia being
$190, this must, of course, be collected from the owners of
carriages, and there would, therefore, be collected from each
carriage $3.80; the share of Connecticut being $70, each carriage
would pay $35. In fact, it needs no demonstration to show that
taxes upon carriages or any particular article of personal
property, apportioned to the population of the several States,
would lead to the grossest inequalities, since the number of like
articles in such State respectively might bear a greatly unequal
proportion to the population. This was also the construction put
upon the clause by Mr. Justice Story in his work upon the
Constitution, §§ 955, 956."
Applying the same course of reasoning to the income tax, let us
see what the result would be. By the census of 1890, the population
of the United States was 62,622,250. Suppose Congress desired to
raise by an income tax the same number of dollars, or the
equivalent of one dollar from each inhabitant. Under this system of
apportionment, Massachusetts would pay $,238,943. South Carolina
would pay $1,151,149. Massachusetts has, however, $2,803,64,447 of
property, with which to pay it, or $12 per capita, while South
Carolina has but $400,911,303 of property, or $348 to each
inhabitant. Assuming that the same amount of property in each State
represents a corresponding amount of income, each inhabitant of
South Carolina would pay in proportion to his means three and
one-half times as much as each inhabitant of Massachusetts. By the
same course of reasoning, Mississippi, with a valuation of $36 per
capita, would pay four times as much as Rhode Island, with a
valuation of $149 per capita. North Carolina, with a valuation of
$361 per capita, would pay about four times as much, in proportion
to her means, as New York,
Page 158 U. S. 689
with a valuation of $1,430 per capita; while Maine, with a per
capita valuation of $740, would pay about twice as much. Alabama,
with a valuation of $41, would pay nearly three times as much as
Pennsylvania, with a valuation of $1,177 per capita. In fact, there
are scarcely two States that would pay the same amount in
proportion to their ability to pay.
If the States should adopt a similar system of taxation, and
allot the amount to be raised among the different cities and towns,
or among the different wards of the same city, in proportion to
their population, the result would be so monstrous that the entire
public would cry out against it. Indeed, reduced to its last
analysis, it imposes the same tax upon the laborer that it does
upon the millionaire.
So also, whenever this court has been called upon to give a
construction to this Clause of the Constitution, it has universally
held the words "direct taxes" applied only to capitation taxes and
taxes upon land. In the five cases most directly in point, it was
held that the following taxes were not direct, but rather in the
nature of duty or excise,
viz., a tax upon carriages,
Hylton v. United
States, 3 Dall. 171; a tax upon the business of
insurance companies,
Pacific Insurance Co. v.
Soule, 7 Wall. 443, a tax of ten percent upon the
notes of state banks held by national banks,
Veazie v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533; a tax upon the devolution of
real estate,
Scholey v.
Rew, 23 Wall. 331; and, finally, a general income
tax was broadly upheld in
Springer v. United States,
102 U. S. 86.
These cases, consistent and undeviating as they are and extending
over nearly a century of our national life, seem to me to establish
a canon of interpretation which it is now too late to overthrow, or
even to question. If there be any weight at all to be given to the
doctrine of
stare decisis, it surely ought to apply to a
theory of constitutional construction which has received the
deliberate sanction of this court in five cases, and upon the faith
of which Congress has enacted two income taxes at times when, in
its judgment, extraordinary sources of revenue were necessary to be
made available.
I have always entertained the view that, in cases turning upon
questions of jurisdiction, or involving only the rights
Page 158 U. S. 690
of private parties, courts should feel at liberty to settle
principles of law according to the opinions of their existing
members, neither regardless of nor implicitly bound by prior
decisions, subject only to the condition that they do not require
the disturbance of settled rules of property. There are a vast
number of questions, however, which it is more important should be
settled in some way than that they should be settled right, and
once settled by the solemn adjudication of the court of last
resort, the legislature and the people have a right to rely upon
such settlement as forever fixing their rights in that connection.
Even "a century of error" may be less pregnant with evil to the
State than a long deferred discovery of the truth. I cannot
reconcile myself to the idea that adjudications thus solemnly made,
usually by a unanimous court, should now be set aside by reason of
a doubt as to the correctness of those adjudications, or because we
may suspect that possibly the cases would have been otherwise
decided if the court had had before it the wealth of learning which
has been brought to bear upon the consideration of this case.
Congress ought never to legislate, in raising the revenues of the
government, in fear that important laws like this shall encounter
the veto of this court through a change in its opinion, or be
crippled in great political crises by its inability to raise a
revenue for immediate use. Twice in the history of this country
such exigencies have arisen, and twice has Congress called upon the
patriotism of its citizens to respond to the imposition of an
income tax -- once in the throes of civil war and once in the
exigency of a financial panic, scarcely less disastrous. The
language of Mr. Justice Baldwin, in
Grignon's
Lessee v. Astor, 2 How. 319,
43 U. S. 343,
though referring to a different class of cases, seems to me
perfectly apposite to the one under consideration.
"We do not deem it necessary, now or hereafter, to retrace the
reasons or the authorities on which the decisions of this court in
that, or the cases which preceded it, rested; they are founded on
the oldest and most sacred principles of the common law. Time has
consecrated them; the courts of the State have followed, and this
court has never departed from,
Page 158 U. S. 691
them. They are rules of property upon which the repose of the
country depends; titles acquired under the proceedings of courts of
competent jurisdiction must be deemed inviolable in collateral
actions, or none can know what is his own."
It must be admitted, however, that, in none of these cases has
the question been directly presented as to what are taxes upon land
within the meaning of the constitutional provision. Notwithstanding
the authorities cited upon this point by the Attorney General,
notably,
Jeffrey's Case, 5 Coke, 67;
Theed v.
Starkey, 8 Mod. 314;
Case v. Stephens, Fitzgibbon
297;
Palmer v. Power, 4 Irish C.L. (1854) 191, and
Van
Rensselaer v. Dennison, 8 Barb. 23, to the effect that a tax
upon a person with respect to his land, or the profits of his land,
is not a tax upon the land itself, I regard the doctrine as
entirely well settled in this court that a tax upon an incident to
a prohibited thing is a tax upon the thing itself, and, if there be
a total want of power to tax the thing, there is an equal want of
power to tax the incident. A summary of the cases upon this point
may not be inappropriate in this connection. Thus, in
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, a license tax upon an
importer was held to be invalid as a tax upon imports; in
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, a tax upon stock for loans
to the United States was held invalid as a tax upon the functions
of the government; in
Dobbins v.
Commissioner, 16 Pet. 435, a state tax on the
salary of an office invalid, as a tax upon the office itself; in
the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283, a tax upon alien passengers
arriving in ports of the State was held void as a tax upon
Commerce; in
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169, a stamp tax upon bills of
lading was held to be a tax upon exports; in
Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35, a tax upon railroads and stage
companies for every passenger carried out of the State was held to
be a tax on the passenger. for the privilege of passing through the
State; in
Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Co.,
117 U. S. 34, a tax
upon Pullman cars running between different States was held to be
bad as a tax upon interstate commerce, and in
Leloup v.
Mobile, 127 U. S. 640, a
similar ruling was made with regard to a license tax
Page 158 U. S. 692
for telegraph companies, and finally, in
Cook v.
Pennsylvania, 97 U. S. 566, a tax
upon the sales of goods was held to be a tax upon the goods
themselves. Indeed, cases to the same effect are almost
innumerable. In the light of these cases, I find it impossible to
escape the conclusion that a tax upon the rents or income of real
estate is a tax upon the land itself.
But this does not cover the whole question. To bring the tax
within the rule of apportionment, it must not only be a tax upon
land, but it must be a
direct tax upon land. The
Constitution only requires that direct taxes be laid by the rule of
apportionment. We have held that direct taxes include, among
others, taxes upon land; but it does not follow from these premises
that every tax upon land is a direct tax. A tax upon the product of
land, whether vegetable, animal, or mineral, is, in a certain
sense, and perhaps within the decisions above mentioned, a tax upon
the land. "For," as Lord Coke said, "what is the land but the
profits thereof?" But it seems to me that it could hardly be
seriously claimed that a tax upon the crops and cattle of the
farmer, or the coal and iron of the miner, though levied upon the
property while it remained upon the land, was a direct tax upon the
land. A tax upon the rent of land, in my opinion, falls within the
same category. It is rather a difference in the name of the thing
taxed than in the principle of the taxation. The rent is no more
directly the outgrowth or profit of the land than the crops or the
coal, and a direct tax upon either is only an indirect tax upon the
land. While, within the cases above cited, it is a tax upon land,
it is a direct tax only upon one of the many profits of land, and
is not only not a direct tax upon the land itself, but is also
subject to the other objection that it is, in its nature, incapable
of apportionment according to population. It is true that we have
often held that what cannot be done directly cannot be done
indirectly, but this applies only when it cannot be done at all,
directly or indirectly; but if it can be done directly in one
manner,
i.e., by the rule of apportionment, it does not
follow that it may not be done indirectly
Page 158 U. S. 693
in another manner. There is no want of power on the part of
Congress to tax land, but, in exercising that power, it must impose
direct taxes by the rule of apportionment. The power still remains,
however, to impose indirect taxes by the rule of uniformity. Being
of opinion that a tax upon rents is an indirect tax upon lands, I
am driven to the conclusion that the tax in question is valid.
The tax upon the income of municipal bonds falls obviously
within the other category, of an indirect tax upon something which
Congress has no right to tax at all, and hence is invalid. Here is
a question not of the method of taxation, but of the power to
subject the property to taxation in any form. It seems to me that
the cases of
Collector v.
Day, 11 Wall. 113, holding that it is not competent
for Congress to impose a tax upon the salary of a judicial officer
of a State;
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, holding that a State could
not impose a tax upon the operation of the Bank of the United
States, and
United States v. Railroad
Co., 17 Wall. 322, holding that a municipal
corporation is a portion of the sovereign power of the State, and
is not subject to taxation by Congress upon its municipal revenues;
Wisconsin Central Railroad v. Price, 133 U.
S. 496, holding that no State has the power to tax the
property of the United States within its limits, and
Van
Brocklin v. Tennessee, 117 U. S. 151, to
the same effect, apply
mutatis mutandis to the bonds in
question, and the tax upon them must, therefore, be invalid.
There is, in certain particulars, a want of uniformity in this
law, which may have created in the minds of some the impression
that it was studiously designed not only to shift the burden of
taxation upon the wealthy class, but to exempt certain favored
corporations from its operation. There is certainly no want of
uniformity within the meaning of the Constitution, since we have
repeatedly held that the uniformity there referred to is
territorial only.
Loughborough v.
Blake, 5 Wheat. 317;
Head Money Cases,
112 U. S. 580. In
the words of the Constitution, the tax must be uniform "throughout
the United States."
Irrespective, however, of the Constitution, a tax which is
Page 158 U. S. 694
wanting in uniformity among members of the same class is, or may
be, invalid. But this does not deprive the legislature of the power
to make exemptions, provided such exemptions rest upon some
principle, and are not purely arbitrary, or created solely for the
purpose of favoring some person or body of persons. Thus, in every
civilized country, there is an exemption of small incomes, which it
would be manifest cruelty to tax, and the power to make such
exemptions once granted, the amount is within the discretion of the
legislature, and so long as that power is not wantonly abused, the
courts are bound to respect it. In this law, there is an exemption
of $4,000, which indicates a purpose on the part of Congress that
the burden of this tax should fall on the wealthy, or at least upon
the well-to-do. If men who have an income or property beyond their
pressing needs are not the ones to pay taxes, it is difficult to
say who are; in other words, enlightened taxation is imposed upon
property, and not upon persons. Poll taxes, formerly a considerable
source of revenue, are now practically obsolete. The exemption of
$4,000 is designed, undoubtedly, to cover the actual living
expenses of the large majority of families, and the fact that it is
not applied to corporations is explained by the fact that
corporations have no corresponding expenses. The expenses of
earning their profits are, of course, deducted in the same manner
as the corresponding expenses of a private individual are
deductible from the earnings of his business. The moment the
profits of a corporation are paid over to the stockholders, the
exemption of $4,000 attaches to them in the hands of each
stockholder.
The fact that savings banks and mutual insurance companies,
whose profits are paid to policyholders, are exempted, is
explicable on the theory (whether a sound one or not, I need not
stop to inquire) that these institutions are not, in their original
conception, intended as schemes for the accumulation of money, and
if this exemption operates as an abuse in certain cases, and with
respect to certain very wealthy corporations, it is probable that
the recognition of such abuses was necessary to the exemption of
the whole class.
Page 158 U. S. 695
It is difficult to overestimate the importance of these cases. I
certainly cannot overstate the regret I feel at the disposition
made of them by the court. It is never a light thing to set aside
the deliberate will of the legislature, and, in my opinion, it
should never be done except upon the clearest proof of its conflict
with the fundamental law. Respect for the Constitution will not be
inspired by a narrow and technical construction which shall limit
or impair the necessary powers of Congress. Did the reversal of
these cases involve merely the striking down of the inequitable
features of this law, or even the whole law, for its want of
uniformity, the consequences would be less serious; but a it
implies a declaration that every income tax must be laid according
to the rule of apportionment, the decision involves nothing less
than a surrender of the taxing power to the moneyed class. By
resuscitating an argument that was exploded in the
Hylton
case, and has lain practically dormant for a hundred years, it is
made to do duty in nullifying not this law alone, but every similar
law that is not based upon an impossible theory of apportionment.
Even the spectre of socialism is conjured up to frighten Congress
from laying taxes upon the people in proportion to their ability to
pay them. It is certainly a strange commentary upon the
Constitution of the United States and upon a democratic government
that Congress has no power to lay a tax which is one of the main
sources of revenue of nearly every civilized State. It is a
confession of feebleness in which I find myself wholly unable to
join.
While I have no doubt that Congress will find some means of
surmounting the present crisis, my fear is that, in some in moment
of national peril, this decision will rise up to frustrate its will
and paralyze its arm. I hope it may not prove the first step toward
the submergence of the liberties of the people in a sordid
despotism of wealth.
As I cannot escape the conviction that the decision of the court
in this great case is fraught with immeasurable danger to the
future of the country, and that it approaches the proportions of a
national calamity, I feel it a duty to enter my protest against
it.
Page 158 U. S. 696
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON dissenting.
I am unable to yield my assent to the judgment of the court in
these cases. My strength has not been equal to the task of
preparing a formal dissenting opinion since the decision was agreed
upon. I concur fully in the dissents expressed by Mr. Justice White
on the former hearing and by the Justices who will dissent now, and
will only add a brief outline of my views upon the main questions
presented and decided.
It is not and cannot be denied that, under the broad and
comprehensive taxing power conferred by the Constitution on the
national government, Congress has the authority to tax incomes from
whatsoever source arising, whether from real estate or personal
property or otherwise. It is equally clear that Congress, in the
exercise of this authority, has the discretion to impose the tax
upon incomes above a designated amount. The underlying and
controlling question now presented is whether a tax on incomes
received from land and personalty is a "direct tax," and subject to
the rule of apportionment.
The decision of the court holding the income tax law of August,
1894, void is based upon the following propositions:
First. That a tax upon real and personal property is a direct
tax within the meaning of the Constitution, and, as such, in order
to be valid, must be apportioned among the several States according
to their respective populations. Second. That the incomes derived
or realized from such property are an inseparable incident thereof,
and so far partake of the nature of the property out of which they
arise as to stand upon the same footing as the property itself.
From these premises, the conclusion is reached that a tax on
incomes arising from both real and personal property is a "direct
tax," and subject to the same rule of apportionment as a tax laid
directly on the property itself, and, not being so imposed by the
act of 1894, according to the rule of numbers, is unconstitutional
and void. Third. That the invalidity of the tax on incomes from
real and personal property being established, the remaining
portions of the income tax law are also void notwithstanding the
fact that such remaining portions clearly come within the
Page 158 U. S. 697
class of taxes designated as duties or excises, in respect to
which the rule of apportionment has no application, but which are
controlled and regulated by the rule of uniformity.
It is not found, and could not be properly found by the court,
that there is in the other provisions of the law any such lack of
uniformity as would be sufficient to render these remaining
provisions void for that reason. There is, therefore, no essential
connection between the class of incomes which the court holds to be
within the rule of apportionment and the other class falling within
the rule of uniformity, and I cannot understand the principle upon
which the court reaches the conclusion that, because one branch of
the law is invalid for the reason that the tax is not laid by the
rule of apportionment, it thereby defeats and invalidates another
branch resting upon the rule of uniformity, and in respect to which
there is no valid objection. If the conclusion of the court on this
third proposition is sound, the principle upon which it rests
could, with equal propriety, be extended to the entire revenue act
of August, 1894.
I shall not dwell upon these considerations. They have been
fully elaborated by Mr. Justice Harlan. There is just as much room
for the assumption that Congress would not have passed the customs
branches of the law without the provision taxing incomes from real
and personal estate as that they would not have passed the
provision relating to incomes resting upon the rule of uniformity.
Unconstitutional provisions of an act will, no doubt, sometimes
defeat constitutional provisions where they are so essentially and
inseparably connected in substance as to prevent the enforcement of
the valid part without giving effect to the invalid portion. But
when the valid and the invalid portions of the act are not mutually
dependent upon each other as considerations, conditions, or
compensation for each other, and the valid portions are capable of
separate enforcement, the latter are never, especially in revenue
laws, declared void because of invalid portions of the law.
The rule is illustrated in numerous decisions of this court and
of the highest courts of the States. Take the
State
Freight Tax Cases, 15 Wall. 232. There was a single
act imposing a
Page 158 U. S. 698
tonnage tax upon all railroads, on all freight transported by
them. The constitutionality of the law was attacked on the ground
that it applied not merely to freight carried wholly within the
State, but extended to freight received without and brought into
the State, and to that received within and carried beyond the
limits of the State, which came within the interstate commerce
provision of the Constitution of the United States. This court held
the tax invalid as to this latter class of freight, but, being
valid as to the internal freight, that much of the law could not be
defeated by the invalid part, though the act imposing the tax was
single and entire. To the same effect are the cases of
Huntington v. Worthen, 120 U. S. 97;
Allen v. Louisiana, 103 U. S. 80;
Ratterman v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 127 U.
S. 411 (where the point was directly made that the
invalid part should defeat the valid part), and
Field v.
Clark, 143 U. S. 649,
143 U. S. 696,
143 U. S. 697.
In this last case, this court said:
"Unless it be impossible to avoid it, a general revenue statute
should never be declared inoperative in all its parts because a
particular part relating to a distinct subject matter may be
invalid. A different rule might be disastrous to the financial
operations of the government and produce the utmost confusion in
the business of the entire country."
Here, the distinction between the two branches of the income tax
law are entirely separable. They rest upon different rules; one
part can be enforced without the other, and to hold that the
alleged invalid portion, if invalid, should break down the valid
portion is a proposition which I think entirely erroneous and
wholly unsupported either upon principle or authority.
In considering the question whether a tax on incomes from real
or personal estate is a direct tax within the meaning of those
words as employed in the Constitution, I shall not enter upon any
discussion of the decisions of this court, commencing with the
Hylton case in 1796 (
3
U. S. 3 Dall. 171), and ending with the
Springer case in 1880 (
102 U. S. 102
U.S. 507); nor shall I dwell upon the approval of those decisions
by the great law writers of the country and by all the commentators
on the Constitution; nor will I dwell upon the long-continued
practice
Page 158 U. S. 699
of the government in compliance with the principle laid down in
those decisions. They, in my judgment, settle and conclude the
question now before the court contrary to the present decision.
But, if they do not settle, they certainly raise such a doubt on,
the subject as should restrain the court from declaring the act
unconstitutional. No rule of construction is better settled than
that this court will not declare invalid a statute passed by a
coordinate branch of the government, in whose favor every
presumption should be made, unless its repugnancy to the
Constitution is clear beyond a reasonable doubt. In
Ogden v.
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213, this court said that the
mere fact of a doubt was sufficient to prevent the court from
declaring the act unconstitutional, and that language in substance
is repeated in the
Sinking Fund Cases, 99 U. S.
700, where the opinion of the court was given by Chief
Justice Waite, who said the act must be beyond all reasonable doubt
unconstitutional before this court would so declare it.
It seems to me the court in this case adopts a wrong method of
arriving at the true meaning of the words "direct tax," as employed
in the Constitution. It attaches too much weight and importance to
detached expressions of individuals and writers on political
economy, made subsequent to the adoption of the Constitution, and
who do not, in fact, agree upon any definition of a "direct tax."
From such sources, we derive no real light upon the subject. To
ascertain the true meaning of the words "direct tax" or "direct
taxes," we should have regard not merely to the words themselves,
but to the connection in which they are used in the Constitution,
and to the conditions and circumstances existing when the
Constitution was formed and adopted. What were the surrounding
circumstances? I shall refer to them very briefly. The only subject
of direct taxation prevailing at the time was land. The States did
tax some articles of personal property, but such property was not
the subject of general taxation by valuation or assessment. Land
and its appurtenances was the principal object of taxation in all
the States. By the VIIIth Article of the Confederation, the
expenses of the government were to be borne out
Page 158 U. S. 700
of a common treasury, to be supplied by the States according to
the value of the granted and surveyed lands in each State, such
valuation to be estimated or the assessment to be made by the
Congress in such mode as they should from time to time determine.
This was a direct tax directly laid upon the value of all the real
estate in the country. The trouble with it was that the
Confederation had no power of enforcing its assessment. All it
could do, after arriving at the assessment or estimate, was to make
its requisitions upon the several States for their respective
quotas. They were not met. This radical defect in the Confederation
had to be remedied in the new Constitution, which accordingly gave
to the national government the power of imposing taxation directly
upon all citizens or inhabitants of the country, and to enforce
such taxation without the agency or instrumentality of the States.
The framers of the Constitution knew that land was the general
object of taxation in all the States. They found no fault with the
VIIIth Article of the Confederation so far as it imposed taxation
on the value of land and the appurtenances thereof in each
State.
Now it may reasonably and properly be assumed that the framers
of the Constitution, in adopting the rule of apportionment
according to the population of the several States, had reference to
subjects or objects of taxation of universal or general
distribution throughout all the States. A capitation or poll tax
had its subject in every State, and was, so to speak,
self-apportioning according to numbers. "Other direct tax," used in
connection with such capitation tax, must have been intended to
refer to subjects having like, or approximate, relation to numbers,
and found in all the States. It never was contemplated to reach by
direct taxation subjects of partial distribution. What would be
thought of a direct tax and the apportionment thereof laid upon
cotton at so much a bale, upon tobacco at so much a hogshead, upon
rice at so much a ton or a tierce? Would not the idea of
apportioning that tax on property, nonexisting in a majority of the
States, be utterly frivolous and absurd?
Not only was land the subject of general distributions, but
Page 158 U. S. 791
evidently in the minds of the framers of the Constitution from
the fact that it was the subject of taxation under the
Confederation. But, at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution, there was, with the single exception of a partial
income tax in the State of Delaware, no general tax on incomes in
this country, nor in any State thereof. Did the framers of the
Constitution look forward into the future so as to contemplate and
intend to cover such a tax as was then unknown to them? I think
not.
It was ten or eleven years after the adoption of the
Constitution before the English government passed her first income
tax under the leadership of Mr. Pitt. The question then arose, to
which the Chief Justice has referred, whether, in estimating
income, you could look or have any regard to the source from which
it sprung. That question was material, because, by the English loan
acts, it was provided that the public dividends should be paid
"free of any tax or charge whatever," and Mr. Pitt was confronted
with the question on his income tax law whether he proposed to
reach or could reach income from those stocks. He said the words
must receive a reasonable interpretation, and that the true
construction was that you should not look at all to the nature of
the source, but that you should consider dividends, for the purpose
of the income tax, simply in the relation to the receiver as so
much income. This construction was adopted and put in practice for
over fifty years without question. In 1853, Mr. Gladstone, as
Chancellor of the Exchequer, resisting with all his genius the
effort to make important changes of the income tax, said, in a
speech before the House of Commons, that the construction of Mr.
Pitt was undoubtedly correct. These opinions of distinguished
statesmen may not have the force of judicial authority, but they
show what men of eminence and men of ability and distinction
thought of the income tax at its original inception.
If the assumption I have made that the framers of the
Constitution, in providing for the apportionment of a direct tax
had in mind a subject matter or subjects matter which had some
general distribution among the States is correct, it is
Page 158 U. S. 702
clear that a tax on incomes -- a subject not of general
distribution at that time or since -- is not a "direct tax " in the
sense of the Constitution.
The framers of the Constitution proceeded upon the theory,
entertained by all political writers of that day, that there was
some relation, more or less direct, between population and land.
But there is no connection, direct or proximate, between rents of
land and incomes of personalty and population -- none whatever.
They did not have any relation to each other at the time the
Constitution was adopted, nor have they ever had since, and perhaps
never will have.
Again, it is settled by well considered authorities that a tax
on rents and a tax on land itself is not duplicate or double
taxation. The authorities in England and in this country hold that
a tax on rents and a tax on land are different things. Besides the
English cases, to which I have not the time or strength to refer,
there is the well considered case of
Robinson v. The County of
Allegheny, 7 Penn.St. 161, when Gibson was the Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, holding that a tax on rent is
not a tax on the land out of which it arises. In that case, there
was a
lease in fee of certain premises, the lessee
covenanting to pay all taxes on the demised premises. A tax was
laid by the State upon both land and rent, and the question arose
whether the tenant, even under that express covenant, was bound to
pay the tax on the land itself. The Supreme Court of the State held
that he was not; that there were two separate, distinct, and
independent subjects matter, and that his covenant to pay on the
demised premises did not extend to the payment of the tax charged
upon the rent against the landowner. All the circumstances
surrounding the formation and adoption of the Constitution lead to
the conclusion that only such tax as is laid directly upon property
as such, according to valuation or assessment, is a "direct tax"
within the true meaning of the Constitution.
Again, we cannot attribute to the framers of the Constitution an
intention to make any tax a direct tax which it was impossible to
apportion. If it cannot be apportioned without
Page 158 U. S. 703
gross injustice, we may feel assured that it is a tax never
contemplated by the Constitution as a direct tax. No tax,
therefore, can be regarded as a direct tax, in the sense of that
instrument, which is incapable of apportionment by the rule of
numbers. The constitutional provision clearly implies in the
requirement of apportionment that a direct tax is such, and such
only, as can be apportioned without glaring inequality, manifest
injustice, and unfairness as between those subject to its burden.
The most natural and practical test by which to determine what is a
direct tax in the sense of the Constitution is to ascertain whether
the tax can be apportioned among the several States according to
their respective numbers, with reasonable approximation to justice,
fairness, and equality to all the citizens and inhabitants of the
country who may be subject to the operation of the law. The fact
that a tax cannot be so apportioned without producing gross
injustice and inequality among those required to pay it should
settle the question that it was not a direct tax within the true
sense and meaning of those words as they are used in the
Constitution.
Let us apply this test. Take the illustration suggested in the
opinion of the court. Congress lays a tax of thirty millions upon
the incomes of the country above a certain designated amount, and
directs that tax to be apportioned among the several States
according to their numbers, and, when so apportioned, to be
prorated amongst the citizens of the respective States coming
within the operation of the law. To two States of equal population,
the same amount will be allotted. In one of these States, there are
1000 individuals, and in the other, 2000, subject to the tax. The
former, under the operation of the apportionment, will be required
to pay
twice the rate of the latter on the same amount of
income. This disparity and inequality will increase just in
proportion as the numbers subject to the tax in the different
States differ or vary. By way of further illustration, take the new
State of Washington and the old State of Rhode Island, having about
the same population. To each would be assigned the same amount of
the general assessment. In the former, we will say, there are 5,000
citizens subject to the operation of the law, in the latter,
Page 158 U. S. 704
50,000. The citizen of Washington will be required to pay ten
times as much as the citizen of Rhode Island on the same amount of
taxable income. Extend the rule to all the States, and the result
is that the larger the number of those subject to the operation of
the law in any given State, the smaller their proportion of the tax
and the smaller their rate of taxation, while, in respect to the
smaller number in other States, the greater will be their rate of
taxation on the same income.
But it is said that this inequality was intentional upon the
part of the framers of the Constitution; that it was adopted with a
view to protect property owners as a class. Where does such an idea
find support or countenance under a Constitution framed and adopted
"to promote justice?" The government is not dealing with the States
in this matter; it is dealing with its own citizens throughout the
country, irrespective of state lines, and to say that the
Constitution, which was intended to promote peace and justice,
either in its whole or in any part thereof, ever intended to work
out such a result and produce such gross discrimination and
injustice between the citizens of a common country is beyond all
reason.
What is to be the end of the application of this new rule
adopted by the court? A tax is laid by the general government on
all the money on hand or on deposit of every citizen of the
government at a given date. Such taxation prevails in many of the
States. The government has, under its taxing power, the right to
lay such a tax. When laid, a few parties come before the court and
say:
"My deposits were derived from the proceeds of farm products or
from the interest on bonds and securities, and they are not,
therefore, taxable by this law."
To make your tax valid, you must apportion the tax amongst all
the citizens of the government, according to the population of the
respective States, taking the whole subject matter out of the
control of Congress, both the rate of taxation and the assessment,
and imposing it upon the people of the country by an arbitrary rule
which produces such inequality as I have briefly pointed out.
In my judgment, the principle announced in the decision
practically destroys the power of the government to reach
Page 158 U. S. 705
incomes from real and personal estate. There is, to my mind,
little or no real difference between denying the existence of the
power to tax incomes from real and personal estate and attaching
such conditions and requirements to its exercise as will render it
impossible or incapable of any practical operation. You might just
as well, in this case, strike at the power to reach incomes from
the sources indicated as to attach these conditions of
apportionment which no legislature can ever undertake to adopt, and
which, if adopted, cannot be enforced with any degree of equality
or fairness between the common citizens of a common country.
The decision disregards the well established canon of
construction to which I have referred, that an act passed by a
coordinate branch of the government has every presumption in its
favor, and should never be declared invalid by the courts unless
its repugnancy to the Constitution is clear beyond all reasonable
doubt. It is not a matter of conjecture; it is the established
principle that it must be clear beyond a reasonable doubt. I cannot
see, in view of the past, how this case can be said to be free of
doubt.
Again, the decision not only takes from Congress its rightful
power of fixing the rate of taxation, but substitutes a rule
incapable of application without producing the most monstrous
inequality and injustice between citizens residing in different
sections of their common country such as the framers of the
Constitution never could have contemplated, such as no free and
enlightened people can ever possibly sanction or approve.
The practical operation of the decision is not only to disregard
the great principles of equality in taxation, but the further
principle that, in the imposition of taxes for the benefit of the
government, the burdens thereof should be imposed upon those having
most
ability to bear them. This decision, in effect, works
out a directly opposite result, in relieving the citizens having
the greater
ability, while the burdens of taxation are
made to fall most heavily and oppressively upon those having the
least ability. It lightens the burden upon the larger number, in
some States subject to the tax, and places it most unequally
Page 158 U. S. 706
and disproportionately on the smaller number in other States.
Considered in all its bearings, this decision is, in my judgment,
the most disastrous blow ever struck at the constitutional power of
Congress. It strikes down an important portion of the most vital
and essential power of the government in practically excluding any
recourse to incomes from real and personal estate for the purpose
of raising needed revenue to meet the government's wants and
necessities under any circumstances.
I am therefore compelled to enter my dissent to the judgment of
the court.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE dissenting.
I deem it unnecessary to elaborate my reasons for adhering to
the views hitherto expressed by me, and content myself with the
following statement of points:
1st. The previous opinion of the court held that the inclusion
of rentals from real estate in income subject to taxation laid a
direct tax on the real estate itself, and was, therefore,
unconstitutional and void unless apportioned. From this position I
dissented on the ground that it overthrew the settled construction
of the Constitution, as applied in one hundred years of practice,
sanctioned by the repeated and unanimous decisions of this court
and taught by every theoretical and philosophical writer on the
Constitution who has expressed an opinion upon the subject.
2d. The court, in its present opinion, considers that the
Constitution requires it to extend the former ruling yet further,
and holds that the inclusion of revenue from personal property in
an income subjected to taxation amounts to imposing a direct tax on
the personal property, which is also void unless apportioned. As a
tax on income from real and personal property is declared to be
unconstitutional unless apportioned, because it is equivalent to a
direct tax on such property, it follows that the decision now
rendered holds not only that the rule of apportionment must be
applied to an income tax, but also that no tax, whether direct or
indirect, on either real and personal property or investments can
be levied unless by apportionment. Everything
Page 158 U. S. 707
said in the dissent from the previous decision applies to the
ruling now announced, which, I think, aggravates and accentuates
the court's departure from the settled construction of the
Constitution.
3d. The court does not now, except in some particulars, review
the reasoning advanced in support of its previous conclusion, and
therefore the opinion does not render it necessary for me to do
more than refer to the views expressed in my former dissent, as
applicable to the position now taken and then to briefly notice the
new matter advanced.
4th. As, however, on the rehearing, the issues have been
elaborately argued, I deem it also my duty to state why the
reargument has in no way shaken, but, on the contrary, has
strengthened, the convictions hitherto expressed.
5th. The reasons urged on the reargument seem to me to involve a
series of contradictory theories:
a. Thus, in answering the proposition that
United
States v. Hylton and the cases which followed and confirmed it
have settled that the word "direct," as used in the Constitution,
applies only to capitation taxes and taxes on land, it is first
contended that this claim is unfounded, and that nothing of the
kind was so decided, and it is then argued that "a century of
error" should furnish no obstacle to the reversal by this court of
a continuous line of decisions interpreting the constitutional
meaning of that word, if such decisions be considered wrong. Whence
the "century of error" is evolved, unless the cases relied on
decided that the word "direct" was not to be considered in its
economic sense, does not appear from the argument.
b. In answer to the proposition that the passage of the
carriage tax act and the decision in the
Hylton case which
declared that act constitutional involved the assumption that the
word "direct" in the Constitution was to be considered as applying
only to a tax on land and capitation, it is said that this view of
the act and decision is faulty, and, therefore, the inference
deduced from it is erroneous. At the same time, reference is made
to the opinion of Mr. Madison that the carriage tax act was passed
in violation of the Constitution,
Page 158 U. S. 708
and hence that the decision which held it constitutional was
wrong. How that distinguished statesman could have considered that
the act violated the Constitution, and how he could have regarded
the decision which affirmed its validity as erroneous, unless the
act and decision were not in accord with his view of the meaning of
the word "direct" the argument also fails to elucidate.
6th. Attention was previously called to the fact that
practically all the theoretical and philosophical writers on the
Constitution since the carriage tax act was passed and the
Hylton case was decided have declared that the word
"direct" in the Constitution applies only to taxes on land and
capitation taxes. The list of writers formerly referred to, with
the addition of a few others not then mentioned, includes Kent,
Story, Cooley, Miller, Bancroft, the historian of the Constitution,
Pomeroy, Hare, Burroughs, Ordroneaux, Black, Farrar, Flanders,
Bateman, Patterson, and Von Holst. How is this overwhelming
consensus of publicists, of law writers, and historians
answered? By saying that their opinions ought not to be regarded
because they were all misled by the dicta in the
Hylton
case into teaching an erroneous doctrine. How, if the
Hylton case did not decide this question of direct
taxation, it could have misled all these writers -- among them some
of the noblest and brightest intellects which have adorned our
national life -- is not explained. In other words, in order to
escape the effect of the act and of the decision upon it, it is
argued that they did not, by necessary implication, establish that
direct taxes were only land and capitation taxes, and, in the same
breath, in order to avoid the force of the harmonious
interpretation of the Constitution by all the great writers who
have expounded it, we are told that their views are worthless
because they were misled by the
Hylton case.
7th. If, as is admitted, all these authors have interpreted the
Hylton case as confining direct taxes to land and
capitation taxes, I submit that their unanimity, instead of
affording foundation for the argument that they were misled by that
case, furnishes a much better and safer guide as to what its
decision necessarily implied than does the contention now
Page 158 U. S. 709
made, unless we are to hold that all these great minds were so
feeble as to be led into concluding that the case decided what it
did not decide, and unless we are to say that the true light in
regard to the meaning of this word "direct" has come to no writer
or thinker from that time until now.
8th. Whilst it is admitted that, in the discussions at the bar
of this court in years past, when the previous cases were before
it, copious reference was made to the lines of authority here
advanced, and that nothing new is now urged, we are, at the same
time, told that, strange as it may seem, the sources of the
Constitution have been "neglected" up to the present time, and this
supposed neglect is asserted in order to justify the overthrow of
an interpretation of the Constitution concluded by enactments and
decisions dating from the foundation of the government. How this
neglect of the sources of the Constitution in the past is
compatible with the admission that nothing new is here advanced is
not explained.
9th. Although the opinions of Kent, Story, Cooley, and all the
other teachers and writers on the Constitution are here disregarded
in determining the constitutional meaning of the word "direct," the
opinions of some of the same authors are cited as conclusive on
other questions involved in this case. Why the opinions of these
great men should be treated a "worthless" in regard to one question
of constitutional law, and considered conclusive on another,
remains to be discovered.
10th. The same conflict of positions is presented in other
respects. Thus, in support of various views upon incidental
questions, we are referred to many opinions of this court as
conclusive, and, at the same time, we are told that all the
decisions of this court from the
Hylton case down to the
Springer case in regard to direct taxation are wrong if
they limit the word "direct" to land and capitation, and must,
therefore, be disregarded, because "a century of error" does not
suffice to determine a question. How the decisions of this court
settling one principle are to be cited as authority for that
principle and, at the same time, it is to be argued that other
decisions, equally unanimous and concurrent, are
Page 158 U. S. 710
no authority for another principle involves a logical dilemma
which cannot be solved.
11th. In dissenting before, it was contended that the passage of
the carriage tax act and the decision of this court thereon had
been accepted by the Legislative and Executive branches of the
government from that time to this, and that this acceptance had
been manifested by conforming all taxes thereafter imposed to the
rule of taxation thus established. This is answered by saying that
there was no such acceptance, because the mere abstention from the
exercise of a power affords no indication of an intention to disown
the power. The fallacy here consists in confusing action with
inaction. It was not reasoned in the previous dissent that mere
inaction implied the lack of a governmental power, but that the
definitive action in a particular way, when construed in connection
with the
Hylton decision, established a continuous
governmental interpretation.
12th. Whilst denying that there has been any rule evolved from
the
Hylton case and applied by the government for the past
hundred years, it is said that the results of that case were always
disputed when enforced. How there could be no rule, and yet the
results of the rule could be disputed, is likewise a difficulty
which is not answered.
13th. The admission of the dispute was necessitated by the
statement that when, in 1861, it was proposed to levy a direct tax,
by apportionment, on personal property, a committee of the House of
Representatives reported that, under the
Hylton case, it
could not be done. This fact, if accurately stated, furnishes the
best evidence of the existence of the rule which the
Hylton case had established, and shows that the decision
now made reverses that case, and sustains the contention of the
minority who voted against the carriage tax act, and whose views
were defeated in its passage and repudiated in the decision upon
it, and have besides been overthrown by the unbroken history of the
government and by all the other adjudications of this court
confirming the
Hylton case.
14th. The decision here announced, holding that the tax on the
income from real estate and the tax on the income from
Page 158 U. S. 711
personal property and investments are direct, and therefore
require apportionment, rests necessarily on the proposition that
the word "direct" in the Constitution must be construed in the
economic sense; that is to say, whether a tax be direct or indirect
is to be tested by ascertaining whether it is capable of being
shifted from the one who immediately pays it to an ultimate
consumer. If it cannot be so shifted, it is direct; if it can be,
it is indirect. But the word in this sense applies not only to the
income from real estate and personal property, but also to business
gains, professional earnings, salaries, and all of the many sources
from which human activity evolves profit or income without invested
capital. These latter the opinion holds to be taxable without
apportionment, upon the theory that taxes on them are "excises,"
and therefore do not require apportionment according to the
previous decisions of this court on the subject of income taxation.
These decisions,
Hylton v. United
States, 3 Dall. 171;
Pacific
Insurance Co. v. Soule, 7 Wall. 433;
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533;
Scholey v.
Rew, 23 Wall. 331;
Springer v. United
States, 102 U. S. 586,
hold that the word "direct" in the Constitution refers only to
direct taxes on land, and therefore has a constitutional
significance wholly different from the sense given to that word by
the economists. The ruling now announced overthrows all these
decisions. It also subverts the economic signification of the word
"direct" which it seemingly adopts. Under that meaning, taxes on
business gains, professional earnings, and salaries are as much
direct, and, indeed, even more so, than would be taxes on invested
personal property. It follows, I submit, that the decision now
rendered accepts a rule and at once in part overthrows it. In other
words, the necessary result of the conclusion is to repudiate the
decision of this court, previously rendered, on the ground that
they misinterpreted the word "direct" by not giving it its economic
sense, and then to decline to follow the economic sense because of
the previous decisions. Thus, the adoption of the economic meaning
of the word destroys the decisions, and they, in turn, destroy the
rule established. It follows, it seems to me, that the conclusion
now announced rests neither upon
Page 158 U. S. 712
the economic sense of the word "direct" or the constitutional
significance of that term. But it must rest upon one or the other
to be sustained. Resting on neither, it has, to my mind, no
foundation in reason whatever.
15th. This contradiction points in the strongest way to what I
conceive to be the error of changing, at this late day, a settled
construction of the Constitution. It demonstrates, I think, how
conclusively the previous cases have determined every question
involved in this, and shows that the doctrine cannot be now laid
down that the word "direct" in the Constitution is to be
interpreted in the economic sense, and be consistently
maintained.
16th. The injustice of the conclusion points to the error of
adopting it. It takes invested wealth and reads it into the
Constitution as a favored and protected class of property, which
cannot be taxed without apportionment, whilst it leaves the
occupation of the minister, the doctor, the professor, the lawyer,
the inventor, the author, the merchant, the mechanic, and all other
forms of industry upon which the prosperity of a people must depend
subject to taxation without that condition. A rule which works out
this result, which, it seems to me, stultifies the Constitution by
making it an instrument of the most grievous wrong, should not be
adopted, especially when, in order to do so, the decisions of this
court, the opinions of the law writers and publicists, tradition,
practice, and the settled policy of the government must be
overthrown.
17th. Nor is the wrong which this conclusion involves mitigated
by the contention that the doctrine of apportionment, now here
applied to indirect as well as direct taxes on all real estate and
invested personal property, leaves the government with ample power
to reach such property by taxation, and make it bear its just part
of the public burdens. On the contrary, instead of doing this, it
really deprives the government of the ability to tax such property
at all, because the tax, it is now held, must be imposed by the
rules of apportionment according to population. The absolute
inequality and injustice of taxing wealth by reference to
population and
Page 158 U. S. 713
without regard to the amount of the wealth taxed are so manifest
that this system should not be extended beyond the settled rule
which confines it to direct taxes on real estate. To destroy the
fixed interpretation of the Constitution by which the rule of
apportionment according to population is confined to direct taxes
on real estate so as to make that rule include indirect taxes on
real estate and taxes, whether direct or indirect, on invested
personal property, stocks, bonds, etc. reads into the Constitution
the most flagrantly unjust, unequal, and wrongful system of
taxation known to any civilized government. This strikes me too
clear for argument. I can conceive of no greater injustice than
would result from imposing on one million of people in one State,
having only ten millions of invested wealth, the same amount of tax
as that imposed on the like number of people in another State
having fifty times that amount of invested wealth. The application
of the rule of apportionment by population to invested personal
wealth would not only work out this wrong, but would ultimately
prove a self-destructive process, from the facility with which such
property changes its
situs. If so taxed, all property of
this character would soon be transferred to the States where the
sum of accumulated wealth was greatest in proportion to population,
and where therefore the burden of taxation would be lightest, and
thus the mighty wrong resulting from the very nature of the
extension of the rule would be aggravated. It is clear then, I
think, that the admission of the power of taxation in regard to
invested personal property, coupled with the restriction that the
tax mast be distributed by population, and not by wealth, involves
a substantial denial of the power itself, because the condition
renders its exercise practically impossible. To say a thing can
only be done in a way which must necessarily bring about the
grossest wrong is to delusively admit the existence of the power
while substantially denying it. And the grievous results sure to
follow from any attempt to adopt such system are so obvious that my
mind cannot fail to see that if a tax on invested personal property
were imposed by the rule of population, and there were no other
means of preventing
Page 158 U. S. 714
its enforcement, the red spectre of revolution would shake our
institutions to their foundation.
18th. This demonstrates the fallacy of the proposition that the
interpretation of the Constitution now announced concedes to the
national government ample means to sustain itself by taxation in an
extraordinary emergency. It leaves only the tariff or impost,
excise taxation, and the direct or indirect taxes on the vital
energies of the country, which, as I have said, the opinion now
holds are not subject to the rule of apportionment. In case of
foreign war, embargo, blockade, or other international
complications, the means of support from tariff taxation would
disappear; none of the accumulated invested property of the country
could be reached, except according to the impracticable rule of
apportionment, and even indirect taxation on real estate would be
unavailable, for the opinion now announces that the rule of
apportionment applies to an indirect as well as a direct tax on
such property. The government would thus be practically deprived of
the means of support.
19th. The claim that the States may pay the amount of the
apportioned tax and thus save the injustice to their citizens
resulting from its enforcement, does not render the conclusion less
hurtful. In the first place, the fact that the State may pay the
sum apportioned in no way lessens the evil, because the tax, being
assessed by population and not by wealth, must, however paid,
operate the injustice which I have just stated. Moreover, the
contention that a State could by payment of the whole sum of a tax
on personal property, apportioned according to population, relieve
the citizen from grievous wrong to result from its enforcement
against his property, is an admission that the collection of such
tax against the property of the citizen, because of its injustice,
would be practically impossible. If substantially impossible of
enforcement against the citizen's property, it would be equally so
as against the State, for there would be no obligation on the State
to pay, and thus there would be no power whatever to enforce.
Hence, the decision now rendered, so far as taxing real and
personal property and invested wealth is concerned,
Page 158 U. S. 715
reduces the government of the United States to the paralyzed
condition which existed under the Confederation, and to remove
which the Constitution of the United States was adopted.
20th. The suggestion that, if the construction now adopted by
the court brings about hurtful results, it can be cured by an
amendment to the Constitution, instead of sustaining the conclusion
reached, shows its fallacy. The
Hylton case was decided
more than one hundred years ago. The income tax laws of the past
were enacted also years ago. At the time they were passed, the
debates and reports conclusively show that they were made to
conform to the rulings in the
Hylton case. Since all thee
things were done, the Constitution has been repeatedly amended.
These amendments followed the civil war, and were adopted for the
purpose of supplying defects in the national power. Can it be
doubted that, if an intimation had been conveyed that the decisions
of this court would or could be overruled, so as to deprive the
government of an essential power of taxation, the amendments would
have rendered such a change of ruling impossible? The adoption of
the amendments, none of which repudiated the uniform policy of the
government, was practically a ratification of that policy and an
acquiescence in the settled rule of interpretation theretofore
adopted.
21st. It is, I submit, greatly to be deplored that, after more
than one hundred years of our national existence, after the
government has withstood the strain of foreign wars and the dread
ordeal of civil strife, and its people have become united and
powerful, this court should consider itself compelled to go back to
a long repudiated and rejected theory of the Constitution by which
the government is deprived of an inherent attribute of its being, a
necessary power of taxation.